In fine arts, Ivan Popov’s paintings are the counterpart of Vasily Shukshin’s prose. Throughout their lives, the two cousins maintained a true friendship and sincere respect for each other. In their art, they praised the place where they spent their childhood. They both left their native village of Srostki at an early age but always longed to return there.
“And it seems to me that here, in the place you came from and grew up in, there is some tremendous power, some life-giving force, which you have to touch in order to recover the vital circulation of fresh blood that seemed exhausted. Evidently the will to live and the firmness of spirit that was brought here by our ancestors still lives in the people here to this day, and there’s something in the belief that the air of home, the native speech, the song you heard in childhood, and a tender word from your mother can heal the heart,” Vasily Shukshin wrote in his essay “The Place Where I Was Born”.
The
study “Ice Drifting on the Katun River” illustrates Vasily Shukshin’s short
story “Styopka”,