Vladimir Dawidowitsch Burlyuk

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Vladimir Burlyuk

Wladimir Burliuk ( Russian Владимир Давидович Бурлюк ;. Scientific transliteration Vladimir Davidovič Burljuk * March 15 . Jul / 27. March  1886 greg. In Kharkov , † 1917 in Thessaloniki ) was a Russian-Ukrainian painter, graphic artist, author and illustrator of futuristic books. Together with his brothers Nikolaj and Dawid Burljuk and his sister Lyudmila Burljuk he was part of the Russian avant-garde .

Life

Vladimir Burljuk studied together with his brother Dawid from 1902 at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Munich and from 1903 at the painting school of Anton Ažbe . He continued his studies from 1911 to 1915 at the Pensaer Kunstfachschule.

In 1907 the two brothers founded the artist association Kranz / Stephanos , financed by their father Dawid Fjodorowitsch Burljuk . In the same year, together with her sister Lyudmila, they took part in the exhibition of the Moscow Stroganov Art Academy.

The family lived from 1907 to 1914 on the estate chernyanka in Kherson Gubernia (now village Tschornjanka, Kherson Oblast , Raion Kakhovka ), where his father was employed at the estate of Count Mordwinow as administrator.

Wladimir Burljuk was a member and exhibitor of the art associations, Künstlervereinigung München , Karo-Bube , Blauer Reiter , Bund der Jugend and Hylæa group of writers and artists.

Burljuk was drafted into military service in 1915 and fell in Thessaloniki in 1917.

Exhibitions (selection)

gallery

literature

  • Iozef Kiblickij (ed.): Futurism in Russia and David Burliuk, “Father of Russian Futurism”: Catalog for the exhibition “Russian Futurism”, September 17 to November 26, 2000, Von-der-Heydt-Museum Wuppertal / State Russian Museum . Palace Editions, [Wetzlar] 2000, ISBN 3-930775-91-3 .

Web links

Commons : Vladimir Burlyuk  - collection of pictures, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Chamot, Mary: Goncharova. Stage designs and paintings. London 1979. p. 8
  2. Bowlt, John E. and Drutt, Matthew (eds.): Amazons of the avant-garde. Alexandra Exter, Natalja Goncharova, Lyubov Popova, Olga Rosanowa, Varwara Stepanowa and Nadeschda Udalzowa. New York 1999. p. 41.
  3. ^ Mordvinov Chernyanka. Goods of the Chersonese region ( Memento from February 26, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) in the Chersonian weekly newspaper Wgoru from October 25, 2007 (Russian)
  4. Quoted from the Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza website