Yuliy Ganf
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Yuliy Abramovich Ganf (Russian: Ганф, Юлий Абрамович) (1898-1973) - Soviet Russian graphic artist, People's Artist of the USSR, especially known for his satirical cartoons in the Krokodil magazine.
Yuliy Ganf was born on June 8, 1898 in the city of Poltava. He studied in the Art Shop of Eduard Steinberg in 1917-1920 and in VKhUTEMAS (The Higher Artistic and Technical Shops) in 1922-1924. In 1920s, he produced political caricatures for Moscow-based magazines and newspapers: Krasny Perets, Bezbozhnik, Krokodil, Pravda, illustrated books published for Detgiz (The State Publishing House of Children's Literature of the Ministry of Education of RSFSR). Author of many political slogans in 1930s. In 1945, he was granted the title of Honoured Artist of RSFSR, and in 1964 - People's Artist of the USSR. In 1970, he was awarded the golden Fighter for Peace medal at the International Exhibition "Satire in Fight for Peace". Yuliy Ganf died in Moscow in 1973.
The artworks of Ganf are exhibited in several museums of art throughout Russia and CIS: Tver Museum of Art, Yekaterinburg Museum of Art, Lugansk Museum of Art, Yerevan Armenia Art Gallery, the Russian State Library and other collections.
Tarakhovskaya ganf.jpg
(Book cover for Yelizaveta Tarakhovskaya's On How Chocolate Came to MosSelProm, 1925. |