Lydia Galochkina

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Lydia Galochkina (2015)

Lydia Galochkina ( Лидия Николаевна Галочкина / Lidija Nikolajewna Galotschkina ; born February 20, 1956 in Kiev , Ukrainian SSR , Soviet Union ) is a Soviet - German artist, author and teacher.

resume

After the nuclear disaster at Chernobyl Lydia Galochkina moved in 1986 with her husband, Valentin Galotschkin and their sons initially from Kiev to Moscow to and in July 1999 to Germany. As quota refugees , the family had an initial five months in a refugee / asylum seeker accommodation in Nordwestmecklenburg in Wismar , on the outskirts of the city in Haffburg live.

After studying for a degree in engineering at the Technical University of Kiev (with main subjects including physics, engineering, technical drawing and technical English), she took part in an art course by the sculptor Oleg Komow .

She studied English for eight semesters at the state foreign language school in Hamburg, then literature at the Maxim Gorki Literature Institute in Moscow. During her studies and afterwards she taught physics, English and German. She also continued to work as a freelance writer for the specialist magazine “Englisch” and for the art newspaper “The News Art” of the professional association of visual artists in Moscow.

She writes texts and poems in Russian, German and English.

Lydia Galochkina is a member of the VS Bayern local board .

Galochkina lives with her husband in Moscow and Munich.

Awards

  • 2009: Diploma and Medal, Professional Association of Russian Writers
  • 2011: Silver Medal of the Russian State Academy of Art
  • 2012: Diploma from the Russian State Academy of Art

Works

Art exhibitions

Russia

  • 1994 - 2018 Moscow / Roslavl, Smolensk Region

Germany

  • 2002–2006 Hamburg
  • 2015–2019 Munich

Art collections with works by Lydia Galochkina

  • State Museum of Ethnology, Hamburg
  • State Literature Museum, Moscow
  • State All-Russian Museum of Decorative Applied Arts, Moscow
  • State Darwin Museum, Moscow online
  • State Ilya Mashkov Museum of Fine Arts, Volgograd
  • State Museum of Fine Arts, Oryol
  • State Museum Rosizo of the Ministry of Culture of Russia
  • State Museum of Russian Art, Kiev
  • State Art Gallery “Usadba Kuskowo XVIII. Century ”, Moscow
  • State Museum of Modern Art, Petrovka Street, Moscow
  • State Museum of Fine Arts, Northern Kazakhstan, Petropavlovsk
  • Boris Yeltsin's art collection
  • Russian State Archives for Literature and Art (RGALI), Moscow
  • The State Central Museum of Contemporary History of Russia
  • Lehmann Art Gallery Hamburg-Harburg online
  • Art gallery Raum & Kunst Burgmann Hamburg online

Individual evidence

  1. Официальный сайт Музейно-выставочного комплекса Российской Академии Художеств. "Вручение наград Российской академии художеств", October 24, 2012. Retrieved October 3, 2017 (Russian).