Another Ukrainian artist, who has had a great influence on the younger generation, is the early modernist painter, FEDIR KRYCHEVSKY. He was born in 1879 in Lebedyn, in the Kharkov Governorate of the Russian Empire, to the family of a Jewish country doctor who converted to Orthodox Christianity and married a Ukrainian woman.
He
graduated from the Moscow School
of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture in 1901 and the Saint Petersburg Academy of Arts in
1910. He traveled in Western Europe for a year, and studied
briefly with Gustav Klimt in
He served as the chairman of the Union of Ukrainian Artists that tried to improve the conditions of artists during the occupation. He was extremely popular among the artist-colleagues, faculty at the institute and the students, and no one betrayed his Jewish origins to the German authorities, saving him from the Babi Yar massacre.
He moved to Königsberg in the summer of 1943, to join his brother Vasyl, a graphic designer. He attempted to flee west to escape the advancing Soviet troops, but the train in which he was traveling was overtaken.
Fedir was arrested by
the NKVD as
a collaborator, but his interrogations elicited nothing that could incriminate
him, so he was stripped of all his titles and honors and sent to exile to the village
of Irpin near
Kyiv where he died of starvation during the famine in 1947, despite the food
help that was receiving from his student Tetyana
Yablonska.
Twelve years after his death Fedir was rehabilitated. In 1959 the first exhibition of his works was held in Kyiv, and information about his work began to be published.
For 30
years, Fedir was one of the leading figures in Ukrainian art. In 1911
and 1913 he organized the first strictly Ukrainian art exhibitions. Beginning
in 1897, his work was exhibited at over 34 shows in and outside
Fedir's triptych "Life" remains one of the iconic examples of Ukrainian modernism. (Painting to left part of this work). The work combines the elements Art Nouveau and Ukrainian Religious paintings. Each painting contains respectively eternal themes of life — love, achievement and loss. Fedir's modern touch to the pictures, like planar-linear rhythm and harmony of colors, enriched the paintings' classical interpretation.
He had many students throughout his long career, notably Boris Kriukow and Tetyana
Yablonska (See Blog April 2022).
There is a
street in Kyiv named in his honor.
Art: Top- Self Portrait
Botttom
left- Part of "Life" triptych
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