Alexander Naftulovich Zuser ( 1896 , Odessa - October 23, 1941 , Odessa ) - Soviet artist, graphic artist.
| Alexander Naftulovich Zuser | |
|---|---|
| Date of Birth | 1896 |
| Place of Birth | Odessa |
| Date of death | October 23, 1941 |
| Place of death | Odessa |
| Citizenship | |
| Study | |
Biography
Born in Odessa in the family of a teacher and publisher Naftul Berkovich Zuser. [1] Father in 1914-1915 published the daily newspaper North-West Thought in Minsk ; [2] [3] The editor of this newspaper was the elder brother of the future artist - writer and publicist Solomon Naftulovich Zuser , who in Soviet times became a major archaeologist and skythologist. [4] [5] [6]
Since the fall of 1912 he studied at the painting and sculpture department at the Odessa Art College , was friends with Amshey Nurenberg and Alexander Berkovich (1891-1951); graduated from college in 1918 . [7] [8] He participated in exhibitions of Odessa artists of the 1920-1930s, for the last time in the First Reporting Exhibition of the Creative Sector of Art and Sculpture Workshops December 21, 1939 - February 25, 1940. He lived at st. Korolenko, 20. He was engaged in collecting paintings by pre-revolutionary and Soviet artists. He taught at the Art College.
He was publicly hanged by the occupying Romanian troops the day after the explosion by underground members of the former NKVD department during the first mass punitive action against the Jewish population of the city. [9]
Notes
- ↑ Deribasovskaya — Rishelievskaya: Almanac
- ↑ Bibliography of Russian periodicals (1901-1916)
- ↑ Northwest Thought. Daily newspaper. Minsk. 1914-1915. Ed. S. N. Zuser. Ed. N. B. Zuser.
- ↑ Naftul Berkovich Zuser
- ↑ History of the Kharkiv University: University of History (1905–2013) : Solomon Naftaliyovich Zuser .
- ↑ Vengerov S. A. “Dictionary of Russian Writers”: Zuser Semyon Naftalevich
- ↑ Zhanna Vasilieva “Free artist on the big road of history”
- ↑ Amsha Nuremberg "Odessa — Paris — Moscow: The Artist's Memories"
- ↑ Sergey Lushchuk “An unknown painting by Leonid Pasternak was discovered”