New Year's Greeting Card

Leopold Levytskyi

  • New Year's Greeting Card 2
  • New Year's Greeting Card 3
Basic information
ID
ФМз-Г-IV-461
Author
Leopold Levytskyi
Name
New Year's Greeting Card
Country
the Ukrainian SSR
Technique
colour linocut
Material
paper
Dimensions (height x width, cm)
15.6 x 9.2
Additionally
Information about author
Author
Leopold Levytskyi
Artist's lifetime
1906–1973
Country
Austro-Hungarian Empire, the Ukrainian SSR, now Ukraine
Biography
Leopold Levytskyi is a Ukrainian graphic artist and painter. He is also a master of printmaking. The artist had a crucial role in forming modern Ukrainian graphic art. He was born in the village of Burdiakivtsi, Ternopil region. He studied in Paris in 1930–1931, and later at the Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow (1931–1932). Levytskyi started his creative activity during his studies at the Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow, where he evolved as an artist. The artistic environment of Krakow formed the artist's worldview, system of ideals, and political beliefs, which determined the specifics of the painter's creative thinking. He was the initiator and co-founder of the Krakow Group. In 1932, he organised an exhibition closed due to its social orientation and sharp themes of works. The artist was imprisoned for three weeks and expelled from the Academy. In the 1930s, he was constantly watched by the police. From 1935, he lived in Chortkiv, Ternopil region, sometimes visiting Lviv, Krakow, and Stanyslaviv exhibitions. In September 1939, he headed the City Council in Chortkiv, collaborated with the newspaper "New Life", and worked as a decorator at the House of Officers. During World War II, the artist together with his wife Eugenia Nadliar fled to Uzbekistan. In 1946, he settled in Lviv and joined the newly formed Union of Artists of the USSR; his graphic works created in Uzbekistan served as the grounds for his joining the union. The Lviv environment undoubtedly influenced the artist's creative work. In the 1960s, Levytskyi developed a unique stylistic manner combining spontaneity and technical skills. The artist died working at his desk with a chisel in his hand on May 14, 1973. He was buried in Lychakiv Cemetery in Lviv. During his life, Leopold Levytskyi did not have a single personal exhibition. The first occurred in Lviv (1974), a year after the artist's death.
Object description
Greeting cards made using colour or monochrome linocut technique are particularly interesting among Leopold Levytskyi's graphic work of the 1960s and 1970s. These cards were intended to greet friends on New Year's Day and Christmas. The artist often humorously depicted himself and his wife, Yevheniia (Henia), in a stylised form, indoors or against a landscape. This postcard depicts a clock with a round pendulum against the backdrop of a starry sky over the village. On the pendulum's disc, the Levytskyi family is seated at a festive table with glasses of wine in their hands.
Inscriptions
To the right, under the image, is the artist's signature. On the back, in the top right corner, are numbers in pencil: "2261/2". The greeting text is in blue ink: "Happy New Year / Wishing you and your dear husband good health, happiness, and creative success. Henia Leopold".
Legal regulation
Borys Voznytskyi Lviv National Art Gallery