Posts Tagged ‘architecture’

Vydubychi monastery domes

Friday, March 28th, 2008

vudybychi, monastery, domes, onion dome, Ukraine, Ukrainian, oil painting, daily painting, Kyiv, Kiev

15×15 cm, oil on board, 2008, private collection

Continuing here the theme of Ukrainian church domes. It’s a real pleasure to paint this beauty.

I caught a cold, as well as the baby, and a bit under the weather, not producing as much as I should a week before my first show.

Katherine I Hardy – a new artist who’s work I like. She illustrated the Great Gatsby and got her degree from RCA.

Kyniv churches old and new

Monday, February 25th, 2008

Kuniv church old and new

15×15 sm, oil on board, 2008
This is one of the impressions from yesterday’s day trip the old wooden one, and a new built right next to  it.  The view on both of them is spectacular as you are coming back from Derman’ over the hill and down very steep descent into the valley. I can only imagine what it will look like when the greenery appears.

Derman’-Horodok-Biliv

Sunday, February 24th, 2008

We visited three different monasteries in Volyn region today.

The roads leading to the places are bad, lack signs and general depressive ruin of the countryside surrounds everything. Preferred means of transport there are horse-driven carriages. During the summer nature hides all this in much more attractive greenery.

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DSC08818.JPG Derman’ dates back XV-XVII century and hosts a lovely woman’s monastery, two churches, a holy well, with ancient row and mot around it. Besides the monastery, an old school, that produced Ulas Samchuk- renowned writer and journalist.

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Horodok outside of Rivne sits on an island, old Ukrainian baroque church dates back 1740. The new monastery cathedral has fantastic new wooden decor inside and the warm” church” has a great private feel to it.

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Biliv is the youngest women’s monastery of the three, from 1972, owns a fantastic wooden church, and is the hardest to get to.

On the way back we ate at an established inn called Sophia, outside of Rivne. The kinds of place where the local newlyweds come for their photo shoots complete with pretty exotic garden, tennis courts, hotel, solid restaurant and even a recently added live music venue.

Neighbour across the stret

Wednesday, February 20th, 2008

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15×15 cm, oil on board, 2008, private collection
This is a view from my parent’s new house window. Since it’s a new development, part of the land is still being used for potato while other plots are built up with million-dollar mansions. Thirteen years later after starting with this house, we are still using dirt road to get here.

Check out two more funky Ukrainian illustrator artists on flickr: Sheplusleo and Taz_coma

Orthodox cathedral in Lutsk

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

Lutsk cathedral

15×15 cm, oil on board, 2008, private collection

As pepole were coming from the service, the winter night was settling in, I peeked though the main gate at the church to see this perfectly framed picture. The architecture of the place is typicall Ukrainian Baroque with a  hint of Renaissance.

View on Podil

Sunday, February 17th, 2008

View on Podil

15×15 cm, oil on board, 2008, private collection

A very cool artist Diana Navarette came to my flickr page; I was happy to find out she makes great expressive portraits.

Marshrutka to Lutsk

Friday, February 15th, 2008

telephone booth, ukrtelecom, kyiv, kiev, ukraine15×15 cm, oil on board, 208, private collection

So we went out to Lutsk for the week. The ride was exiting, to say the least. As we were approaching our destination – in a village before Lutsk – the driver took us off the bus, ’cause his buddy warned him on the phone him the police was waiting for him at the station. I don’t think the guy did anything wrong, the police seems to be after every marshrootka in town, but having to switch to a local bus to make the last five minutes of your five-hour ride is a bit extreme. Here’s the back of the driver looking at those typical Ukrtelecom phone booths at the Kyiv vokzal just as were boarding. Hardly anyone is using them these days. It’s a shame, they are of such fantastic color! They usually serve the orientiers for marshrutkas at vokzal to line up there by dozens and offer to take you in almost every little town around Ukraine.

Lutsk – the old town

Wednesday, January 2nd, 2008

I am home for New Year’s – in Lutsk. The town is tiny and cozy, and has an old town that’s worth checking out. We picked a very gray and cold day to explore it, feels cold just from looking at pictures:

Lutsk, st. Bratkovoskogo

This is a residential street with old small houses leading up to the catholic cathedral. An old German cathedral on the very left now houses a baptist church, I think.

Lubart castle in Lutsk

This is the Lubart castle in Lutsk – dates back XV c. or so and is comparatively well preserved. The pretty building up font is the local fancy restaurant Korona Vitovta that’s worth stopping by at (not any more! see my review above). The tree on the left is called Lesya Ukrajinka tree (Lesya was a prominent Ukrainian poet in nineteen hundreds and may have planted it).

Lubart castle in Lutsk - interior

Inside the castle there is a museum of bells in the tower on the left, museum of first book printing in the handsome building next to it and a gallery of art – in the white building on the very right. There used to be a cathedral in the middle where you see excavation works roofing now.

Besides a new place for drining good beer opened at the beginning of main pedestrian street – Bravyi Shweik. The decor is solid, full of tv screens showing the oddest videos: this time it was extracts from bad Elvis movies, where he’d always play the singer of the band. It is the season for mulled wine (usually called Glutwein in Ukrainian on the menu). As well as great time to meet my college girlfriends who all live out of town and come home just for holidays.

Planok castle and Lavra

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

recently finished painting these two architectural landmarks:

Palanok castle, Mukacheve, oil painting by Olha Pryymak

2007, oil on canvas 50×30 cm. 18x 24 cm. Please send your bid by email if you want to purchase this painting.
I visited it on tour of Zakarpattya last winter. It’s an unforgettable place : the Carpathians are behind you, and this castle rises up above the plains on a man-made hill. Three castles one inside another really when you start exploring it… And the sweet wine that locals produce there is something else.

Kyiv Lavra, oil painting by Olha Pryymak

2007, oil on canvas, 30x50cm, private collection

Olyka and Klevan

Saturday, November 10th, 2007

Two rival towns going back in sixteen hundreds now are ruins with a palace/castle and a cathedral each. One castle now is a psychiatric hospital, the other – a ruin, home to junkies and stray sheep.

Here are some detailed photo-accounts of the trip by two Ukrainian travel bloggers to Olyka (here too) and to Klevan (and here). And here’s my photo memories of a very wodnerful atmonstperic trip:

Olyka, catholic cathedral

Olyka, Ukraine, the orthodox church

Olyka, the view of the city center

Olyka, the polish catholic cemetery

Olyka, the catholic cathedral

Klevan, Ukraine, the Chartoryiski castle palace

The rest of the phots are in this flick set.