Alexandr Guristyuk

Alexandr Guristyuk is a Ukrainian painter.

Biography

He was born on June 2, 1959 in the village Yaroshivka, Chernigov area of Ukraine, into a military family. He studied at art school for two years. He was expelled for bad behaviour.

Guristyuk has worked in art workshops at the Rivne organisation of the National union of artists of Ukraine since 1989.

He participated in regional and national art exhibitions from 1990. He had personal exhibitions in Rivne (1990, 1994, 1999, 2000, 2004, 2006, 2007), Lutsk (1996, 1998), Kiev (2000, 2001, 2006), Lvov (2003), Lublin (Poland, 2004), and Preshov (Slovakia, 2006). He participated in the second international art open-air which was devoted to the Day of Preshov city, Slovakia (May 28 - June 9 2006).

Creativity

Alekzander Guristyuk has the creative arsenal of about 500 different-genre and differently-styled pictures. In recent years, he worked in a nativity style. Amongst his paintings, many are of female portraits.

He work in the genres of still-life, portrait, landscape, and genre composition.

In 1980 Guristyuk revolted against the system and "social circus" that is displayed in pictures "Head of the Set," "Members of the Rivne Party," "Night," "New Year's Hours," and "Feast." At the end of the 1990s, he the artist painted on ethnic and religion themes. He has worked in these styles to this day.

Realness and meticulousness of style were transformed at the present stage on the overall picturesque reception with the underlined incompleteness of details. He formulates conceptual basis of the creativity, briefly on "Soul and Color." Plastic solution in style a primitive, an impressive surface of cloths, bright color, dramatic nature and grotesqueness of the images. Here resources with which the artist tries to formulate and solve one of the major problems of the his creativity - the "Magic Mystery" of each moment of reality.

The main series: "Polissya", "Fables", "Christ".

The main pictures:

Guristyuk's pictures are in private collections in Ukraine, Poland, France, Germany, Portugal, Israel, Australia, and the United States of America.

Exhibitions

Literature

References

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