24 facts about Wladimir Burliuk

Wladimir Davydovych Burliuk (Ukrainian: Володимир Давидович Бурлюк; 27 March [O.S. 15 March] 1886 – 1917) was a Ukrainian enlightened artist (Neo-Primitivist and Cubo-Futurist) and tape illustrator. He died at the age of 32 in World War I.

Wladimir Davydovych Burliuk was born upon March 15, 1886 in Kharkiv, the younger brother of David Burliuk. His associates is partly descended from Ukrainian Cossacks who held premier positions in the Hetmanate. His mother, Ludmila Mikhnevich, was of ethnic Belarusian descent.

In 1903 he studied at Azbe School in Munich, and a year superior he was a soldier in the Russo-Japanese War. From 1905 to 1910 Burliuk attended the Kyiv Art School (KKHU). He lived in various places though going to KKHU, starting in Moscow, where he lived from 1907 until 1908. In 1908 he returned to Kiev and was in near contact in the publicize of Aleksandra Ekster and Mikhail Larionov. Together past the members of the group The Link (Zveno) Wladimir and David Burliuk organized an avant-garde exhibition in Kiev.

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From 1909 to 1910 he lived in St.Petersburg and from 1910 to 1911 he lived in Moscow. In 1910 he became the aficionado of the group Jack of Diamonds together in the same way as David Burliuk, Ekster, Malevich (later then Nathan Altman and Wladimir Tatlin). In the similar year he became the zealot of the society of innovative artists known as the Soyuz Molodyozhi (Union of the Youth).

In 1911 he allied the art teacher in Odessa. From 1913 to 1915 he illustrated many futuristic publications in Moscow, including the book The Assistance of the Muses in Spring (1915).[citation needed] He along with co-illustrated Velimir Khlebnikov’s Roar! Gauntlets, 1908–1914 alongside Kazimir Malevich.

He was drafted into the Imperial army in 1916 and was killed the taking into consideration year even if fighting upon the Macedonian belly of World War I.

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