Mariia Tymchuk
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mariia Tymchuk | |
|---|---|
| Марія Миколаївна Тимчук | |
The artist Maria Tymchuk with her father, the Merited Painter of Ukraine Mykola Shevchuk, during the All-Ukrainian art plein air event "To You, Mother of God!" at the Zarvanytsia Spiritual Center (2023) | |
| Born | 18 February 1989 |
| Alma mater | Terebovlia Higher School of Culture, Kamianets-Podilskyi Ivan Ohiienko National University |
| Occupations | Master of decorative and applied arts |
Mariia Tymchuk (née Shevchuk; Ukrainian: Марія Миколаївна Тимчук; born 18 February 1989) is a Ukrainian master of decorative and applied arts. Daughter of Mykola Shevchuk.[1]
Maria Tymchuk was born on 18 February 1989 in Terebovlia, now Terebovlia Hromada, Ternopil Raion, Ternopil Oblast, Ukraine.[1]
In 2008, she graduated from the Faculty of Fine Arts and Restoration at the Terebovlia Higher School of Culture, and in 2012, she graduated from the Kamianets-Podilskyi Ivan Ohiienko National University (teachers Nataliia Ursu and Borys Nehoda). Currently, she is a teacher in the Department of Decorative and Applied Arts at the Terebovlia College of Culture and Arts.[1]
Creativity
She paints in the genres of decorative painting, landscape, and iconography. He also paints artillery shell casings. She is the founder of the author's style of "rounded craquelures".[1]
From 2010, Tymchuk has participated in plein air workshops, exhibitions, international festivals, and charity events. Solo exhibitions have been held in Ternopil (2010), Zbarazh (2021),[2] and Berezhany (2024).[3] Some of her works are kept in the collections of the Ternopil Regional Art Museum, Zbarazh Castle, the Bohdan Lepky Museum in Berezhany, and others. The artist's copy of the Theotokos of Terebovlia is in the private collection of Cardinal Pietro Parolin in the Vatican City.[1][4][5]
Important works include:
- "Harbuzovyi natiurmort" (2015), "Soniakhy" (2018), "Pivonii" (2019), "Hrushi", "Pivnyky" (both 2020), «Pora irysiv», "Simeistvo tiulpaniv" (both 2021), "Zhorzhyny" (2022), "Vesnianyi podykh" (2023), "Sonechko", "Zarvanytska ikona Materi Bozhoi", "Icon of the Mother of God “Admiration”" (all 2024).[1]