Lidia Ivanovna (Ioannikievna) Ballier (nee Arionesco , also Arionesco-Balllier ; March 22, 1880 , Chisinau , Bessarabian province , Russian Empire - 1923 , Chisinau , Romania ) - Russian artist. Representative of post-impressionism and neo-impressionism .
| Lydia Ballier | |
|---|---|
| Lidia arionescu-baillayre | |
| Birth name | Lidia Ioannikievna Arionesco |
| Date of Birth | |
| Place of Birth | Chisinau , Bessarabia , Russian Empire |
| Date of death | |
| Place of death | Kishinev |
| A country | |
| Genre | |
| Study | Imperial Academy of Arts |
Biography
Born in the family of an employee of the Bessarabian Zemstvo Council, later the provincial secretary and court adviser Ionniki Panteleimonovich Arionesco (also Arioneskul) and his first wife Anna Georgievna. Father, among other things, owned the Rashkovskaya locomotive mill. In 1886, the family moved into house No. 49 on Leovskaya Street (now Shchusev St., 63) in Chisinau [1] .
Initially, she studied at the School of Drawing in Chisinau (workshop of V.F. Okushko ), continued her education at the Imperial Academy of Arts in St. Petersburg under the leadership of L. Dmitriev-Kavkazsky (1907), studied with V. Donchev and A. Ballier (for whom she married in 1907).
Member of the first St. Petersburg society of experimental artists and innovators "Youth Union" . Until 1918, she lived with her husband in Petrograd at 5 Bolshaya Raznochinnaya Street; then returned to Chisinau.
She took part in exhibitions in St. Petersburg and Vilna (1903-1910), Chisinau (1908, 1920, 1923).
The author of still lifes and portraits.
Notes
Links
- Arionescu-Baillayre Lidia (rum.)