Thanks to Petro Kholodny, Kholodnyi or Kholodny
Older (Петро Холодний Старший in
Ukrainian), a famous Ukrainian impressionist painter with an inclination to lyricism and neovizantyst, painter-Monumental, graphic designer crafts, teacher by profession a physicist-chemist and public leader.
Born on
18 December, 1876, in Pereiaslav, then
Poltava gubernia, now
Kiev Region,
Ukraine and on 7 June,
1930, in
Warsaw,Poland.
Relatives of
Peter from mother's side were icon-painters who worked primarily in Poltava.
Distinguished painter, by profession a chemist. A graduate of the
Kyiv Drawing School, he began to exhibit his work in 1910. His early paintings include A
Tale of a
Girl and
Peacock (
1916), Ivasyk and the
Witch,
The Wind, Kateryna, and A
Gray Day. As a chemist, he was interested in paint manufacturing and application techniques. Attracted by ancient
Galician icons in
1914, he became fascinated with the tempera technique and used it frequently. During the Ukrainian struggle for independence (1917--20), Kholodny worked in the
Central Rada's
Secretariat of Public Education and
Ministry of Education. Under the
Directory of the
Ukrainian National Republic he was deputy minister of education.
Leaving Ukraine with the Ukrainian National Republic government in
1920, he was interned by the
Poles in
Tarnów and in
1921 settled in
Lviv.
The subsequent period proved to be the most productive one in Kholodny's artistic career. In
1922 he helped found the
Circle of Promoters of Ukrainian
Art and took part in its exhibitions. He began to paint icons and churches and to design stained-glass windows. His principal works of this period are the icons and stained-glass windows of the
Dormition Church in Lviv, the iconostasis and murals of the
Chapel of the
Greek Catholic Theological Seminary in Lviv, numerous icons of the parish churches in Radelychi, Kholoiv,
Borshchovychi, and Zubrets, and the stained-glass windows of the church in Mraznytsia. The basic features of his work, rooted in Ukrainian artistic traditions that grew out of the synthesis of
Byzantine iconography with folk art, were compositional unity, the primacy of the line, and harmonious, warm colors. In his stained-glass windows, Kholodny juxtaposed elements of pure colored glass to
Volodymyr achieve lightness and transparency. He painted many portraits: Samiilenko, Andrii Nikovsky, Yuliian Romanchuk, Rev Yosyf Slipy, and
Ukrainian army officers such as generals
Mykola Yunakiv,
Marko Bezruchko,
Volodymyr Salsky,
Mykhailo Omelianovych-Pavlenko,
Yurii Tiutiunnyk, and
Volodymyr Sinkler and
Colonel Dmytro Vitovsky. Historical compositions such as Leaving the
Castle,
Prince Ihor's
Campaign against the Cumans, and Oh, the Rye in the
Field are worthy of note.
During his stay in Lviv in 1928, decided to go to
Paris to collect material for future paintings, which would be devoted to the death of
Simon Petliura. He gathered the necessary material, but the idea remained unrealized. Written several research papers were published.
He died in 1930 in
Warsaw.
Kholodny's style can be described as a mature impressionism of a Ukrainian variety that is profoundly lyrical. His neo-Byzantine works, which rivaled those of
Mykhailo Boichuk, revealed new potentialities of the ancient style, free of schematism or archaism. Kholodny also worked in graphic art, developing his own style of drawing. A posthumous exhibition of his works was held in Lviv in 1931. After the
Red Army occupied Lviv, many of Kholodny's works were destroyed for their allegedly 'nationalist' spirit and his church murals were painted over.
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Halyna Myroslava "
Looking for"
Галина Мирослава "Шукаючи або Туманно в пелерині неба"
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- published: 11 Aug 2010
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