Hryhoriy Shevchenko1907 - 1908 yy.Kyrylivka village, Cherkasy region (Zvenyhorod district, Kyrylivka village)
Photo by G.P. Shevchenko. Village of Kyrylivka. Windmills. Cherkasy region (Zvenyhorod district, village of Kyrylivka). 1907-1908.
Hryhoriy Shevchenko - a photo artist from the Shevchenko family - the great-grandson of the late Taras Hryhorovych Shevchenko. He was engaged in photography at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries, which allowed him to capture places and people that had not yet undergone dramatic changes and retained their pristine authenticity.
Author:Hryhoriy ShevchenkoGenre:Landscape PhotographyPlace: Kyrylivka village, Cherkasy region (Zvenyhorod district, Kyrylivka village)Original: All rights reservedRestoration: All rights reservedReference to: Original
A village scene from Ukraine's Volyn region in 1909
Views of Odessa. [Album]. View of the Pokrovsk Church and Aleksandrovsky Avenue. Mid-1850s.
Odesa. Quarantine. Mid-1850s.
Bison
Boys from the Plast hut ‹The Winged Bunker› 1947. Bavaria
Verkhovyna 12
Verkhovyna 11
Verkhovyna 9
Verkhovyna 8
Villa Bashkirtseff in NiceFrom 1871 to 1877, the Bashkirtseff family villa in Nice served as a setting for Marie’s early ambitions. Here, surrounded by the social life she adored, Marie immersed herself in private studies, driven by her vision of fame. Today, Nice commemorates her with a dedicated street and a permanent display of her work in the Musée des Beaux-Arts.
A watering hole under a bridge in a city in Yunnan province by Sofia Yablonska
Irish Landscape Design in Ukrainian Park by Dionysius Mickler
Oleksandr and Margarita Murashko on their wedding day
Sofia Yablonska is sitting in a car
View from the ship
Ukrainian ladies in HarkivFor some time, Kharkiv played the role of the capital, thanks to the industrial development of the Donetsk-Kryvorizka region, the city became one of the largest cities of the All-Russian Empire. At the same time, it was one of the centers of activity of the Ukrainian revival.
Cultural center of the continent in 19 century was KyivAt the end of the 19th century, Kyiv could be considered the cultural center of the continent, where Eastern and Western civilizations met.
A man on a fenceOne of the many photos of people and the area where Paraska-Plytka Horytsvit lived
Life is bustling in old KyivIt is not surprising that at the end of the 19th century, almost half of all Jews in the world lived in Ukraine. The cultures of all the countries on the continent flocked there and it was very beneficial for doing business.
Magic of CarpathianParaska created her own microcosm, which exists on the border between truth and fiction, where the real is so closely intertwined with the mystical that it is impossible to separate them. Her life is a difficult path of trials, including 10 years of Soviet camps for the help of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army.