The painter Vladimir Igoshev worked in various genres: he painted portraits and self-portraits, landscapes and genre paintings. He used different techniques including graphite pencil.
Vladimir Igoshev recalled: ‘Pencil is my inseparable companion. When I first got to use it in the early years, I felt an overwhelming desire to paint. Then there was the school and the Ufa College of Arts, where the happy meeting with my remarkable teachers took place. Ivan Uryadov and Aleksandr Tyulkin didn’t just teach me to professionally work with the pencil and brush, but cultivated a love of creative process itself, organization of the process, and labour discipline. We drew everywhere: at the market, in the park, by the riverbank. I will always appreciate my first teachers for these lessons and for the ‘sacred’, as Uryadov used to call it, artists’ attitude to their vocation.’
The People’s Artist of the Bashkir ASSR Ivan Ivanovich Uryadov was an active participant and event planner of the republic’s creative life. In 1914 he graduated from the art school in Kazan. Till 1926 he taught visual arts in the teachers’ training college in Orenburg and worked as the drawing teacher in the studio at the political department of Volga Military District in Samara. In 1929 he moved to Ufa, where he worked as a teacher at the Ufa College of Arts. The works by Ivan Uryadov are now in the collection of the Bashkir Nesterov Art Museum and in the private collections.
Aleksandr Erastovich Tyulkin is the People’s Artist of the Bashkir ASSR and a founder of the visual art in Bashkortostan. From the early years he loved impressionism. From 1926 till 1950 Tyulkin gave classes at the Arts Faculty of the Ufa College of Arts. He educated the whole generation of well-known painters, such as Boris Domashnikov, Fyodor Kascheev, Akhmat Lutfullin and others.
In 1944 Aleksandr Tyulkin was appointed the head of The Union of Artist of Bashkortostan, and in 1960 he was given the title of the Honoured Artist of the RSFSR.
Vladimir Igoshev recalled: ‘Pencil is my inseparable companion. When I first got to use it in the early years, I felt an overwhelming desire to paint. Then there was the school and the Ufa College of Arts, where the happy meeting with my remarkable teachers took place. Ivan Uryadov and Aleksandr Tyulkin didn’t just teach me to professionally work with the pencil and brush, but cultivated a love of creative process itself, organization of the process, and labour discipline. We drew everywhere: at the market, in the park, by the riverbank. I will always appreciate my first teachers for these lessons and for the ‘sacred’, as Uryadov used to call it, artists’ attitude to their vocation.’
The People’s Artist of the Bashkir ASSR Ivan Ivanovich Uryadov was an active participant and event planner of the republic’s creative life. In 1914 he graduated from the art school in Kazan. Till 1926 he taught visual arts in the teachers’ training college in Orenburg and worked as the drawing teacher in the studio at the political department of Volga Military District in Samara. In 1929 he moved to Ufa, where he worked as a teacher at the Ufa College of Arts. The works by Ivan Uryadov are now in the collection of the Bashkir Nesterov Art Museum and in the private collections.
Aleksandr Erastovich Tyulkin is the People’s Artist of the Bashkir ASSR and a founder of the visual art in Bashkortostan. From the early years he loved impressionism. From 1926 till 1950 Tyulkin gave classes at the Arts Faculty of the Ufa College of Arts. He educated the whole generation of well-known painters, such as Boris Domashnikov, Fyodor Kascheev, Akhmat Lutfullin and others.
In 1944 Aleksandr Tyulkin was appointed the head of The Union of Artist of Bashkortostan, and in 1960 he was given the title of the Honoured Artist of the RSFSR.