Teodozia Markivna Bryzh (18 February 1929 – 4 July 1999) was a Ukrainian sculptor, Honored Artist of Ukraine (1997), Member of the Union of artists of the USSR.[1]
Life
Teodozia Bryzh was born on 18 February 1929 in the village Berezhnytsia, Sarny district.[2] Bryzh graduated from Sarny Gymnasium. In 1954, she graduated from the Lviv Institute of Applied and Decorative Arts. Among her teachers are Ivan Severa and Leopold Levitsky. Bryzh lived and worked in Lviv.[2]
Career
Bryzh created more than two hundred sculptures, among them are monuments, tombstones, memorial plaques, decorative and park sculptures. Bryzh's series of works based on The Forest Song by Lesia Ukrainka are of significant interest.[1]
Bryzh realized many art projects with her husband Yevhen Beznisk, a monumental and graphic artist from Lviv.[2] The couple decorated the memorial cemetery of the Sich Riflemen on Mount Makivka, the memorial chapel to the victims of the People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs (NKVD) in Zolochiv Castle, the monument to Danylo Halytsky, and Vasylko Romanovych, built in Volodymyr-Volynsky.[3]
The sculptures of Bryzh are characterized by plasticity, elegance, and lightness. Bryzh was one of the first sculptors in Ukraine to follow the path of contemporary world art in the 1960s.[4]
Teodozia Bryzh died on 4 July 1999 in Lviv. She is buried in Lychakiv Cemetery.[5]
Commemoration
There is a memorial museum of Bryzh on 5, Martovycha Street in Lviv.[1] A street in Rivne is named after Teodozia Bryzh.
Selected works
- Memorial complex in memory of the victims of fascism in Volodymyr-Volynskyi. Co-authors sculptor Yevhen Dzyndra, architect Yaroslav Nazarkevych. Built in 1965, reconstructed in 1985.
- Monument to Soviet soldiers in the village of Khorobriv (1975)
- Monument to Yuri Velykanovych on Myshuha Street in Lviv (1982, architect Lydia Lesova)
- Tombstones of Solomiya Krushelnytska, Ivan Krypyakevych, Leopold Levytsky, Oleksa Shatkivsky at Lychakiv Cemetery in Lviv
- Chapel-monument to the victims of communist repressions (1995, castle park in Zolochev; co-authored with sculptor Vasyl Kamenshchyk, artists – Eugene and Yarema Bezniska)[6]
References
- 1 2 3 "Theodosia Markovna Brizh (born in 18.02.1929) – Biography, Interesting Facts, Famous Artworks". Arthive. Retrieved 10 March 2022.
- 1 2 3 Віктор, Гуменний (11 February 2016). "Львів'янка, що творила історію скульптури з нової сторінки: творча історія Теодозії Бриж • Фотографії старого Львова". Фотографії старого Львова (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 10 March 2022.
- ↑ Ent︠s︡yklopedii︠a︡ Lʹvova = Encyclopaedia Leopoliensis (in Ukrainian). Andriĭ Kozyt︠s︡ʹkyĭ, I. Pidkova, Андрій Козицький, І. Підкова. Lʹviv. 2007–2012. pp. 285–286. ISBN 978-966-7007-68-3. OCLC 181625653.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link) - ↑ Художники України: енциклопедичний довідник (in Ukrainian). Віктор. Сидоренко, Академія мистецтв України. Інститут проблем сучасного мистецтва. (1 ed.). Kyïv: Інтертехнологія. 2006. p. 95. ISBN 978-966-96839-3-9. OCLC 781430671.
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: CS1 maint: others (link) - ↑ Krysa, Li︠u︡bomyr (2006). Lychakivsʹkyĭ nekropolʹ : putivnyk (in Ukrainian). Roman Figolʹ. Lʹviv: [publisher not identified]. p. 58. ISBN 966-8955-00-5. OCLC 85871287.
- ↑ "Капличка-пам'ятник жертвам комуністичних репресій – "Золочів.нет"". 22 October 2017. Archived from the original on 22 October 2017. Retrieved 10 March 2022.