Ilya Yefimovich Repin (born August 5 [July 24, Old Style], 1844, Chuguyev, Russia [now Chuhuyiv, Ukraine]—died September 29, 1930, Kuokkala, Finland) was a Ukrainian-born Russian painter of historical subjects known for the power and drama of his works.
Repin was born to a poor family near Kharkov, Russia (now Kharkiv, Ukraine). He learned his trade from a painter of icons named Bunakov and in 1864 became a student at the Academy of Fine Arts at St. Petersburg. In 1871 he won an academy scholarship that enabled him to visit France and Italy, and, when he returned to Russia, he devoted himself to history painting. In 1894 Repin became professor of historical painting at the academy in St. Petersburg.
The powerful Volga Bargemen (1873) epitomizes the stark realism and socially critical cast of much of Repin’s work, which was to serve as a model for Socialist Realist painting in the Soviet Union. His work tends to be grim in tone, sharply drawn, and boldly composed. Among his pictures are Religious Procession in Kursk Gubernia (1880–83), Ivan the Terrible and His Son Ivan, November 16, 1581 (1885), and Zaporozhye Cossacks (1880–91), the latter perhaps his best-known work. He also did vigorous portraits of his great Russian contemporaries, such as Leo Tolstoy, Mikhail Glinka, and Modest Mussorgsky.