Kashina Nadezhda
1896–1977
Kashina Nadezhda Vasilyevna. Younger sister of the famous artist Kashina (Pamyatnykh) Nina Vasilyevna. Artist - painter, graphic artist. Honoured Art Worker of Uzbek SSR (1950). National Artist of Uzbek SSR (1964). Member of the Artists Union of the USSR. One of the originators of art in Uzbekistan. Kashina was born in 1896 in Perm. She became acquainted with painting in her early childhood, as both her father and grandfather were icon painters. She received her initial art education at the Perm Art School. The desire to receive higher artistic education... далее
Kashina Nadezhda Vasilyevna. Younger sister of the famous artist Kashina (Pamyatnykh) Nina Vasilyevna. Artist - painter, graphic artist. Honoured Art Worker of Uzbek SSR (1950). National Artist of Uzbek SSR (1964). Member of the Artists Union of the USSR. One of the originators of art in Uzbekistan. Kashina was born in 1896 in Perm. She became acquainted with painting in her early childhood, as both her father and grandfather were icon painters. She received her initial art education at the Perm Art School. The desire to receive higher artistic education and become a professional painter led Kashina to Moscow, where in 1927 she graduated from the Higher Art and Technical Institute (VKhUTEIN), studied under S. V. Gerasimov, A. V. Kuprin, R. R. Falck (1921-1927). In 1928, having come to Uzbekistan for the first time on a Glaviskusstvo business trip, Kashina decided to stay in the sunny land forever. The result of her acquaintance with the East is a series of works in which the influence of Western European expressionism and primitivism is palpable. These works were exhibited at the exhibitions of art associations ‘Rost’ and ‘13’ (1929, Moscow) and were very favourably received. She wrote thematic paintings dedicated to the life of Soviet Uzbekistan, during the war years she became the author of posters: ‘The country is calling the fighter to the front - go friend to the factory’ (1941), ‘I will avenge you, brother’ (1942), ‘Be a hero!’ (1944); after the war - ‘The Right to Education’ (1950), ‘The Song of Our Motherland’ (1954), ‘Friendship is Happiness’ (1957), ‘Let's unfold a nationwide campaign to raise cotton production’ (1970). Together with A. V. Kedrin she made a ceramic panel ‘Collective Farm Work’ for the pavilion of the Uzbek SSR at the All-Union Exhibition of Economic Achievements (1964). Works by the artist N. Kashina are represented in the State Tretyakov Gallery, the Russian Museum, the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts, the Astrakhan Picture Gallery, the Museum of Oriental Arts, the Perm State Art Gallery, the Karakalpak Museum of Arts named after I. V. Savitsky, the Museum of Arts of Uzbekistan in Tashkent, and in private collections. скрыть
Works of the artist