Drawings of Several Female and Children's Heads

Yulian Zaiats

  • Drawings of Several Female and Children's Heads 2
  • Drawings of Several Female and Children's Heads 3
Basic information
ID
Ф-З-Арх-ЛГМ-5/11
Author
Yulian Zaiats
Name
Drawings of Several Female and Children's Heads
Date of creation
27.01.1911–23.02.1911
Country
German Empire (?)
Technique
drawing
Material
paper pencil
Dimensions (height x width, cm)
29.4 x 21.4
Additionally
Information about author
Author
Yulian Zaiats
Artist's lifetime
1880–1971
Country
Austro-Hungarian Empire, the Second Polish Republic, the USSR
Biography
Yulian Zaiats (May 30, 1880, Bohutyn, Austro-Hungarian Empire, now Pomoriany district, Lviv region – September 2, 1971, Lviv, Ukrainian SSR) was a Ukrainian artist, lawyer, scholar, bibliographer, and cultural figure. According to some sources, he was the son of a Greek Catholic priest.

He initially studied at a gymnasium in Lviv (graduating with honours in 1899). The artist then enrolled in the law faculty of Lviv University, but for political reasons transferred to the Jagiellonian University in Krakow (1901). At the same time, he enrolled in the Kraków Academy of Fine Arts, where he studied under Leon Jan Wyczółkowski (11 April 1852 – 27 December 1936). According to researcher Oleh Kupchynskyi, he was actively involved in research work. In 1902, he submitted his scientific work, "Usus fructus nominis", to the historical and philosophical section of the Shevchenko Scientific Society, which was published in the "Journal of Law and Economics." It should be noted that, based on the results of this work, Julian Zayats defended his doctoral dissertation in 1907. He then worked as a lawyer in the State Treasury Prosecutor's Office (Lviv). In addition, in 1909 and 1912, he improved his legal qualifications in Berlin, where he prepared a scientific work entitled "Jus iurandum in litem." According to researcher Oleh Kupchynskyi, he attended lectures at the Berlin Academy of Arts by the renowned German painter and graphic artist of Jewish origin, Max Liebermann (July 20, 1847–February 8, 1935). However, during this period, the artist did not teach regularly at this institution and was only appointed to the Senate of the Berlin Academy of Arts in 1912.

It should be noted that after World War I, Yulian Zaiats worked as an employee of a private law firm in Komarne (now the centre of the Komarne municipal community in the Lviv region), and later as a lawyer in Lviv. Yulian Zaiats also taught Roman law at the Ukrainian Secret University and was a permanent legal advisor to Metropolitan Andrei Sheptytskyi. He joined the Legal Commission of the Shevchenko Scientific Society and became a member of one of the key parties in the region at that time, the Ukrainian National Democratic Union. During the Second Polish Republic (1918–1939), Yulian Zaiats authored appeals to the League of Nations and the Vatican regarding the violent measures against Ukrainians within the framework of military-police terror, the so-called “Polish pacification”, initiated by the leader of this state entity, Jozef Pilsudski. At the same time, in the 1920s, he was invited to work at the Lviv branch of the Financial Prosecutor's Office of the Polish State Treasury. Later, before the annexation of the western Ukrainian lands to the Ukrainian SSR, he was a judge of the Supreme Administrative Tribunal of Poland in Warsaw (1939). From 1941, he was president of the Court of Appeal (Lviv).

After the end of the Nazi occupation, he was arrested as a person who could have been involved in the crimes of the occupiers. At the request of the intelligentsia (according to documents from the archives of the Security Service of Ukraine, first published in the works of scholars Mykola Kobyletskyi and Lesia Trepak), in particular, Metropolitan Andrei Sheptytskyi, and the head of the National Museum, Ilarion Svientsitskyi, the criminal case against Yulian Zaiats was closed. In 1945, he began teaching at Lviv State University, and from 1946, he worked as a bibliographer at the Scientific Library of the V. Stefanyk Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR. In 1951, the artist failed to pass the certification due to a lack of professional qualifications, but with the permission of the Certification Commission, he held the position of librarian from 1953 until his retirement.

During his time as a bibliographer, Yulian Zaiats produced a number of bibliographic works: “Materials for the Bibliography of M. Voznyak” (1946), “Bibliography of the works of M. P. Drahomanov” (1947, co-authored), “Bibliography of the history of the city of Lviv” (parts 1–2, 1948) – however, none of them were ever published. He was into collecting art and old books, and did some painting and drawing. Participated in art exhibitions in Lviv (1929–1932, 1934, 1935, 1937, 1943; National Museum and Ukrainian Society of Art Lovers), in Warsaw (Polish Society of Art Lovers in the “Zachęta” Salon), and other cities. Among his well-known works are “Lady in Blue”, “Daughter”, “Self-Portrait”, “Boy”, “Church in Krasne”, “Church in Kryvchytsi”, Flowers”, and “The Kaminka River”, which were highly praised in the press and exhibition catalogues of the time.

Additionally, he possessed a distinctive vocal talent and a powerful tenor voice. According to researcher Oleh Kupchynskyi, he graduated from the Lviv Conservatory (class of Nestor Nyzhankivsky). However, from 1928, Nestor Nyzhankivsky (August 31, 1893–April 10, 1940) taught at the Mykola Lysenko Higher Music Institute in Lviv. Also, according to Oleh Kupchynskyi, Yulian Zaiats performed solo concerts in Lviv, Warsaw, and other cities and participated in annual holiday programs for Shevchenko Days in Galicia. Between 1920 and 1926, he served as the leader of the “Muse” singing society. As for the artist's legacy, thanks to the efforts of Ilarion Svientsitskyi, a significant collection of his works is housed in the Andrei Sheptytskyi National Museum in Lviv, and some works are in the art department of the Lviv Library of the Vasyl Stefanyk National Academy of Sciences. According to researchers Mykola Kobyletskyi and Lesia Trepak, twenty works by Yulian Zaiats were purchased by the State Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow.

An important part of Yulian Zaiats' creative legacy is a series of graphic works currently stored in the Archive of Artists and Cultural Figures of the Borys Voznytskyi Lviv National Art Gallery, which provide valuable insights into the specifics of the educational process as well as the priorities in more conservative artistic circles focused on developing a realistic visual language through careful study of nature and the creative work of artists of past eras, especially those who practised the faithful reproduction of people and the world around them.
Object description
The sheet contains a series of portrait sketches of 29 images of women's and children's faces, half-figures, and figures, executed in a soft academic manner. Most of them are variations on the theme of full-length portraits of young women, complemented by images of children of various ages. The composition lacks strict symmetry and is more akin to a sketchbook by an artist who studied types, facial expressions, and anatomy. The faces are presented from different angles, including front view, three-quarter view, and profile, which indicates the artist's deliberate study of form. Most of the images retain a sense of chamber restraint, with barely noticeable emotion or inner concentration. Some of them are likely exercises in copying pictorial sources, a typical academic practice. There are examples of a freer interpretation of the image, where an attempt is made to capture the mood or psychological state of the model. A separate portrait of an elderly woman or man with clearly marked signs of ageing does not stand out from the others in terms of its plastic richness and desire to convey the texture of the skin, which complicates identification and accurate attribution. Some of the images reveal features of academic realism, closely related to the portrait tradition of the 19th century, where chiaroscuro modelling emphasises the volume and structure of faces. A series of children's images is characterised by soft lines, a lightness of gaze, and a certain immediacy (as seen in the head of a boy with a twisted face and the figure of a child with a raised leg) – all of which lends them emotional polyphony. On the reverse side of the sheet are two figurative studies of nude female models: one depicts a woman sitting on her haunches, while the other is in a dynamic pose with her knee resting on a chair. Both images are distinguished by anatomical accuracy and careful attention to proportions, which corresponds to the character of a training drawing from life. Also on the reverse side is a knee-length drawing of a man in military uniform (probably in sepia), which is less detailed but retains a careful attention to the characteristic details of the silhouette and posture. In general, it can be said that the drawing represents a comprehensive educational and studio practice: from portrait analysis to working with figures, demonstrating the artist's ability to work with both emotional nuances and plastic anatomy.
Inscriptions
On the front, from top to bottom, left to right: “30/1 11”; “29/1 11”; “28/1 11”; “27/1 11” and the inscription “after F (illegible)”; “26/1/11” and the inscription “after F (illegible)”; “-4/2-”; “8/2 11”; “-5/2 11-”; “10/2 11”; “11/2 11”; “23/ 2 11”. On the reverse, from left to right: Yulian Zaiats' signature and the date “4/6 19”; Yulian Zaiats' signature and the date “5/6 19”.
Legal regulation
Borys Voznytskyi Lviv National Art Gallery