Yevgeny Vuchetich
Yevgeny Viktorovich Vuchetich (28 December [O.S. 15 December] 1908–12 April 1974) (Russian: Евгений Викторович Вучетич) was a prominent Soviet sculptor and artist. He is known for his heroic monuments, often of allegoric style.
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Biography
Vuchetich was born in Yekaterinoslav, Russian Empire (now Dnipropetrovsk, Ukraine), the son of Viktor Vučetić, of Serbian ethnicity, and Anna Andreevna Stewart, a Russian of French descent.
He was a prominent representative of the Socialist Realism style and was awarded with the Lenin Prize in 1970, the Stalin Prize (1946, 1947, 1948, 1949, 1950), Order of Lenin (twice), Order of the Patriotic War (2nd degree), Hero of Socialist Labor (1967) and People's Artist of the USSR (1959).
Works
- Soviet War Memorial[1] in Treptower Park, Berlin (1946–1949), overseen by a 13m tall monument of a Soviet soldier holding a German child, with a sword, over a broken swastika.
- Let Us Beat Swords into Plowshares in the United Nations garden (1957)[2]
- Let Us Beat Swords into Plowshares in front of the plant "Gazoapparat" in Volgograd.
- A sculpture of Felix Dzerzhinsky (1958), colloquially known as "Iron Felix", used to be in Moscow at the Lubyanka Square.
- The Motherland Calls! at Mamayev Kurgan (1963–1967)
- Mother Motherland, Kiev, Ukraine (first design, 1970s)
Gallery
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yevgeny Vuchetich. |
References
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- Articles containing Russian-language text
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- 1908 births
- 1974 deaths
- Heroes of Socialist Labour
- Lenin Prize winners
- People's Artists of the USSR (visual arts)
- Russian artists
- Russian people of Serbian descent
- Russian sculptors
- Socialist realism artists
- Soviet artists
- Soviet sculptors
- Stalin Prize winners
- Ukrainian people of Serbian descent
- 20th-century sculptors
- Russian artist stubs
- European sculptor stubs