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Bookplate "From the Books of Mykhailo Matchak"

Pavlo Kovzhun

  • Bookplate "From the Books of Mykhailo Matchak" 2
Basic information
ID
ФМз-Г-IV-579
Author
Pavlo Kovzhun
Name
Bookplate "From the Books of Mykhailo Matchak"
Technique
linocut
Material
paper
Dimensions (height x width, cm)
10.1 x 7.6
Additionally
Information about author
Author
Pavlo Kovzhun
Artist's lifetime
1896–1939
Country
Ukraine
Biography
Pavlo Kovzhun (3 October 1896, Kostiushky village, now Ovruch District, Zhytomyr Region – 15 May 1939, Lviv) is an outstanding Ukrainian graphic artist, painter, art critic and public figure, a representative of Futurism and Constructivism with elements of Ukrainian Baroque. He is one of the most outstanding students and followers of Heorhii Narbut. He grew up in the Kyiv region and Crimea, in the ancient district of Ak-Mechet, on the outskirts of modern Simferopol. The artist studied at Kyiv Art School (1911–1915). From 1921, he lived and worked in Lviv. Pavlo Kovzhun founded the first Ukrainian Futurist art group, "Kvero" (1914). He was a co-founder (together with P. Kholodnyi, M. Holubets, S. Tymoshenko, and R. Lisovskyi) of the following Lviv art associations: Group of Ukrainian Artists (HDUM, 1922–1926) and Association of Independent Ukrainian Artists (ANUM, 1931–1939). Between 1928 and 1938, Mykhailo Osinchuk and Pavlo Kovzhun painted the churches of Galicia with complex ornamental compositions in the Ukrainian-Byzantine style. Pavlo Kovzhun focused on book graphics (covers, bookplates, publishing marks, posters, initials, and caricatures) in his work. He wrote articles on artistic topics and essays about cultural figures. He was an editor of the magazines "Mytusa" and "Mystetstvo". In the 1930s, Kovzhun gave a series of lectures on the history of Ukrainian art at the Ukrainian Scientific Institute in Berlin. Pavlo Kovzhun's graphic works were repeatedly exhibited at international exhibitions in Prague (1924), Brussels (1927), Los Angeles (1931), Berlin (1937), and Rome (1938).
Object description
Bookplate "From the Books of Mykhailo Matchak".
Legal regulation
Borys Voznytskyi Lviv National Art Gallery