Vladimir Sakhnenko

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Vladimir Sakhnenko
Ukrainian SSR
Died31 July 2008(2008-07-31) (aged 78)
Known forCeramics, painting, drawing

Vladimir Sakhnenko (Russian: Влади́мир Сахне́нко; born 10 January 1930, in the

Union of Artists of the USSR since 1967.[3] He is the father of artist Ivan Sakhnenko.[4]

Sakhnenko finished the art school in Voroshilovograd in 1951 and then studied at the Surikov Academic Institute in Moscow,[3] where he met Ilya Kabakov[5] and his future wife – sculptor Zoya Riabchenko.[4] He took part in art exhibitions since 1957.[3] He lived and worked in Tula.

Ceramics

Vladimir Sakhnenko created monumental objects, exterior ceramics and pottery houseware. The utility and decorativeness of his works served to conceal experiments with design and form, seditious for the Soviet period, which he continued in painting.[4]

Many of his works still adorn cultural centres, Tula Drama Theatre, Intourist hotel in Yalta and the government dacha in Foros. State Museum of Culture History of Uzbekistan in Samarkand and World Trade Centre in Moscow are also the holders of Vladimir Sakhnenko's ceramics.[1][4]

He worked daily in his workroom at Kislotoupor

Shchyokino
factory making crocks, vases, amphorae, flowerpots, multiple ceramic constructions, and ceramic sculptures of various creatures, almost until the end of his life.

He used chamotte, mostly with glaze. In the late 1970s he discovered a temperature-resistant composition of blue-green glaze that could survive extreme weather conditions, including frost. Sakhnenko's glazed ceramics have been held out of doors in Samarkand and Crimea for almost 40 years.[4]

Painting

In the 1970s the artist created 13 large black and white canvases (held in Erarta Museum[1]). In the early 1980s, Vladimir Sakhnenko turned to making bright paintings: portraits, still lives and works that depict biblical scenes.[1] His personal style (both in painting and pottery) features easy switch from figurativeness to abstraction and ornamentality.

Art collections

Recent exhibitions

  • 1999 — On the Staraya Basmannaya Street Gallery, Moscow, featuring his son Ivan Sakhnenko
  • 2005 — Autumn Marathon, Central House of Artists, Moscow, featuring Ivan Sakhnenko, Avetik and others
  • 2006 — Revelation of Colour, Central House of Artists, Moscow, solo exhibition, Art Caravan Gallery
  • 2007 — Abstract Art. The Early 21st Century, Central House of Artists, Moscow

Selected works

Ceramics

  • Big vase on the roof of Yalta Hotel Complex
    Big vase on the roof of Yalta Hotel Complex
  • Figures in the garden of Yalta Hotel Complex
    Figures in the garden of Yalta Hotel Complex
  • Two amphoras in the garden of Yalta Hotel Complex
    Two amphoras in the garden of Yalta Hotel Complex
  • Two amphoras on the roof of Yalta Hotel Complex
    Two amphoras on the roof of Yalta Hotel Complex
  • Two stoneware figures in the garden of Yalta Hotel Complex
    Two stoneware figures in the garden of Yalta Hotel Complex
  • Two amphoras in the swimming pool of Yalta Hotel Complex
    Two amphoras in the swimming pool of Yalta Hotel Complex
  • Two wall amphoras in the swimming pool of Yalta Hotel Complex
    Two wall amphoras in the swimming pool of Yalta Hotel Complex
  • Vessel, glazed chamotte
    Vessel, glazed chamotte
  • Table set, 1979
    Table set, 1979

Paintings

  • Adam and Eve, 1979, oil canvas, 75x58
    Adam and Eve, 1979, oil canvas, 75x58
  • Roses, 1979, oil canvas, 57x68
    Roses, 1979, oil canvas, 57x68
  • About love, 1980, oil canvas, 100x95
    About love, 1980, oil canvas, 100x95
  • Confession, 1980, oil canvas, 100x93
    Confession, 1980, oil canvas, 100x93
  • Composition, 1980, oil canvas, 105x65
    Composition, 1980, oil canvas, 105x65
  • The Seven Leaf Plant, 1980, oil canvas, 72x63
    The Seven Leaf Plant, 1980, oil canvas, 72x63
  • Madonna and Child, 1981, oil canvas, 100x53
    Madonna and Child, 1981, oil canvas, 100x53
  • Magi, 1981, oil canvas, 128х102
    Magi, 1981, oil canvas, 128х102
  • Sergey, 1982, oil canvas, 113x63
    Sergey, 1982, oil canvas, 113x63
  • Still Life with Lemon, 1982, oil canvas, 85x90
    Still Life with Lemon, 1982, oil canvas, 85x90
  • Lord's Supper, 1982, oil canvas, 85x320
    Lord's Supper, 1982, oil canvas, 85x320

References

  1. ^ a b c d Vladimir Sakhnenko, Erarta Museum of Contemporary Art, Saint Petersburg
  2. ^ Erarta galleries St. Petersburg about ceramics by Vladimir Sakhnenko
  3. ^ a b c d АРТ-Казна: Каталог выставки (PDF) (in Russian). Tula, Russia. 2013. p. 152. Retrieved 2 February 2016.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ a b c d e Кончин, Евграф (2009). Холст как мера вечности: Статьи, интервью, рецензии (in Russian). Moscow: Живопись-Инфо. pp. 266–269. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  5. ^ Илья Кабаков нашел в музее Эрарта работы своего друга со студенческих времен… (in Russian). Erarta. 28 June 2010. Retrieved 2 February 2016.