Vladimir Polunin

Vladimir Polunin (1880 – 11 March 1957) was a Russian scene painter.

Born in the Russian Empire, in 1908 Polunine moved to London to work as a designer for the Ballets russes. He was Diaghilev's chief scene-painter and worked with Picasso.[1] Among Polunin's students was Karen Harris, daughter of the banker Sir Austin Harris.[2] In London he met one of the artists Serge Diaghilev was trying hard to get work for, the sculptor and costume designer Elizabeth Violet Hart. She was an English introduced in the Parisian Bohemia by Henri-Pierre Roché and heroine of the novel Deux Anglaises et le continent. They were married the same year.

At that time he was a teacher at the Slade School of Fine Art.

He was the father of botanists Nicholas Polunin and Oleg Polunin, as well as physician Ivan Polunin.[3]

Polunin died on 11 March 1957 in Great Britain.

Publication

  • The Continental Method of Scene Painting: Seven Years With the Diaghileff Company.[4]
gollark: And some languages don't really have English-style discrete alphabets at all as far as I know.
gollark: Yes. Also, you can write stuff like accented es as either one character or e + a diacritic.
gollark: For some reason there are weird parenthesized things so you can write ⒧⒤⒦⒠ ⒯⒣⒤⒮.
gollark: Codepoints, technically, characters are really vaguely defined and the Unicode spec doesn't use the term.
gollark: Why wouldn't they?

References

  1. Haskell and Clarke, (p. 149); and Boston, (p. 73
  2. The modernist Journals Project
  3. Westing, Arthur (16 December 1997). "Obituary: Nicholas Polunin". The Independent.
  4. The Continental Method of Scene Painting: Seven Years With the Diaghileff Company on WorldCat
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.