Selected dates:
January 27, 1810
Born in the town of Ulla (now Beshenkovichi district, Vitebsk region, Russian Empire, today the Republic of Belarus) in the family of a Greek Catholic priest, nobleman Tomasz Khrutsky.
1827–1829
Moved to St. Petersburg to study painting. His first teacher was the English portrait painter George Doe.
1830
Entered the Imperial Academy of Arts.
At the request of Jozef Oleshkevich, an artist of Polish origin, an academician, he received permission to copy works from the Hermitage collection.
1836
He received a large silver medal for the still life "Flowers and Fruits" and the title of "free artist".
1838
Awarded a small gold medal of the Academy of Arts.
1839
He was awarded the title of Academician of the Academy of Arts. Left St. Petersburg.
1840s
He worked a lot in the portrait genre: 21 portraits were painted within three years.
1844
He acquired the Zakharnichi estate in the Polotsk district (not far from modern Polotsk), where he built a house according to his own design and laid out a garden. He lived there until the end of his life.
1846-1855
Collaborated with the Lithuanian Metropolitan Joseph Semashko. For ten years, Khrutsky carried out orders from the hierarch of the church.
1847–1851
He worked in the genre of church painting. He painted icons for the Alexander Nevsky Cathedral in Kovno (now Kaunas), the cave church of the Three Martyrs in Vilna and the Church of St. Joseph the Betrothed in Trinopol.
January 13, 1885
He died at the Zakharnichi estate.