Influenced
by a childhood spent in rural surroundings, Chagall’s ‘I and the Village’ is a
dreamlike representation of goats, pastures, a farmer, a violinist, and simplistic
images of houses, some of them upside-down. The whole could be viewed as a
jigsaw puzzle in a child’s imagination. Clearly
exhibiting aspects of Cubism, the components are randomly put together to
produce an abstract arrangement. The colours are rich and a stark contrast
exists between the red, the green and the blue. It is a painting that provides
many viewpoints and perspectives.
The
painting is full of intrigue and symbolism. In the foreground of the painting,
a green-faced man, wearing a cross around his neck, a cap on his head, and
holding a glowing tree, stares directly across at the head of a goat. In the
background, a row of houses, an Orthodox church, and a man dressed in black
hurries past an upside down woman playing what looks like a violin.
The
geometric shapes and symbols catch the viewer’s attention. The small and large
circles have been said to represent 3 spatial phenomena: the sun’s revolution
in orbit, the earth’s revolution around the sun, and the moon’s revolution
around the earth.

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