The museum’s collection presents an eye-catching reproduction of the portrait of Maxim Gorky by Isaac Izrailevich Brodsky. The original oil painting was created in 1937. Sergey Sergeyev-Tsensky hung this reproduction above his bed in memory of his friendship with Maxim Gorky.
Maxim Gorky and Sergey Sergeyev-Tsensky were both great writers, who managed to reveal to their readers a very rare kind of outlook on humanity. The creative journey of Sergeyev-Tsensky, like that of Maxim Gorky, overlapped with a few tragic periods in history that affected the lives of all people in the world. Gorky’s views on the situation in post-revolutionary Russia were influenced, among other things, by Sergeyev-Tsensky’s letters and the information they contained. They started corresponding in 1916. Their first meeting took place in Yalta in July 1928.
The contents of their correspondence provide enough material to evaluate and compare the literary views of Sergeyev-Tsensky and Gorky. The writers gave creative feedback on some of each other’s innovative and poetic techniques. Gorky wrote to Sergeyev-Tsensky,