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・ Alexander Alekseevich Durnovo
・ Alexander Ales
・ Alexander Alexanderovich Lieven
・ Alexander Alexandrov
・ Alexander Alexandrovich Chuprov
・ Alexander Alexandrovich Kornilov
・ Alexander Alexandrovich Makarov
・ Alexander Alexandrovich Menshikov
・ Alexander Alexandrovich Morozov
・ Alexander Alexandrovich Morozov (Artist)
・ Alexander Alexandrovich Vishnevsky
・ Alexander Alexandrovich Volkov (footballer)
・ Alexander Alexandrovich Volkov (politician)
・ Alexander Alexeev
・ Alexander Alexeyevich Avdeyev
Alexander Alexeyevich Borisov
・ Alexander Alexeyevich Chekalin
・ Alexander Alexeyevich Gorsky
・ Alexander Alexeyevich Makarov
・ Alexander Alfonsovich Grossheim
・ Alexander Alfred Hayton
・ Alexander Allain
・ Alexander Allan
・ Alexander Allan (locomotive engineer)
・ Alexander Allan (ship owner)
・ Alexander Allan Innes Wedderburn
・ Alexander Allan Stevenson
・ Alexander Allardyce
・ Alexander Allen (politician)
・ Alexander Allen (stylist)


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Alexander Alexeyevich Borisov : ウィキペディア英語版
Alexander Alexeyevich Borisov

Alexander Alexeyevich Borisov ((ロシア語:Александр Алексеевич Борисов), – 17 August 1934) was a Russian painter notable for his Arctic landscapes.
==Biography==

Alexander Borisov was born in the village of Gluboky Ruchey in the north of Russia, now located in the Krasnoborsky District of the Arkhangelsk Oblast. He was one of the four children in the peasant family of Alexey Egorovich Borisov and Matryona Nazarovna Borisova. He spent his adolescence in the Solovetsky Monastery in the White Sea where he studied icon painting. In 1886 he obtained a fellowship to continue his studies at the art school in Saint-Petersburg. In 1888 he enrolled as a student into the Imperial Academy of Arts. Borisov studied there under the landscape painters Ivan Shishkin and Arkhip Kuindzhi and graduated in 1892. In the Academy, he decided to devote his career to painting Arctic landscapes. For the Russian Arctic, Borisov was the pioneer of the genre.
In 1894, he accompanied the finance minister, Sergei Witte, to Kola Peninsula. In 1896, Borisov travelled to the coasts of the White Sea and the Barents Sea, and then joined a scientific expedition to visit Novaya Zemlya. In 1887, he held an exhibition of his works painted during these travels. The exhibition was acclaimed by the art critics and fellow artists, including Ilya Repin, and several works of Borisov were bought by Sergei Tretyakov for his art collection which later became the Tretyakov Gallery.
In 1900, Borisov organized his third and last Arctic expedition, during which he spent a winter in Novaya Zemlya and investigated the eastern coast of the islands. In particular, he made a topographic map of Novaya Zemlya, performed meteorogical observation, and collected samples of minerals, plants and animals. In 1901 he returned to mainland Russia. The paintings by Borisov created during the expedition have been exhibited in Saint-Petersburg between 1900 and 1905. The artist also travelled to Europe (Austria, Germany, France, and Great Britain) with his exhibitions, and in 1908 he travelled to the US.
In 1909, Borisov bought a house in the village of Gorodishchenskaya, close to Krasnoborsk. He spent most of his time in the house until his death in 1934. In 1910s, Borisov produced a series of landscapes of areas close to the Northern Dvina. These paintings were shown at his personal exhibition in Saint-Petersburg in 1914 and were generally praised by the art critics. In 1900s and 1910s he published several books which included his accounts on the Arctic travels and his ideas on building the economy of the Russian North. Borisov was a proponent of the construction of a railway which would link all-year harbors of the Kola Peninsula with the banks of Ob River, and he self-funded a research expedition which took place in 1915 and 1916. (The railroad was built much later and was not based on Borisov's expedition results).
Alexander Borisov died in 1934 in his house in Gorodishchenskaya.
A peninsula in the east coast of the Severny Island of Novaya Zemlya is called Borisov Peninsula. Streets in Arkhangelsk, Veliky Ustyug, and Krasnoborsk, and the Arctic Museum in Arkhangelsk have been named after him.

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