Anatolyj Brusylowskyj

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Anatolyj Rafaylowytsch Brusylowskyj ( Ukrainian Анатолий Рафаилович Брусиловский ; born June 4, 1932 in Odessa , Ukrainian SSR ) is a Ukrainian- Russian graphic artist and photographer.

life and work

Brusylowskyi graduated from the Kharkov Institute in 1957. In 1961 he illustrated the book Die Brücke by Manfred Gregor and in 1964 Der Fänger im Roggen by JD Salinger .

Brusylowskyj produces assemblages , collages , photographs, paintings and graphics . He was one of the Russian nonconformists who formed a countermovement to Socialist Realism during the thaw period .

The photographic series “Studio” shows his artist colleagues from the Russian underground movement . Each individual portrait was prepared by him with composition drawings , selection of the staging, accessories and lighting. The photo session , for which he took one day at a time, was initiated by him with long conversations in which the characteristic mood and facial expressions, eye expression, posture and gestures of the person for the portrait were discovered and determined.

Brusylowskyj is a member of the Russian Association of Artists and the Russian Union of Journalists and Photographers. He was a lecturer at San Diego State University .

He has exhibited in different countries including Germany, Poland, Italy, France, Switzerland, Russia, Israel and USA. He is represented by Galleries Sandmann in Berlin and Gmurzynska in Zurich.

Exhibitions

Publications

  • The Pantheon of the Russian Underground, 2008

Individual evidence

  1. Eurasia Gallery From Massowː Brusilovsky, Anatol Biographie.Retrieved October 28, 2014
  2. Moscow Museum of Modern Art: Anatoly Brusilovsky: Pantheon of the Russian underground , accessed on October 27, 2014 (English).
  3. galerie gmurzynskaː Anatol Brusilovsky ( memento of October 28, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) accessed on October 27, 2014

Web links