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Vladimir Ozernikov (1919 Irkutsk - 2000 Sevastopol)

 

Set of Four Stage Designs for the Production of 'The Road to Calvary' at the Khabarovsk Drama Theatre

 

Date: 1948 

 

Act I. Gouache over pencil on paper glued on support cardboard. Overall size: 23.5 x 27.7 cm. Signed, titled, and dated.

Act III, card 12. Gouache over pencil on paper glued on support cardboard. Overall size: 23.5 x 28 cm. Signed, titled and dated.

Act III, card 14. Gouache over pencil on paper glued on support cardboard. Overall size: 23.5 x 28 cm. Signed, titled and dated.

Act V. Gouache over pencil on paper glued on support cardboard. Overall size: 24 x 27.3 cm. Signed, titled and dated.

 

Provenance: From the artist's estate. 

 

The play was based on a trilogy of novels by Alexey Tolstoy, tracing the fate of the Russian intelligentsia on the eve of, during, and after the revolution of 1917.

 

£2,500.-

Stage Designs for the production of "The Road to Calvary" play

  • Vladimir Ozernikov was born in 1919. He was a Russian-Jewish artist who spent considerable time of his career as a costume and stage designer. He spent his formative years in Siberian city of Irkutsk. In 1934 Ozernikov enrolled at the Irkutsk School of Fine Arts. Quite early on in his career, he became a member of the Union of Artists of the USSR, which allowed him to get involved in artistic projects across the country, including designing theatre costumes and stage decorations. From 1941 he collaborated with different drama theatres across the country, including in cities like Khabarovsk, Vladivostok, Kiev, Simferopol, Ryazan, and others. Additionally, he worked for three years in China (from 1947 to 1951) where he designed interiors and theatrical costumes.

    In total, Ozernikov worked on more than 100 theatre productions.

    In 1952 the artist moved to Sevastopol (Crimea region) where he joined the Lunacharsky Art and Drama Theatre as the chief costume and stage designer and worked there for over a decade until he established his own studio in 1966. Over the years, Ozernikov displayed regularly at commercial galleries and museum exhibitions. He also was involved in many public buildings projects where he worked on designing and decorating the interior space. Some of the projects included the Marine station and the Ukraine Hotel in Sevastopol.

    His works can be found in the collections of regional and state museums of Russia and Ukraine and in private collections.

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