Mark Kirnarsky
Mark Abramovich Kirnarsky (June 8, 1893 in Pogar – 1941 in Leningrad, now Saint Petersburg) was a Soviet cover artist of Jewish descent. He belonged to the so-called Petrograd school, distinguished by consistent and scrupulous style. He scored particularly for Akhmatova's From Six Books (Iz shesti knig) and the publishing house Academia.
Since 1922 Kirnarsky lived in Leningrad and died during its siege.[1]
Notes
- Письма В.Н. Вайсблата П.Д. Эттингеру (in Russian). aej.org.ua. Retrieved 2009-04-15.
gollark: Most interweb™ stuff will continue to be done on large platforms despite, by 2030, probably a lot of random privacy scandals and likely not that much done about them, though open stuff will probably be more usable and better by then.
gollark: I doubt it.
gollark: It already has a lot. Desktop Linux, no.
gollark: I mean, maybe supercomputing facilities will also have test ones and/or some used as accelerators for specific tasks, but it won't be massively commonplace.
gollark: Quantum computing will improve, but mostly still be stuck as a very expensive shiny toy in 2030, though perhaps with some utility in doing specific calculations in research.
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