Nikolai Ushin

Soviet graphic artist, theatre designer and book illustrator
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroSoviet graphic artist, theatre designer and book illustrator
PlacesRussia
isArtist Illustrator Graphic artist Designer Theatre designer
Work fieldArts Creativity
Gender
Male
Death6 April 1942
The details

Biography

Nikolai Alexeyevich Ushin (Russian: Николай Алексеевич Ушин, 1898 – 6 April 1942) was a Soviet graphic artist, theatre designer and book illustrator.
Born in Saint Petersburg, Ushin studied in the Academy of Fine Arts in 1923–1928. In the 1920s Ushin began designing theatrical decorations for scenic performances. He creatively adapted the themes of medieval Russian painting and Palekh miniature. Ushin in particular illustrated the Russian translation of One Thousand and One Nights published in eight volumes by Academia. His illustrations for One Thousand and One Nights were awarded a gold medal at the 1937 Paris Exposition. Ushin also made lithographs and bookplates. He died in besieged Leningrad in 1942. Ushin's works are kept in several Saint Petersburg museums. His nephew, Andrey Ushin also became a graphic artist.

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