Marija Felixovna Bri-Bein
Marija Felixowna Bri-Bein ( Мария Феликсовна Бри-Бейн , scientific transliteration Marija Feliksovna Bri-Bejn ; born June 2, 1892 in Odessa , Russian Empire ; † 1971 or 1968 in Moscow , RSFSR ) was a Russian painter and graphic artist .
Life
1910–1915 she was trained at KK Kostandi in Odessa. In 1917 she took part in an exhibition. 1917-1919 she was a member of the Towarischtschestwa Juschnorusskich Chudoschnikow ( Товарищества южнорусских художников , ТЮРХ , South Russian painter cooperative TJuRCh) and 1926-1932 the Assoziazia Chudoschinkow Revolyutsii ( Ассоциация художников революции , АХР , Association of Painters of the revolution, AChR). In 1924 she was a student of Ilya Ivanovich Mashkov in Moscow. She created agitprop posters, watercolor portraits and ivory miniatures. In 1928 she took part in an exhibition of the AChR (then AChRR) in Moscow on the tenth anniversary of the Red Army , and in 1932 in the exhibition on the fifteenth anniversary in Moscow's Gorky Park .
literature
- Oskar Eduardowitsch Wolzenburg: Художники народов СССР . Бойченко-Геонджиан. Искусство, 1972, p. 67 ( online ).
Web links
- БРИ-БЕЙН М.Ф. at maslovka.org
- Bri-Bejn Marija Feliksovna at russianposter.ru
- Бри-Бейн Мария Феликсовна , near Tretyakov Gallery
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b Wolzenburg
- ↑ Владимир Данилович Соловьëв: Русские художники XVIII-XX веков . сводный список художников, встречающихся в справочной литературе. 2005, p. 51 ( online ).
- ↑ russianposter.ru
- ↑ 1928 г. Москва. X ВЫСТАВКА АХРР (К ДЕСЯТИЛЕТИЮ РККА). maslovka.org, accessed January 11, 2014 .
- ↑ 1933 г. Москва. ХУДОЖЕСТВЕННАЯ ВЫСТАВКА «15 ЛЕТ РККА». maslovka.org, accessed January 11, 2014 .
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Bri-Bein, Marija Felixovna |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Bri-Bejn, Marija Feliksovna; Бри-Бейн, Мария Феликсовна (Russian); Bri-Bein, Maria Felixovna |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Russian painter and graphic artist |
DATE OF BIRTH | June 2, 1892 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Odessa , Kherson Governorate , Russian Empire |
DATE OF DEATH | 1968 or 1971 |
Place of death | Moscow , RSFSR , Soviet Union |