Eduard Anatoljewitsch Budogoski

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eduard Anatolyevich Budogoski ( Russian Эдуард Анатольевич Будогоский * July 9 jul. / 22. July  1903 greg. In Zlatoust , Russian Empire ; † 19th July 1976 in Moscow ) was a Soviet Illustrator , in particular by woodcuts in children's books of the 1930s known .

Life

Budogoski was the son of an officer. His older sister Lidija Budogoskaja (1898-1984) was a well-known writer.

Budogoski first studied at the Suvorov military schools in Warsaw and Moscow as preparation for a military career. In 1922 he moved to the Petrograd Art Academy , where he was able to study through the entrance examination at the graphic faculty until 1926. His teachers were Mstislav Dobuschinski , Viktor Samirailo , Jelisaveta Kruglikowa and Dmitri Mitrochin . He deepened the techniques of woodcut with Pawel Schillingowski .

Budogoski then worked for 8 years at OGIS, the state publisher from 1926 to 1934. There he was Vladimir Lebedev's assistant in the children's book department. Illustrations were created for Sapruda by Olga Bergholz , Seljodka by N. Keskla, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain and Fedka by Dojwber Lewin . This was the most fertile time.

During the war destroyed most original of his works and materials. It was not until the 1950s that he began to illustrate children's books again. He moved to Moscow, but his publishing house demanded the realistic standards of the time, so these last years of his work have unfortunately not produced particularly outstanding works.

Individual evidence

  1. БУДОГОСКИЙ ЭДУАРД АНАТОЛЬЕВИЧ
  2. Работы художника Э.А. Будогоского