Ryah Ludins

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Born
Ryah Ludschinski

(1896-03-28)March 28, 1896
Mariupol, Ukraine
DiedAugust 30, 1957(1957-08-30) (aged 61)
KnownforArtist, art teacher
Ryah Ludins
Ryah Ludins
Photo of Ryah Ludins working on a fresco in Bellevue Hospital, taken 1937
Born
Ryah Ludschinski

(1896-03-28)March 28, 1896
Mariupol, Ukraine
DiedAugust 30, 1957(1957-08-30) (aged 61)
Known forArtist, art teacher

Ryah Ludins (18961957) was a Ukrainian-born American muralist, painter, printmaker, art teacher, and writer. She made murals for post offices and other government buildings during the Great Depression and also obtained commissions for murals from Mexican authorities and an industrial concern. Unusually versatile in her technique, she made murals in fresco, mixed media, and wood relief, as well as on canvas and dry plaster. She exhibited her paintings widely but became better known as a printmaker after prints such as "Cassis" (1928) and "Bombing" (about 1944) drew favorable notice from critics. She taught art in academic settings and privately, wrote and illustrated a children's book, and contributed an article to a radical left-wing art magazine. A career spanning more than three decades ended when she succumbed to a long illness in the late 1950s.

Born in Ukraine, Ludins came to New York City aged eight in 1904 and spent most of the rest of her life in the city. After graduating from high school she enrolled in Columbia Teachers College in 1920, intending to take up art education as her career.[1][2] While studying there, she received an honorable-mention award in an exhibition of textile design held at a Manhattan gallery devoted to the applied arts called the Art Alliance of America.[3][4] A year later, having earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Fine Arts and Fine Arts Education, she began studies at the Art Students League of New York where she took life classes from Kenneth Hayes Miller.[5][6] In 1925 she embarked on travels that took her first to Paris, where she studied with André Lhote, and then to Mexico City where she took classes at the National Polytechnic Institute of Mexico.[1] During World War II Ludins studied printmaking under William Hayter at his Atelier 17, then located in Manhattan.[5]

Career in art

Personal life and family

References

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