Zofia Nalepińska-Bojczuk
Zofia Oleksandriwna Nalepińska-Bojczuk (born July 30, 1884 in Lodz, died December 11, 1937 in Kiev) - Ukrainian painter, she created book illustrations, woodcuts, graphics; the sister of Polish poet T. Nalepinski and the wife of the Ukrainian artist Mychai Bojczuk.
Curriculum vitaeShe was born in Lodz. Pole of origin. Her maternal grandfather taught mathematics at the Warsaw Gymnasium. Her father Aleksander was a Polish nationalist. Her mother was also not Ukrainian. Zofia's grandfather was known as a doctor. He helped the poor and needy. She graduated from the painting school. She was a student at the Académie Ranson in Paris at Paul Serusier, where she met Michajlo Bojczuk and became a member of the group of militant activists calling for the rebirth of Byzantine art (1909). In 1918 she gave birth to Petra's son (Peter). From 1919 she lectured at Myrhodzko School of Art and Ceramics, and in 1922 she conducted workshops at the Kyiv Institute of Fine Arts. In the years 1925-1929 she lectured at the Institute of Art in Kiev. Nalepińska had many problems with her husband. Bojchuk's private life has come to the background, giving way to work and aspirations for professionalism. On December 11, 1937, by the cause of her husband Mykhail Bojchuk, she was arrested, accused, sentenced to death and shot by the NKVD under Stalinist purges. Her case was led by Perera Iskijwna Goldman, who also sentenced A. I, O Slisarenka or O. Doswitny. Rehabilitated posthumously in 1958. Creation
She created covers and graphics for books. The author of such paintings as: "Fabzajec '" (1925), "Meni trynadcjatyj mynalo ...", "Molotube", "On vacation" (all from 1926), "Pered nastupom bilych", "Holodni dity" (both of 1927) "The Pacific Islands of Ukraine" (1930), "Robitfakiwky" (1931), "Exaltation" (1932). Illustrated some book editions: "Kateryna" by T. Shevchenko, "Pryjmak" by D. Mamin-Sybirjak (1929). S. Wasylchenko (1930), Anna Karenina by L. Tolstowe (1935) and others. The artist is also the author of unrealized projects of paper money and other securities in the years 1917-1921, which were shown at the "Ukrainian Contemporary Grafik Exhibition" by the Association of Independent Ukrainian Artists (Lviv, June 1932). Memory
The name of Zofia Nalepińska-Bojczuk is one of over forty other names that are on the monument of repressed artists, shown in 1996 at the National Academy of Fine Arts in Kiev. Literature
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