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#Vasyl Krychevsky
vintage-ukraine · 1 year
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Ornament by Vasyl Krychevsky, 1922
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viragfold · 3 months
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Mail Art Call: Vasyl Krychevsky
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150 éve született Vaszil Kricsevszkij, ukrán festő, építész, művészettudós, iparművész, grafikus, filmművészeti teoretikus. Egyébiránt ő alkotta meg az 1918-as ukrán címert, ill. az első ukrán bankjegyeket is ő tervezte. A Szumi városában napokban nyíló kiállítás azon a Mail Art projekten alapul, mely neki állít emléket. A küldött munkámmal a jövőről tűnődöm. Winston Churchill jut eszembe valahányszor, amikor a mostani, háborúval sújtott Ukrajna kulturális projektjeit látom és csodálom; azt, amiképp az emberi/társadalmi létezésnek ezen elemi dimenzióit próbálják a golyózáporban is fenntartani. A brit miniszterelnökhöz kötődik ugyanis állítólag a következő gondolat: valamikor a háború alatt azt javasolták neki, hogy a nehéz költségvetési helyzet miatt álljon le a kultúra intézményestül, mindenestül, Churchill erre visszakérdezett: „Akkor miért harcolunk?”. Annak nagyon örülök, hogy odaért a lapom, voltak félelmeim, mert sajnos, a közelmúltban egyes küldeményeim visszajöttek onnan. A kiállítás kurátora, Roman Golub nemrég tette közzé a részvételi certifikációkat, köztük az enyémet is, melyet ezúton köszönök.
Egy videó a kiállításról (feliratozva is nézhető):
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guhfis · 7 months
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inspired by ukrainian artist Vasyl Krychevsky. triptych "Life" (Love, Family and Return)
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unhonestlymirror · 6 months
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A fancy outfit from my homeland: юпка "з перчиками" - jupka "with peppers." People who actively use russian language often confuse it with юбка (a skirt). Ukrainians still quarrell whether it originates from Kyiv region or Poltava region. XD
Yupka is a Ukrainian traditional women's clothing: a light shortened coat, intricately cut, with inserted wedges that extended to the bottom. It was usually decorated with embroidery with thin strips of velvet, but in Kyiv and Poltava regions it was covered with thin pieces of wool - red on a green background "peppers", less often - green on red background. In the photo is just such a "pepper" yupka from the funds of the Poltava Museum of Local Lore named after Vasyl Krychevsky (second photo by annasenik). Some people claim it was meant to imitate a royal mantle... but it sounds quite offensive. XD
Illya Ripyn (Repin) painted a portrait of Sofya Dragomyrova (daughter of the commander of the Kyiv, Podilsk and Volyn Governorate, General Mykhailo Dragomyrov) in this very green "jupka" (first photo).
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byneddiedingo · 2 months
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Earth (Aleksandr Dovzhenko, 1930)
Cast: Stepan Shkurat, Semen Svashenko, Yuliya Solintseva, Yelena Maksimova, Mykola Nademsky, Petro Masokha, Ivan Franko, Volodymyr Mikhajlov, Pavlo Petrik. Screenplay: Aleksandr Dovzhenko. Cinematography: Danill Demutsky. Art direction: Vasyl Vasylovych Krychevsky. Film editing: Alexsandr Dovzhenko. 
At once lyrical, tragic, and enigmatic, Aleksandr Dovzhenko's Earth might be viewed today as an example of how Ukraine has always been a temptation and a thorn in the side of Russia -- or at least those in Russia who would try to rule it. As a film about the collectivization of agriculture in the young Soviet Union it bears comparison to Sergei Eisenstein's The Old and the New (1929), which attempted that subject with a much heavier hand: Its celebration of the tractor, in comparison with Dovzhenko's somewhat problematic introduction of a tractor whose radiator has to be pissed in before it will function, concludes with a tractor ballet. And Eisenstein's treatment of the reactionary clergy involves an all too obvious montage in which the followers of the church are juxtaposed with a herd of sheep; Dovzhenko is content with just showing his priest's frenzied proclamations of anathema on the collectivists. But Eisenstein's film, like Dovzhenko's, met with official disapproval: Collectivization was just too important to Stalin not to undergo intense ideological scrutiny. Artistically, Dovzhenko's Earth has to be judged the greater film, one in which the relationship of beauty and terror informs almost every frame.
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buddha-arena · 2 years
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St. Michael's Cathedral in Kyiv (1952)
Vasyl Hryhorovych Krychevsky (Ukrainian, 1873 - 1952)
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propalahramota · 2 years
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A cover of Ukrainian Art Magazine by Vasyl Krychevsky, 1918
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simena · 4 years
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Nicholas (Mykola Vasyl) KRYCHEVSKY
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fromthegallerytoday · 2 years
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From the gallery today, Fedir Krychevsky, a prolific Ukrainian painter (b. 1879). His work was a fascinating fusion of folk art sensibilities, Art Nouveau, modernism, and sacred icon paintings. Krychevsky worked at the Kyiv Art School and was a much-loved tutor. The 1920s were called by some, the Ukrainian Renaissance with the establishment of an independent Ukrainian state, but by the end of that decade the sovietization, or Russification, of Ukraine was in full force. Creative freedom was severely curtailed in what became known as the Executed Renaissance. Ukrainian language, culture, and heritage were systematically and deliberately erased. Thousands of Ukrainian writers and artists were arrested or shot during the Stalinist purges of 1930-1940. The Soviets insisted on Socialist Realism, a highly regulated art style, meant to promote an idealized image of the USSR. As a staunch defender of Ukrainian culture, Krychevsky was a thorn in the side of the Nazi and Stalinist regimes, but he remained in Kyiv through the brutal Nazi occupation. In 1943 Krychevsky moved to Konigsberg to be with his brother Vasyl. An attempt to flee to the West resulted in him being seized by the Russian KGB and interrogated. In 1944 he returned to his beloved Kyiv, but as an internal exile. His health and his spirit broke. After three years of extreme hardship in Irpin, a suburb of Kyiv, he died of starvation during the 1947 famine. During his challenging life, his love for Ukrainian heritage was evident in every piece he created. USA, please stop Putin from writing more history of violence and death in Ukraine. ❤️🎨❤️ 🇺🇦 #saveukraine#ukraineartists#ukraineculture#ukraineheritage#ukrainepeople#stopukrainewar#closetheskies
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carmencitab · 2 years
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Zvenygora, Affiche de cinéma, 1927. Vasyl Krychevsky (Vorozhba 1873-1952) (Le film est constitué de douze épisodes, dont chacun raconte l'un des moments clés de l'histoire ukrainienne, depuis l'époque des Varègues à la guerre civile russe et la révolution d'Octobre. Les épisodes sont présentés sous la forme d'un rêve surréaliste et sont unis par la figure du grand-père. Source wiki) https://instagr.am/p/CbCxkhwrvfT/
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vintage-ukraine · 1 year
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Great and lesser coats of arm of the Ukrainian People Republic by Vasyl Krychevsky, 1918
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viragfold · 9 months
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Mail Art Call: Vasyl Krychevsky
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Vasyl Krychevsky: WIKIPEDIA
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skyartbook-blog · 6 years
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MALARSTVO AVANGARD COLOR FONT Designer: ©Alena Morgunova @alena_morgunova More: https://goo.gl/gtDSP2 Color OpenType-SVG font Malarstvo with Latin and Cyrillic letters and alternates glyphs! I named this font "Malarstvo" because I was really inspired of lettering by Ukrainian artist Vasyl Krychevsky. Vasyl Krychevsky (1873-1952) was an outstanding Ukrainian architect, artist, scholar, and teacher. His contribution to the development of modern Ukrainian art and culture was great and diverse. He set a new trend in the art of book design in Ukraine. This font work nicely for all sorts of things including t-shirt design, typographic art, social media images and so much more! @fontself #alenamorgunov #graphics#graphicdesing #graphics#graphicdesigner #graphicdesign#2in1design #2in1designstudio #design #color #ukraine #font #vectorfont #glyph #latin #fonts   #cyrillic #abc #alpfabet #typography #typographyinspired  #thedailytype #malarstvo #krychevsky #vasylkrychevsky (at Kharkov, Ukraine)
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vintage-ukraine · 1 year
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The cover of The Ukrainian Book XVI–XVII–XVIII Centuries by Vasyl Krychevsky, 1925
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vintage-ukraine · 1 year
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Vasyl Krychevsky`s cover of Contrasts by Hrytsko Chuprynka, 1913
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vintage-ukraine · 2 years
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The Rocks over the Sea by Vasyl Krychevsky, 1923
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