Marc Chagall: how the Jewish soul and love for Vitebsk created a new visual language He flew over Vitebsk when no one believed in flights. He painted green cows and purple violinists when Paris demanded cubism, and Russia — socialist realism. He drew love as he felt it, not as others saw it. Marc Chagall is one of the most mysterious and recognizable artists of the 20th century. His paintings are not just surrealistic fantasies, they are a visual philosophy of a person who lived at the intersection of worlds: Jewish shtetl and European capital, tradition and avant-garde, land and sky. To understand Chagall, you need to understand his worldview — a holistic system where love, faith, nostalgia, and the cosmos intertwine into a single pattern. Vitebsk as the center of the universe For Chagall, Vitebsk was not just his hometown, but a spiritual center of the universe. Even living in Paris, New York, or the south of France, he always returned to the streets of his Belarusian childhood. In his paintings, Vitebsk appears not as a realistic city, but as a mythological space — with flying people, inverted houses, floating goats, and musicians on rooftops. In this worldview — a key feature of Chagall: he did not divide the physical and spiritual. For him, reality was permeable to the miraculous. His Vitebsk is not a city on a map, but a city in the soul. Therefore, on his canvases, he can simultaneously depict a Hasidic synagogue, an avant-garde theater, rural life, and a fantastic flight. This is not eclecticism, but synthesis — a world where everything is connected to everything. Jewish tradition as root and wing Chagall never renounced his Jewish origin. On the contrary, it became the source of his poetry. Biblical images, Hasidic legends, Yiddish language, ritual objects — all this fills his paintings with profound meanings. But Chagall was not a religious artist in the traditional sense. He did not illustrate the Torah, he experienced it through personal experienc ...
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