The exhibition of the Iskitim Museum of Arts and History features a watercolor painting “Cold May in Srostki” by Ivan Petrovich Popov.
The artist became fascinated with watercolors in the late 1960s. His interest in this medium culminated in a solo exhibition of his watercolor works organized at the Novosibirsk Museum in 1972. The main themes of both oil and watercolor paintings by Ivan Popov were his native land and Vasily Makarovich Shukshin. The art historian Pavel Dmitriyevich Muratov said, “In his transparent watercolors, Popov creates decorative effects and complex textures, even ripping the top layer of the paper slightly in some areas. These effects cannot be achieved by painting directly from nature, only in the studio. This suggests that Popov’s watercolor studies are not merely studies, but rather small landscape and portrait paintings that are based on other studies.”