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Tiina Abel: Nikolai Kummits - soulful romantic of the
slums
The Tartu slum district of Ülejõe where
Nikolai Kummits (1897-1944), one of the best known Estonian
slum romantics, was born late last century, adopts a highly
significant place in Estonian art. After graduating from the
Pallas art school in 1929, Kummits slowly developed into an
artist, but one lacking grand personal ambitions. Poor
health and constant financial problems set their limits on
the development of his talents. Kummits was never given the
chance to participate in the feverish art life of any
metropolis, or to examine his own aims as an artist in the
perspective of a millennia-long European art tradition. But
he cultivated his 'own garden' during the short period at
his disposal, celebrating the anything but academic
atmosphere of slums in the university town of Tartu;
although admittedly one cannot fully understand Tartu's
genius loci without perceiving the mutual influence of the
Apollonian university and Dionysian slums.
The architecture of a slum at the time, and the
psychology of its inhabitants - factory workers, cobblers,
cabbies, prostitutes, poor students - were influenced by the
ambivalence of its status: ties with the village had not yet
been broken, whilst the town was still not an everyday
reality. Significant visual elements of the slum are, for
instance, a broad fence separating the house from the
street, a yard and a kitchen garden. These things express
the owners' yearning for privacy and for country-life. Life
in the slum can sometimes be enjoyably varied, although the
most important factor shaping one's destiny there seems to
be a chain of casual events which a slum-dweller tries to
resist by lapsing into alcoholism and debauchery, and by
exhibiting an inert tolerance.
Due to his background and disposition, Kummits perfectly
understood the existential atmosphere of the slums. He knew
that a man was on his own there because he belonged neither
to the city nor the country. Those aesthetic and moral
criteria that should have been the yardstick by which to
measure a person, were replaced by money.
What then constitutes the greatness of Kummits as an
artist? Primarily his ability to overlook misery and
ugliness, his forgiving nature, his desperate search for
vanished or hidden-away humanity. Kummits does not create
his pictures with a critic's pen or whilst wearing a
missionary's robe. He fixes his benign gaze on the space
between town and village and finds there an everyday reality
which, in his opinion, is eminently worthy of diligent
recording. A solitary fisherman's cottage, an old woman
peeling potatoes, a mother and child practising reading -
these are the eloquent images which convey a message of
loneliness and love. Kummits seems to believe in the
ennobling power of poverty and hard work; the characters in
his paintings possess a sincere and religious humility
which, at the same time, sets stock by human dignity. The
artist seems to transfer to them his own belief in the
purgatory power of suffering and the need for patience.
Kummits refuses to be a realist where he can be a poet.
Despite idealising his subject matter, the artist never
creates an idyll. The pictures are filled with tension. The
gentle contrast between a country woman standing and an axe
lying on the floor, could very well flare up into mortal
conflict at any moment; the thin fragile figure of a child
reading is threatened by a brutal blow of the fist, or by
tuberculosis. But not yet, with the ever-worrying mother
relaxing in a moment of leisure, and the soft glow of a lamp
chasing shadows into a corner. But nobody can be certain
about tomorrow.
However congenial and original Kummits's participation in
the lives of the poor might be, his paintings of slums
belong primarily to the sphere of an artistic activity where
the message is conveyed by means and codes of expressions
characteristic of art. As a poetic realist, Kummits used a
language of art which was understandable all over the Europe
of the day. Over that decade, realism as a method went
through a period of considerable growth. The anti-avant
garde neo-realism had several different aspects, and its
roots reached far down into the political, social and
aesthetical collisions of WWI and the post-war period. What
matters for us here is the fact that while remaining within
the new wave of the close-to-nature manner of depiction,
Estonian artists preferred to produce paintings on local
themes in the key of Impressionism or Fauvism. Kummits's
colour sensitivity differs greatly from that particular
brand of re-discovered French colourism. If we try to find
paragons, then the dim colouring and hazy contours of
Kummits's paintings remind the viewer of the 17th century
Dutch masters, whilst his mood resembles Louis Le Nain or
François Millet. The everyday browns, dark greens and
greys of the poor are among the artist's favourite colours.
Here Kummits, like his famous predecessors, as mentioned
above, adhers closely to reality. Spirituality and purity in
the artist's pictures are expressed by light. At times, the
light almost becomes a halo. The painter's obvious fondness
for various nuances of light has given rise to comparing him
with Georges de la Tour, and even Rembrandt. The light from
a lamp, the glow of a candle and the luminous moon, even
darkness - everything has become a metaphor for spiritual
generosity. This is how the motif of noble poverty in the
artist's paintings is accentuated, brought to the fore.
Nikolai Kummits's artistic interpretation of slum-life is
precise and convincing. So convincing, that the October
exhibition of the Art Museum of Estonia, N.Kummits and the
Motif of the Slum in Estonian Art, can easily embrace all
the major relevant themes starting from grotesque
caricatures of everyday life, to all sorts of architectural
utopias which threaten to destroy the unique environment of
the slum. I personally regard especially highly the manner
in which the artist communes with the reality surrounding
him, and the humanity and compassion, so often neglected by
the contemporary, aggressive world.
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