Maybe someone wants to buy this painting or will help me to sell it?
I will wait for all proposals.
Regards,
Macas
Added after 48 seconds
Isaev, Nikolai (one thousand eight hundred ninety-one -1977)
Painter, graphic designer, representative of the "Paris School". He was born near Odessa. In the early 1900s he studied at art schools in Odessa and Kharkov in 1912, arrived in St. Petersburg. In 1919 he emigrated to the Kingdom of CXC. In 1920-24 he worked decorator of the National Theatre in Belgrade, copied Byzantine frescoes. In 1924, held in Belgrade, the first solo exhibition. In 1925 he moved to Paris. Attended the workshop VI Shuhaeva and AE Yakovlev. In 1926 he held a day-man show. He painted landscapes, still lifes with flowers, fish and birds, and portraits. He participated in the Salon d'Automne and the Salon des Tuileries, exhibitions of Russian art in Brussels (1928) and Paris (1931, 1932), exhibitions of the "Circle" in Belgrade (1931). Performed scenery for the theater J. Pitoeva. Designed the pavilion of the Baltic States at the International Exhibition in Paris (1937). After the war, traveled to the south of France, Switzerland, Italy, Spain, wrote a lot of landscapes. During this period came to a free of figurative painting, rich in color, with a pronounced decorative principle. Performed the frescoes and icons for the Uniate Church in Marseille and Strasbourg. Created illustrations for books C. Baudelaire, P. Ronsard, Poe, Nikolai Gogol. Collaborated in the magazine "C'est Paris". Held solo exhibitions in several galleries in Paris (1949, 1951, 1962, 1964, 1968, 1976 - retrospective), a New York gallery (1957). He participated in the Autumn Salan, Independent, in an exhibition of European art at New York gallery (1965), shows "Russian artists of the Paris School" (1961) and "Russian view" (1974). He was buried at Saint Genevieve de Bois. Represented in the museums of Zurich, Chicago and the Museum of Modern Art in Paris.
Последний раз редактировалось macas; 31.10.2011 в 20:42.
Причина: Добавлено сообщение
|