Morning village / Rankove selo
ID:
5147
Updated:
02.04.2025
Name:
Morning village / Rankove selo
Author:
Vladimir Podlevsky
Original name:
The country of the work of art:
Date:
1990
Type:
Painting
Technique of implementation:
Painting, landscape
Materials:
Canvas, oil
Dimensions:
90x70 sm
Special labels, markings, signatures:
Ж – 1487, КП – 6415
Location of special signs:
On the back on canvas or on a stretcher
Description:
Summer rural landscape. In the foreground in the center is a yellow-green conical stack. On its slope - a purple shadow on the left - is a male figure in a red jacket and brown pants, holding a rake in his right hand (in profile on the right). At his feet are three birds. In the background to the left are three houses with two- and four-pitched roofs; two with emerald green and one with violet-blue. To the right of the lower corner, along the right edge, is a road. There are blue-green trees on the right side of the road. In the distance are green-orange poplars against a background of bright pink and yellow-green spots in the sky. The author's signature is in brown in the lower left corner: V. Podlevsky, 90. On the back - Left, above the author's inscription: Podlevsky Volodymyr Tadeevich, born in 1960. 1990, oil on canvas 70 x 90 m. Zhytomyr.
Circumstances:
It was taken out of the Kherson Art Museum by representatives of the russian federation
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Details of theft
Year of the incident:
2022
Place of the incident:
The Oleksii Shovkunenko Kherson Regional Art Museum
Coordinates (Lat, Lon):
46.62979067231111, 32.609546919505945
Place of last known stay:
Links
Archive links
Description of the incident location
It was opened on May 27, 1978, in the former City Hall building, an architectural monument of the early 20th century. As of 2022 (before the robbery), the museum's collection included more than 13 thousand works of art and was one of the most interesting museum collections in Ukraine. It includes works of Ukrainian and foreign painting, graphics, sculpture, and decorative and applied arts. From October 31 to November 4, 2022, the Kherson Art Museum was looted by the russian occupiers, and more than 10,000 of its most valuable exhibits were stolen. The cargo was sent to Crimea, and the works (all or part of them) ended up in the Simferopol Central Museum of Tavrida. It is unknown whether everything is still there.
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