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Izmailovich, Dmitry Vasilyevich

Dmitry Vasilyevich Izmailovich ( port. Dimitri Ismailovitch ; 1890, Satanov - October 15, 1976 [1] , Rio de Janeiro ) - Russian and Brazilian artist.

Dmitry Izmailovich
Date of Birth1890 ( 1890 )
Place of BirthSatanov , Podolsk province , Russian Empire (now Gorodok district , Khmelnytsky region )
Date of deathOctober 15, 1976 ( 1976-10-15 )
Place of deathRio de Janeiro , Brazil
CitizenshipRussia , Brazil
Study

Content

Biography

Born in Ukraine. He graduated from Sumy Cadet Corps (1907), Pavlovsk Military School in St. Petersburg. In 1911 he was in France among the three Russian officers sent to maneuvers from the Life Guards of the Kexholm regiment . After the outbreak of the First World War, he was a machine-gunner, later served in the headquarters of the division, corps, and then the army of General A. A. Brusilov . After the revolution, left military service. In 1918-1919, he studied painting in Kiev , in the Ukrainian Academy of Art under the famous artist M. I. Zhuk . Held in Kiev solo exhibition. In 1919 he emigrated to Constantinople , where he lived until 1927, and studied Byzantine and Persian art [2] [3] [4] .

In 1927, through Athens, London and the United States came to Brazil, where the donkey. He taught painting in Rio de Janeiro, his student, in particular, was Danila Vasiliev [5] . He was known as a portrait painter; in portraits he used elements of icon-painting technique [6] . In the last period of his life he painted mostly landscapes and still lifes. In 1968, a personal exhibition was held in the municipality of Rio de Janeiro, dedicated to the 50th anniversary of Izmailovich's creative activity [7] .

 
Untitled (1955), Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul

Two paintings are on permanent display at the National Museum of Fine Arts in Rio de Janeiro . Izmailovich also performed two coi icons in the Church of the Annunciation of the Mother of God (São Paulo) in São Paulo [8] ( 1954 ).

After 1976, there were eight posthumous solo exhibitions of the artist's works, all in Brazil [3] .

Notes

  1. ↑ artru.info
  2. ↑ Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (inaccessible link)
  3. ↑ 1 2 Enciclopedia Itau Cultural de Artes Visuais
  4. ↑ IZMAYLOVICH Dmitry Vasilyevich. Art and architecture of Russian abroad
  5. ↑ Australian Dictionary of Biography
  6. ↑ MF virtual gallery Archival copy of August 3, 2016 on the Wayback Machine
  7. ↑ A. A. Khisamutdinov, Russians in Brazil . Latin America, No.9 (2005).
  8. ↑ Kolupaev V.E. Russian features in Brazil in the second half of the 20th century // Yearbook of historical and anthropological research for 2011/2012 / RUDN, Interuniversity Research Center for Comparative Historical and Anthropological Research. M: EKON-INFORM, 2012. c. 48 - 60. ISBN 978-5-9506-0928-2

Links to images of paintings

  • Still life
  • Istituto de Artes UFRGS (inaccessible link)
  • Portrait of Eugenia Alvaro Moreira
  • Portrait of Lily Marinho
  • Portrait of Guilleme de Almeida
  • Portrait of Clarice Lispector

Sources

  • Regis F., de . Russian life in Brazil // For the Truth! Buenos Aires. No. 242, 1954.
  • Icons of the Church of the Annunciation // Friends and acquaintances, newspaper (São Paulo) . Sao Paulo. No. 5.1975. with. 2
  • Art of their life // Friends and acquaintances, newspaper (São Paulo) . Number 2, 1969. p. one.
  • Ayala Walmir. Dicionário de Pintores Brasileiros. 1997. H. 123.
  • Braga Theodoro. Artistas pintores no brasil. São Paulo: São Paulo Editora, 1942.
  • Teixeira José Roberto. Leite: Dicionário crítico da pintura no Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Artlivre, 1988.
  • Cecília Maria. Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo: Catálogo geral de obras. 1988
  • Lourenço França. São Paulo: Imprensa Oficial do Estado, 1988 .; Pontual Roberto. Dicionário das artes plásticas no Brasil: * Apresentação de Antônio Houaiss. Rio de Janeiro: Civilização Brasileira, 1969.
  • Rubens Carlos. Pequena história das artes plásticas no Brasil. São Paulo: Nacional, 1941.
  • Salao de 31 (Sala Especial do VII Salão Nacional de Arte Plásticas). Rio de Janeiro: Funarte, 1984.

Links

Kolupaev V. Dmitry Vasilyevich Izmailovich // Religious leaders of the Russian diaspora

Source - https://ru.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Izmailovich,_Dmitry_Vasilevich&oldid=93636514


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