Return to collection Fine Art
1 #1

Portrait of a Participant of the Azov Flotilla A.D. Babych

ID:
1145
Inventory number:
Гр-458 КН-33850
Type:
Graphics
Material:
paper
Techniques:
charcoal, drawing sauce (Russian sauce)
Dimensions:
37x52 cm
Author:
Mykola Tykhonov

Mykola Hryhorovych Tykhonov was a painter, graphic artist, poster artist, monumentalist. Born on December 22, 1917 in Yaroslavl, Russia. Graduated from the Yaroslavl Art School (1939). His teachers by profession were F. Shytov, V. Hanashkin. Worked in the field of political posters. Member of the Union of Artists of the USSR (1963). Starting in 1949 worked in Mariupol. He created monumental works: mosaic in the Taras Shevchenko Cinema in collaboration with A. Kechedzhi and Yu. Raizin (1964 to 1965, Mariupol); relief in the Wedding Palace (1967, Mariupol); mosaic in a department store in the village of Kuibyshevo, Zaporizhia region (1968); mosaic in the Yuvileyny Cinema (1970, Mariupol); relief with mosaic in the Soyuz cinema (1977, Mariupol); mosaic in the Metallurg boarding house of the Ilyich Plant (1977 to 1979) – all co-authored with Yu. Raizin; mosaic in a shopping center in Yenakiyevo co-authored with Yu. Raizin and V. Ponomarev (1970). He worked in the poster genre (co-work with Yu. Raizin). 12 posters were published in mass circulation in the Polityzdat Ukrainy (1964 to 1972). Starting in 1961 he participated in all-Union and republic art exhibitions of graphics and posters. He lived and worked in Donetsk. He died in 1989.

Date of creation:
1962
Preservation:
General paper aging, yellowing.
Location:
unknown
Provenance:
Purchased through the Zhdaniv Art and Production Workshops of the Donetsk Branch of the USSR Art Fund. Invoice No. 459. Act No. 2801 dated 02/17/1983.
Date of record to the inventory book:
09.03.1981
Item description from the inventory book:
Bust-length depiction of an elderly man with sunken cheeks, a mustache, and a high forehead. His hair is combed to the side. He is wearing a shirt with a standing collar and a jacket. At the lower right — two signatures by the artist.