Rechensky Pavel
1924 - 1999
Pavel Rechensky. Soviet and Kazakhstani artist-painter. Participant of the Great Patriotic War. Member of the Artists Union of the USSR (1961), awarded medals of the USSR. He was born in the village of Babovo, Fedorovsky district, Saratov region. In 1931 his family was kukulised and taken to Kazakhstan, to the village of Osakarovka, near Karaganda. Then, in Kazakhstan Pavel Rechensky will live all his life. At the age of 18 he went to the front, where after the victory he served in the Navy. But by the age of 30... далее
Pavel Rechensky. Soviet and Kazakhstani artist-painter. Participant of the Great Patriotic War. Member of the Artists Union of the USSR (1961), awarded medals of the USSR. He was born in the village of Babovo, Fedorovsky district, Saratov region. In 1931 his family was kukulised and taken to Kazakhstan, to the village of Osakarovka, near Karaganda. Then, in Kazakhstan Pavel Rechensky will live all his life. At the age of 18 he went to the front, where after the victory he served in the Navy. But by the age of 30 he realised that his vocation was painting. He had no special artistic education. Engaged in self-education. The works of P.I. Rechensky, in which polar genres as icon painting and Russian lubochnaya picture met, which enriched each other, because he came to the style, replenishing esoteric painting with a new name. He created a lot of gospel images. Since 1951 began to take part in art exhibitions in Almaty, Karaganda, Moscow, Leningrad, Sevastopol, Kyzyl, Gurzuf, Poland. Since 1961 - a member of the USSR Union of Artists. He is one of the founders of the Karaganda organisation of the Artists Union of Kazakhstan. In 1997 his works were presented at the International exhibition of naive art ‘INSITA’ in Bratislava (Slovakia). The artist presented more than 80 paintings to the Pavlodar Museum. His last exhibitions were held in Almaty. The artist died on 9 May 1999 in Karaganda. About fifty paintings were presented to the Karaganda Museum. скрыть
Works of the artist