Mykhailo Dzyndra (Ukrainian: Миха́йло Васи́льович Дзи́ндра; 8 November 1921 – 8 September 2006) was a Ukrainian sculptor. He was known for his work synthesizing Ukrainian cultural symbolism with modernism. He spent most of his life in the United States. A follow of Alexander Archipenko, he began his work in the 1940s after graduating from the Lviv Ivan Trush College of Decorative and Applied Arts. He started with figurative, realist works after immigrating to Czechoslovakia, Allied-occupied Germany, and finally to the United States. He then moved towards associative, abstract forms, which were
Mykhailo Dzyndra (Ukrainian: Миха́йло Васи́льович Дзи́ндра; 8 November 1921 – 8 September 2006) was a Ukrainian sculptor. He was known for his work synthesizing Ukrainian cultural symbolism with modernism. He spent most of his life in the United States.
A follow of Alexander Archipenko, he began his work in the 1940s after graduating from the Lviv Ivan Trush College of Decorative and Applied Arts. He started with figurative, realist works after immigrating to Czechoslovakia, Allied-occupied Germany, and finally to the United States. He then moved towards associative, abstract forms, which were known as his "sculpture of plastic associations" period. His style was often metaphysical during this time, with plastic contrasts and experimentation with surrounding space. After 1991, he returned to Ukraine, and in 2005 donated his works to found the Mykhaylo Dzyndra Modern Sculpture Museum in Lviv, which is a branch of Lviv Gallery of Art before his death the following year.
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Mykhailo Dzyndraa lăsat un gând
acum 2 zile
Biography Dzyndra was born on 8 November 1921 in the village of Demnia near Lviv, in the Stanisławów Voivodeship in the Second Polish Republic (now Ukraine). He had two other brothers, Yevhen and Stepan Dzyndra. After graduating from secondary school, he studied in Lviv in the private studio of sculptor of Andrii Koverko. He then attended the specialized artistic school called the Art and Industrial School, where he studied under sculptors Ivan Severa and Mykola Mukhin from 1942 to 1944. After the end of World War II, he immigrated to Bratislava in Czechoslovakia, where he taught in a decorative woodcarving studio. Just over a year later, he then immigrated again, this time to Allied-occupied Germany. In Germany, he worked on sculptures and practiced in art exhibitions, and was a member of the Professional Union of Artists of Germany. While in Germany, he stayed in a refugee camp near Munich, and also helped establish another carving school that was attended by about 250 students of various nationalities. At the end of the decade, however, he finally immigrated to the United States. He spent the next few decades in the United States, until his return to Ukraine in 1991 following the 1991…
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Mykhailo Dzyndraa lăsat un gând
acum 2 zile
Personal life
He was married to a woman named Sofia.
He died on 8 September 2006 in Lviv, and was buried at Lychakiv Cemetery.
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Mykhailo Dzyndraa lăsat un gând
acum 2 zile
Legacy
He was posthumously awarded the Order of Merit, 3rd class, in 2006 for his work.
In 2024, Ukrainian designer Ruslan Baginskiy dedicated a project to the sculptor.