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eng Automatic Translation

Yaroslav Tyshinsky

1883

An artist, some local historians call Yaroslav Tyshinsky the first Minsk designer. He also created scenery for performances and children's performances.

Lived and worked in Poland and Minsk.

Associated institutions

Related

Selected dates:

June 1, 1883

Born in the village of Nepokolovtsy (Russian Empire, now Ukraine). A few years later, the family moved to Stryi (a city near Lviv), which was part of Poland until the start of World War II.

He graduated from the Lviv Gymnasium and entered the Faculty of Architecture of the Lviv Polytechnic Institute, where he met the famous Minsk architect Otton Krasnopolsky.

After studying at the institute, he entered the Krakow Academy of Fine Arts.

After Krakow, he went to Paris, to the Julian Academy, but did not receive a diploma.

1909

In connection with the death of his father, the artist briefly returns to Lvov, then, at the invitation of a friend , he goes to Minsk, where he began his career as a sculptor-decorator and art teacher. Subsequently, he opened his own school-workshop in Minsk.

He is engaged in the design of the city's first artistic coffee house, opened at the Grand Café Select restaurant on Zakharyevskaya (the coffee house was decorated in a Parisian style, no photographs have been preserved).

March 1911

The first art exhibition in Minsk in the premises of the Polish club Ognisko, located in the city center on Cathedral Square in the Lyakhovsky house. Tyshinsky was one of the organizers of this exhibition - he was assisted by the artist Ferdinand Ruschits.

1914

The artist was forced to leave Minsk, he was exiled to Orenburg, where he worked in local schools, taught drawing and architecture.

1918

As a private , he joined the ranks of the 5th Siberian division. After its defeat near Krasnoyarsk , he ended up in prison, and when he was released, he was engaged in deforestation, rafting trees along the Yenisei, and making dye for underwear.

1920

The artist returned to Poland. During this period, he begins to paint silk scarves and creates his last sculpture.

April 17, 1930

The artist died of tuberculosis and was buried at the Powazkowski Cemetery in Warsaw.