1 188 $
| |
Marking: | 93937 |
Country: | USSR |
Dating: | 1945 year |
The original. |
The original poster is in excellent collector's condition. The full title of the poster is "Soviet people are full of gratitude and love for their native Stalin, the great organizer of our victory." Artist V. Koretsky. M.; L.: The State Publishing House "Art"; 1st Model printing trust "Polygraph Book of OGIZA at the Council of People's Commissars of the RSFSR", 1945. Size 83.8*56.4 cm. In good condition. Guarantee of authenticity. Rare.
Viktor Borisovich Koretsky (1909-1998) was a Soviet graphic artist. Honored Artist of the RSFSR (1961). Laureate of two Stalin Prizes (1946, 1949). V. B. Koretsky was born on May 5 (18), 1909 in Kiev. In 1921-1929 he studied at the Moscow School of Fine Arts. In the 1920s and 1930s, he created a gallery of portraits of artists. He has been painting posters since 1931. Collaborates in the publishing houses OGIZ-IZOGIZ, Iskusstvo. In 1939-1987, he was a member of the editorial board at the Advertising Film publishing house. The artist's creative method is based on a combination of full-scale photographs with pencil and gouache drawings.
During the Great Patriotic War, he created over 40 posters. They are distinguished by the sharpness of their constructions, the emotional intensity of conveying the drama of the experiences of Soviet people. Since 1956, he worked in the Agitplakat association. V. B. Koretsky is the author of the first Soviet postage stamp dedicated to the Great Patriotic War, "Be a Hero!", which was issued on August 12, 1941. She was the artist's first and last postal miniature.Two more of his works became the subjects of postage stamps: the emblem of the Spartakiad of the Peoples of the USSR, designed by him, is depicted on one of the stamps of the 1956 series issued for the Spartakiad, and his 1940 poster "Meeting of the Red Army with the population of Western Ukraine and Western Belarus" is represented on one of the stamps of the 1968 series issued in connection with The 50th anniversary of the Armed Forces of the USSR. V. B. Koretsky died on July 4, 1998. He was buried in Moscow at the Vagankovo cemetery.
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