Depicted:Clarice LispectorOriginal: All rights reservedRestoration: All rights reserved
Clarice Lispector
Clarice Lispector with her printing machine
Alla Horska, Hryhoriy Synytsia, Vasyl Stus, Viktor Zaretsky
Пантелеймон Куліш у шапціPanteleimon Kulish (1819–1897) was a key figure in the Ukrainian cultural revival. He authored the first Ukrainian historical novel, The Black Council (1857), and worked as a publisher and editor (including the journal Osnova), as well as an ethnographer and historian. He developed the phonetic Ukrainian orthography known as “Kulishivka,” translated Shakespeare and worked on a translation of the Bible, helping to establish standards for the literary Ukrainian language. He moved in the circle of Taras Shevchenko, was married to the writer Hanna Barvinok (Oleksandra Bilozerska), and was connected to the intellectual milieu of the Cyril and Methodius Brotherhood. He hailed from the then Chernihiv Governorate (now Sumy Oblast).
Delegates to the First All-Union Conference of the Association of Proletarian Writers of the USSR, representatives of Ukraine and Belarus. From left to right, sitting: Mykola Khvylovy, Serhiy Pylypenko, Tsishka Gartny, Adam Babareka. Standing: Grigory Epik, Mikhas Charot, Anatol Volny, Mykola Hristovy. Moscow
All executed before 1937, Khvylovy - committed suicide.
Clarice LispectorUkrainian-born Brazilian novelist and short story writer. Her distinctive and innovative works delve into diverse narrative forms, weaving themes of intimacy and introspection, earning her subsequent international acclaim. Born to a Jewish family in Podolia in Western Ukraine.
Mark Lukych-KropivnickijMarko Lukich Kropyvnytskyi (1840-1910) is one of the founders of the Ukrainian professional theater, writer, playwright, theater director and actor.