Daud Akhriev original painting

Semana Santa

Semana Santa | Oil on Linen | 39.5" x 78.7"

Simply stated… if one ever needs proof positive of the artistic power and status of Daud Akhriev, it can be seen and is emphasized in this painting.  The composition is complex and well-developed with the persona of each figure defined with reverence via the lanterns they carry.  Amidst the darkness, the light soothes their souls and their way as they move in solemn accord.  Work such as Semana Santa* is immensely difficult and this painting would be gladly accepted by many if not most museums across the land and beyond.  One can feel the history from the past connecting with the people of today in this poetic and remarkable effort by this Living Master.  

*Semana Santa = Easter Week

SKU: DAK-120035 Artist: Tags: ,
Nicole Wolff
Gallery Director

Biography

Daud Akhriev was born in the former Soviet Union in 1959.  He studied classical painting and drawing for 14 years, graduating with honors from the Repin Institute (Russian Academy of Fine Art) with a masters degree in fine art, under the tutelage of the late painter and Academic, Piotr Fomin.  In 1991 he emigrated to Chattanooga, Tennessee.  Akhriev, now a U.S. citizen, shares his time between Andalusia, Spain and Chattanooga, Tennessee with his artist wife.

Akhriev is internationally sought after as an instructor for figure and landscape painting and for his monumental work. The Four Seasons, his four 9 foot bronze figures completed for the city of Chattanooga, are listed on the national Public Art Registry. Additional public art includes the Erlanger Chapel Mosaic and the Baylor School Mosaic, as well as murals at the Collegedale Seventh-Day Adventist Church and St. Peter's Episcopal.

Daud Akhriev, Stylistic Pluralism was published in 2002 by Common Place publishing.  He is also featured in Traditions Rediscovered, the Finley Collection of Russian Art.  Akhriev’s drawings are in several books about the Repin Institute, both in Russian language and in Chinese, and in numerous magazines such as Artists Magazine, Pastel Journal,  Island Journal, Chattanooga Magazine, Southern Living and American Art Collector.

 

Awards and Recognition

Oil Painters of America Annual Juried Exhibition, Most Original Master Signature Division, Award of Excellence,
USA 2018
Spanish Pastel Biennial, Rembrandt Award, Oviedo,
Spain 2018
Most Imaginative Painting, Oil Painters of America National Juried Exhibition, Steamboat Springs Museum of Art, Colorado 2018
Pastel 100, Pastel Journal, 2018
Pastel 100, Pastel Journal, 2017
Master Signature Status, Oil Painters of America, 2016
Silver Medal Winner, Oil Painters of American National Juried Exhibition, 2016
Grand Prize, Plein Air Magazine, Spring Competition 2016
Silver Prize, Plein Air Magazine, Spring Competition, ]2016
Grand Prize, Pastel Journal 100, 2015
Second Portrait Prize, Pastel Journal 100, 2015
Finalist, Salon 2015 ARC, Figurative Work
Ten Best Mosaics 2015 (one of), Society of American Mosaic Artists, 2015
Winning Team, Erlanger Hospital Chapel Redesign competition, 2014-15 (with HK Architects)
Featured Artist, Hunter Museum Invitational Biennial Exhibition II, 2010
National Registry of Public Art for the Four Seasons
Chattanooga TN 2009
Best Still Life, Salon International, Greenhouse Gallery, 2008
Best Still Life and Second Place Overall, National Juried Show, Oil Painters of America 2006
Feature Article, Artists Magazine, Feb 2006

"Akhriev's dedication to detail is exquisite to the point of being other-worldly."
- Jennifer Jordan, author and filmmaker, Salt Lake City

“… You could also say that the artist’s subject is light: we can almost feel the heat of the sun. We nearly squint at its intensity.”
-Tamera Lenz Muente, Assistant Curator, Cincinnati Museum of Art, in Pastel Journal

“…artist, Daud Akhriev, captures in his paintings and pastels the contradictions and hardships of Maine coastal living in a collection of powerful and compelling images. …Akhriev’s waterfront scenes are complex and meticulous studies in color and form—a gigantic game of Pick-Up-Sticks, gone array. In each of his works, the docks, like the island inhabitants he portrays, appear to have reached an uneasy truce with a world where the power of nature is relentless and the flesh endures against all odds.”
-Critic Richard Friswell - ARTESMAGAZINE