Folk Patterns
About
pattern:
Porcelain Folk
Patterns by Alexey Vorobievsky is a surprisingly harmonious world of bright,
festive, as a rule, red-blue-gold paintings adorning porcelain. Referring to
the origins of folk art, the artist created emotionally figurative works, juicy
in color, inspired by fairy tales, epics, fairground booths with invariable
carousel and buffoons, folk theater and its heroes. Fabulous birds with golden
feathers, golden-maned horses, fantastic flowers, intricate ornament pattern,
reminiscent of the painting of an old spinning wheel or embroidery of a
sundress - all this can vary by the artist endlessly. The high aesthetic
potential of the cultural and everyday life of Russia are reflected in these works.
The author of this pattern was awarded by a gold medal at the World Exhibition
in Brussels in 1958. The works are kept in the collections of the State
Hermitage, the International Ceramics Center in Faenza (Italy) and other major
cultural treasures.
About
painter:
The author of the pattern is Aleksey Viktorovich Vorobyevsky (1906-1992) - Honored Artist of the RSFSR, winner of the State Prize of the RSFSR named after V.I. IE Repin for the creation of highly artistic samples of porcelain products. In 1926 he graduated from the Slutsk art school and started working at the LFZ as a porcelain painting artist. Participant of international exhibitions since 1927. The master's works are distinguished by their individual style, elegance of miniature painting, light naivety of the image, harmony of color, pattern and form. Vorobyevsky's work is characterized by an appeal to fantastic and fairy-tale plots, which are based on the motives of folk art. Often in his works you can see plots with schematically depicted figures of people, unearthly flowers, trees, buildings and crystal bridges. When asked about how such wonderful plots are born, he replied that he sees them in a dream, then transfers them to porcelain. Sometimes Vorobyevsky is called an artist-jeweler for his unique painting technique. Works are in the Hermitage, Russian Museum, Kuskovo Estate, Elaginoostrovsky Palace Museum and other museums and private collections in Russia, USA, France, Great Britain, Germany.
More masterpieces created by Voroboevskiy please, find here.