Vasily Sedlyar
Vasyl Teofanovych Sedliar (Ukrainian: Васи́ль Теофанович Седля́р: 12 April 1899, Khristyvka, Shyshaky Raion — 13 July 1937, Kiev) was a Ukrainian painter, illustrator and art teacher; executed in the Great Purge. He was also known for his ceramic and faience work.
Biography
He was born to a peasant farming family. From 1915 to 1919, he studied at the Kiev Art School then, from 1919 to 1923, at the Ukrainian State Academy of Arts under Mykhailo Boychuk. He later became one of Boychuk's closest associates.
He was one of the founders of the Association of Revolutionary Art of Ukraine (ARMU) and held several teaching positions: at the mezhyhirska Art and Ceramics College (1923-1928), the Technological Institute of Ceramics and Glass (1928-1930) and the National Academy (then known as the Kiev Art Institute, 1930-1936).[1]
Among his best known works were the murals at the Chervonozavodsk State Ukrainian Drama Theater, which were later destroyed.
He was arrested at his home in Kharkiv by the NKVD, in 1936, on charges of espionage and counterrevolutionary activities; based on a trip to Germany, France and Italy that he had taken with Boychuk in 1927. He was taken to a prison in Kiev, confessed under torture and was executed by firing squad on 13 July 1937, along with Boychuk and the painter Ivan Padalka.[1] He was rehabilitated in 1958.
In 2009 the publishing house, Dukh i Litera, issued a new edition of Kobzar by Taras Shevchenko, with all eighteen of Sedliar's original illustrations, some in color.[2] That same year, an exhibition of his surviving works was held at the National Art Museum of Ukraine.
References
- Artur Rudzynskiy; "The Illustrator of 'Kobzar' Vasily Sedlyar: The Fate of the Master and His Work"
- Kobzar @ Dukh i Litera
External links
Media related to Vasily Sedlyar at Wikimedia Commons
- Marko Stekh, from Очима культури #37 "The Legacy of Mykhailo Boychuk and Boychukism"
- Artur Rudzynskiy; "Unique photos of illustrations of 'Kobzar' by Vasily Sedlyar" from Pravda
- Kostantyn Rodyk; "Leninism and Art: A Knife and Sulfuric Acid" @ Україна Молода