Yevhen Samuchenko
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Yevhen Samuchenko | |
|---|---|
| Євген Самученко | |
| Born | |
| Website | q-l-n |
Yevhen Samuchenko (Ukrainian: Євген Самученко; creative pseudonym Q-lieb-in;[1] born in Odesa, Ukraine[2]) is a Ukrainian travel photographer and photo artist.
Member of the International Federation of Photographic Arts (AFIAP, 2016; EFIAP, 2019), Global Photographic Association of China (2019), Ukrainian Association of Professional Photographers (2017).[2]
He became interested in film photography at the age of 12, and since 2012 has been working with digital photography.[2][3] Yevhen's works were published in The New York Times,[4] The Times, CNN,[5] N-Photo, Bruckmann Publisher, National Geographic, Story Terrace, BBC, BuzzFeed, on the official websites of UNESCO and Nikon.[1] He conducted more than 60 master classes and workshops.[6]
He is the co-author of the photo book The Beauty of Ukraine (2022, teNeues Verlag, Germany; English, German and Ukrainian languages),[2][5][4] which is included in the Stanford Library fund (2023)[2] and entered the top 10 of the best travel books according to The Daily Telegraph.[7][8]
Judge of the international photo contests.[1]
Exhibitions
Personal exhibitions
- 2020 — At the Pink Planet, Kherson Regional Universal Scientific Library named after Oles Honchar, Kherson;[2]
- 2018 — One Day on Mars, Kolkata, India;[2]
- 2017 — One Day on Mars, Kyiv School of Photography, Kyiv;[2]
- 2017 — One Day on Mars, "Dzyga" gallery, Lviv.[2]
Group shows
- 2022 — Earth Photo 2022, Royal Geographical Society, London, UK;[2]
- 2022 — NFT exhibition on LED screens at Times Square, New York, USA;[9]
- 2022 — World Masters of Photography exhibition, Lik Academy of Photography and Design, Vienna, Austria;[2]
- 2022 — Travel Photographer of the Year exhibition, London, UK;[2]
- 2019 — Exhibition of winners of Nature Photographer of the Year, Netherlands.[2]
Museum expositions
- 2022 — Museum of Gloucester, UK;[2]
- 2022 — FMOPA Museum, USA;[2]
- 2022 — MEAA Museum, Great UK;[2]
- 2021— City Art Museum "Sakura", Japan;[2]
- 2021 — Ward Museum, USA;[2]
- 2021 — Museums of Science and Industry, Manchester, UK;[2]
- 2020 — Museum of Transport and Technology, Auckland, New Zealand;[2]
- 2019 — Science Museum, London, UK;[2]
- 2017 — Parkhomivka Museum of History and Arts, Kharkiv region, Ukraine;[2]
- 2016 — National Watch and Clock Museum, Columbia, Pennsylvania, USA;[2]
- 2014 — Odesa National Art Museum, Odesa.[2]