Return to collection Fine Art
1 #1

Drawing for the painting 'Railworkers' Strike at Mariupol Station 1905'

ID:
1335
Inventory number:
Гр-647 КН-41797
Type:
Graphics
Material:
paper
Techniques:
coloured pencil
Dimensions:
28.5x20.5 cm
Author:
Mykola Bendryk

Mykola Kuzmych Bendryk was a Ukrainian artist, painter, graphic artist, and Honored Artist of the Ukrainian SSR (1978). He was born in the village of Olhynka (now Volnovakha district, Donetsk region) on April 26 (May 9), 1914. Bendryk studied at the Institute of Proletarian Fine Arts in Leningrad under V. Yakovlev, I. Shukhmin, I. Brodskyi, P. Utkin, and K. Rudakov. He took part in World War II and worked as a teacher at the Lviv Institute of Decorative and Applied Arts. Since 1935, he participated in regional, all-Union, and foreign exhibitions. His personal exhibitions were held in Moscow (1939,1977), Kyiv (1974, 1978, 1983, 1985), Donetsk (1935, 1956, 1967, 1977, 1980, 1985), and Mariupol (1957, 1959, 1963, 1969-1970, 1974, 1980, 1982, 1984). Since 1956, he lived and worked in Mariupol. Selected works include "Old Teacher", "Still Life with Lemon", "Self-Portrait" (various versions), "Partisan Hrach", and others. He died on February 17, 1994 in the city of Horodnya (Chernihiv region). According to his will, most of his creative assets were transferred to the Mariupol Museum of Local Lore, and later exhibited at the A.I. Kuindzhi Art Museum.

Date of creation:
1935
Preservation:
Yellowing of the paper; the drawing is divided into squares numbered in the top corner and along the left edge.
Location:
unknown
Provenance:
Transferred by Bendryk M. K. Act No. 17 dated 03/07/1990.
Date of record to the inventory book:
03.04.1990
Item description from the inventory book:
Mariupol station. In the foreground there is an image of the platform along which lampposts stretch; in the forground - the station building and figures of people; on the right — a departing train and carriages. In the lower left - the inscription: N. Bendryk. In the upper right corner an inscription in the artist's hand: Vokzal st. Mariupol 1935.