Mikhail Koulakov

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Mikhail Koulakov
Born
Mikhail Alexievich Koulakov

(1933-01-08)8 January 1933
Abstract Expressionism

Mikhail Alexievich Koulakov (Russian: Михаил Алексеевич Кулаков; 8 January 1933 – 15 February 2015) was a Russian abstract painter.

Life

Born in Moscow on 8 January 1933, Koulakov majored in stage design, studying with the painter and director

Moscow Theater of Satire [ru]. Koulakov resided in Italy from 1976 until his death in 2015 and worked in his studio in San Vito (Narni), Umbria. In 1993 he was elected a senior academician of the Fine Arts Academy “Pietro Vannucci”, Perugia
.

Koulakov died on 15 February 2015, aged 82.[1]

Art

Koulakov was a representative of

Leningrad's Institute for Theatrical Arts in 1962, and started his career in Moscow and Leningrad where his works were displayed in alternative spaces to the prevailing socialist realism
.

Martial arts

Koulakov was a tai chi 7th Dan master. In 1990 he published the book Tai Chi Chuan, il Grande Limite.

Exhibitions

Anthological exhibitions

His anthological exhibitions include:

  • 1988: Auditorium of San Domenico (Narni)
  • 1989: The Soviet Union Foundation of Culture, ex-riding school of the Czars in Leningrad and Riga Arsenal
  • 1991: Architectural complex “San Michele a Ripa” in Rome
  • 1993: Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow, State Ethnographic Museum, St. Petersburg, and Palazzo Ruspoli in Rome
  • 1996: “Bibliomediateca” (Terni)
  • 2003: CERP “Centro Espositivo Rocca Paolina” (Perugia)
Collective exhibitions

Some of the collective exhibitions he has taken part:

  • 1977: “Salon d'Art Sacre” in Paris
  • 1977: “X Quadriennale” in Rome
  • 1977: Venice Biennial “La nuova arte sovietica. Una prospettiva non ufficiale”
  • 1979: “20 Jahre unabhaengiger Kunst aus der Sovjetunion”, Museum Bochum, Bochumkunstsammlung, Bochum
  • 1994: “IV Biennale di Arte Sacra”, San Gabriele, Teramo
  • 1995: “From Gulag to glasnost” Norton and Nancy Dodge Collection, Jane Vorhees Zimmerli Art Museum, Rutgers, USA
  • 1996: “Non konformisty-Seconda avanguardia russa”, Collezione Bar-Ger: The Russian State Museum, St. Petersburg - State Tretjakov Gallery, Moscow - Staedel Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt am Main - Kunsthaus, Leverkusen
  • 1997: Josef Albers Museum, Quadrat Bottrop; “Arte Metro Roma” project, mosaic at Anagnina Metro Station, Rome
  • 1998: “Anatomia Sovremennogo iskusstva” St. Petersburg
  • 1999: “Die Suche nach der Freiheit. Moskauer Kuenstler der 50er und 70er Jahre”, Berlin-Hamburg; “Un colore in più”, Spazio Krizia, Milan
  • 2000: “Un angelo per la città”, Rocca Paolina, Perugia
  • 2001: “Abstrakzia v Rossii”, Russian State Museum, St. Petersburg
  • 2003: “Moskovskaja abstrakzia, 2. polovina XX veka”, State Tretjakov Gallery, Moscow.
Personal Exhibitions
  • 1964: House of Culture, Akademgorodok Novosibirsk
  • 1966: Theatre of Satire, Moscow
  • 1967: Institute of Physics, Moscow
  • 1968: Institute of Physics, Erevan
  • 1968: Institute of Physics and Chemics, Moscow
  • 1969: House of Scientists Dubna, Moscow
  • 1975: Libreria Internazionale Paesi Nuovi, Roma
  • 1977: Galleria Trifalco, Roma
  • 1977: International Institute, Minneapolis
  • 1977: Banach Gallery, New York
  • 1978: Galleria Trifalco, Roma
  • 1979: Galerie Slavia, Bremen
  • 1980: Galleria Cecchini, Perugia
  • 1980: Cooperatriva Esperienze Culturali, Bari
  • 1980: Galleria San Carlo, Napoli
  • 1981: Galerie Basilisk, Wien
  • 1984: Galleria Cortina, Milano
  • 1985: Palazzo dei Priori, Perugia
  • 1986: Galerie Schrepfer, München
  • 1988: Galleria Trifalco, Roma
  • 1988: Auditorium San Domenico, Narni
  • 1989: Galerie Art East Art West, Hamburg
  • 1989: Mugnano di Perugia
  • 1989: Gallery of Soviet Culture Fund, Moscow
  • 1990: Arsenal, Riga
  • 1990: Manege, Leningrad
  • 1990: Savitski Gallery, Pensa
  • 1990: Galleria La Gradiva, Roma
  • 1990: Galleria Il Bucchero, Ortebello
  • 1991: Galleria Forzani, Terni
  • 1991: Dostojevski Museum, Leningrad
  • 1991: Yurjevski Monastery, Novgorod
  • 1991: S. Michele a Ripa, Roma
  • 1992: G. Braun Medienhaus, Karlsruhe
  • 1992: Galerie Art Modern International, Aachen
  • 1992: Galerie Kunst in der Scheune, Offenbach
  • 1992: Castello Trecentesco, Celano
  • 1993: Pushkin Museum, Moscow
  • 1993: Palazzo Ruspoli, Roma
  • 1993: Russian Ethnographic Museum, St. Petersburg
  • 1993: Palazzo Petrignani, Amelia
  • 1993: Galerie Weber, Berlin
  • 1996: Bibliomediateca, Terni
  • 1999: Spazio Arte, Perugia
  • 1999: Banca d'Italia, Roma
  • 2003: "Celare il cielo", Galleria Giulia, Roma
  • 2003: "Genesi", Rocca Paolina, Perugia
  • 2003: "Radici e Globalizzazione. Omaggio a Mikhail Koulakov", Palazzo Santoro Colella, Pratola Peligna
  • 2005: "Verso l'autunno", l'Indicatore, Roma
  • 2007: "Put geroia", Galereia Albom, Sankt Peterburg
  • 2007: "Besoblachnoe vremia - Tempo senza nubi", Fond Era, Moskva
  • 2008: "Il Sole, la Luna, l'Universo", Circolo Culturale l'Officina, Perugia
  • 2008: Galleria Arte Contemporanea Sante Moretto, Vicenza
  • 2008: "Potop mlechnyh putei. Diluvio delle vie lattee", State Tretyakov Gallery, Moskva
  • 2008: "Fiori celesti", Palazzo Venezia, Roma
  • 2011: "Signs of Spirituality", Galleria Nazionale di Arte Moderna GNAM, Roma
  • 2011: H.C. Andersen Museum, Rome
  • 2013: "80 anni tra Russia e Italia", Centro Russo di Scienze e Cultura, Roma
  • 2015: "Mikhail Koulakov: Umbria seconda patria", Palazzo Vecchio, Sangemini
  • 2016: "Mikhail Koulakov: Il Cosmo nel Gesto", Palazzo di Primavera, Terni
  • 2019: "Mikhail Kulakov. The Style of the Thaw Period", MMOMA Moscow Museum of Modern Art, Moscow

References

  1. ^ "В Италии умер известный художник-авангардист Михаил Кулаков". Российская газета. Retrieved 2015-02-15.

External links