Viktor Zarubin

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Viktor Zarubin
Виктор Иванович Зарубин
Зарубин Виктор Иванович (1910).jpg
Born(1866-11-13)November 13, 1866
DiedNovember 5, 1928(1928-11-05) (aged 61)
EducationMember Academy of Arts (1909)
Alma materHigher Art School (1898)
Known forPainting

Viktor Ivanovich Zarubin (Ukrainian: Віктор Іванович Зарубін; Russian: Виктор Иванович Зарубин; 13 November 1866, Kharkov - 5 November 1928, Saint Petersburg) was a Ukrainian-born Ukrainian and Russian painter and scenographer. Most of his works are landscapes with figures.

Biography[]

His father was a professor. Upon completing his basic education at the local gymnasium, he enrolled at the University of Kharkov where, at the urging of his parents, he graduated from the physics and mathematics department in 1893. During those years, he also worked part-time for the "Казённая палата" (Treasury Chamber), an agency of the Ministry of Finance.[1]

Immediately after graduation, he resigned his position there and ran away with his fiancée to study art in Paris. He was at the Académie Julian for three years; studying with Jules Lefebvre and Tony Robert-Fleury and held his first small exhibition in 1896.[1]

He then moved to Saint Petersburg, where he was admitted to the Imperial Academy of Arts and studied with Arkhip Kuindzhi.[2] From 1897, he participated in the annual exhibitions there and, in 1898, was named an "Artist, First Degree" for his painting "The House of God". In 1909, he was promoted to "Academician".[2]

After 1917, he helped design Revolutionary events and festivities, organized art shows, and illustrated children's books.[1] He also participated in the last few exhibitions of the Peredvizhniki and, in 1925, became a member of "AKhRR". Over the last decade of his life, he was a regular exhibitor at the numerous state-sponsored art events that came and went as the various factions in the government sorted themselves out. He was especially successful at the "Jubilee Exhibition of Theatrical and Decorative Art" in 1927.[2]

His works may be seen in museums throughout what are now Russia, Ukraine and Belarus.

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c Brief biography @ Art-100.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c Brief biography @ Artcyclopedia.ru.

External links[]

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