Depicted:Solomiia KreshelnytskaOriginal: All rights reservedRestoration: All rights reserved
Two models in Sonia Delaunay's boulevard Malesherbes studioThe photograph depicts two models wearing designs by artist and designer Sonia Delaunay. The outfits are described as beachwear, swimwear, or clothing with geometric patterns. One model holds an umbrella, also designed by Delaunay. The designs are part of the "Simultaneous" line, which reflects Delaunay's artistic theory of using bold, contrasting colors and geometric shapes to create movement and harmony. The clothing was created to suit the real lives of women, allowing for freedom of movement.
Georges Lepape’s “Simultaneous” Vogue Cover, "Simultaneous" dress designed by artist Sonia Delaunay. Vogue magazine from Late January 1925, featuring a work by French illustrator Georges Lepape. The illustration depicts a woman in a geometric, colorful outfit standing next to a car with a similar pattern. The dress is a "Simultaneous" dress designed by artist Sonia Delaunay.
Carl & Pearl Butler in Nudie Cohn, rodeo tailor from Ukraine costumes
Collection of things created by Nudie Cohn
Billy Walker in the Nudie Cohn costume
The Ukrainian Refugee Who Shaped American Style
Ukrainian Refugee American Style
Elton John's "Nudie Suit"he suit was designed by Nudie Cohn, an American tailor who created custom rhinestone-studded outfits for many celebrities in the 1970s.
This particular suit, with its ornate embroidery and a cowboy hat featuring stars, is one of his most well-known outfits from the era. The singer's flamboyant style and elaborate stage costumes became a defining part of his public image.
Anna StenUkrainian-born Hollywood actress Anna Sten (1908 – 1993) rose from Kyiv’s theatre scene and early Soviet silents to German talkies before Samuel Goldwyn brought her to the United States, promoting her as “the next Greta Garbo.” Notable films include Nana (1934), We Live Again (1934) and The Wedding Night (1935). Her cosmopolitan career and star-making myth embody the transnational currents of 1930s cinema.
Sonia Delaunay wearing Casa Sonia creations, Madrid, c.1920
Views of Odessa. [Album]. Boulevard. Mid-1850s.
Odesa. Boulevard. Monument to Duke Richelieu. Late 1870s.
Modest Menczynski - Lohenrin
in the opera Lohenrin > by Richard Wagner. 1909
Mentsynskyi Modest Omelyanovich
Verkhovyna 1
Gazda from Verkhovyna
Nudie Cohn in his store with "Nudie and his Mandolin" vinyl
Nudie Cohn on cover of Rolling Stone
Nudie Cohn and Elvis PresleyNudie Cohn designed Elvis' famous gold suit featured on the album cover of "50,000,000 Elvis Fans Can't Be Wrong."
Nudie Cohn and Roy Rogers
Nudie Cohn and Gram Parsons in his Flying Burrito Brothers Nudie suitAs the 1960's were winding down, Nudie Cohn's career took on a new dimension when he made a suit for Gram Parsons. An article by Elyssa East in the Oxford American magazine provides some details about the creation of Nudie's most renowned suit:
“The 1960s were coming to a close when rising country rock musician Gram Parsons posed next to Nudie Cohn, the celebrated Western-wear designer more than three times his senior. Raeanne Rubenstein shot their portrait for Show: The Magazine of the Arts at Nudie’s Los Angeles workshop. Over a smooth bare chest and midriff, the twenty-something Parsons wore the suit Nudie designed for him for the cover of the Flying Burrito Brothers’ debut album, The Gilded Palace of Sin. Made of white cavalry twill, it was embroidered with crudely ren
Portrait of Helena Chołoniewska, née Dunin-Borkowska in riding dress
Berezil MuseumDuring the winter 1924-1925 season, Berezil received the premises of the V. Lenin Theater (former M. Solovtsov Theater). The museum exhibition was displayed in three rooms in the foyer. Berezil staff gave tours and continued to put together the collection of the Theater Museum, which from the beginning was planned as an all-Ukrainian museum.
Lady Butterfly, Solomiia Krushelnytska in character
Mykola Karpovych SadovskijUkrainian actor, one of the ideologues of the Ukrainian household theater
Krushelnytska in a hat with feathers
Krushelnytska in a costume with a wig
Krushelnytska with a friend
Solomiia Krushelnytska (on the right) with her sister Osypa Bandrivska
Solomiia Krushelnytska as Madama Butterfly
A scene from the play "Hello on the Wave 477!" - A scene from the play. "Infernal action with Ostap Vishnya"Act 3. Scene 3.. Beelzebub – Mytrofan Kononenko, Ostap Vyshnia – Oleksandr Khvylia
A scene from the play "Hello on the Wave 477!". Act 3. Scene 3. "Infernal action with Ostap Vyshnia"Owls – I. Bilashenko, Lidia Krynytska, Klavdia Pilinska, Witch – Mykola Savchenko, Ostap Vyshnya – Oleksandr Khvyla
Action 1. Part II "Kaloshi No. 13" (advertising poster)A scene from the play. Chudak - Dmytro Milyutenko, Bearers - Tamara Zhevchenko, Olga Pigulovich
Sonia Delaunay Costume for Cleopatra
Figures in an InteriorFigures in an Interior is a work by the Ukrainian and French artist Sonia Delaunay. The artist, with her husband Robert Delaunay, was a co-founder of the Orphism art movement, which is characterized by its use of strong, vibrant colors and geometric shapes to create a sense of rhythm and movement.
Sonia Delaunay's work often blurred the lines between fine art and decorative arts, and she applied her artistic principles to various media, including paintings, textile designs, and interior decoration. The painting shown is a great example of her style, with two abstracted figures in a dynamically colored and patterned room. The search results include mentions of a similar work, "Figures in an Interior, colour screenprint" by Sonia Delaunay, and other Delaunay paintings with figures in interiors.
Berezil theater actors in cabinetLes Kurbas offered Ukrainians a new theater, which he called philosophical. This theater forced to think - and this in the conditions when the "Soviet" winners gave the people a beautiful picture, urging them to believe in it.
Solomiya Krushelnytska in costumeIn the modern Ukrainian tradition, she is included in the list of the most famous women of ancient and modern Ukraine.
Sonya DelaunayFar from being limited to painting, she tries out other types of creativity: monumental frescoes, theater decorations, posters, textiles; creates "couture" dresses.
Ivan AlchevskijUkrainian singer (lyric tenor), public figure; organizer, head of the Ukrainian literary and artistic society "Kobzar". He studied singing with his older brother Grigory, then in Paris and Brussels.
Mark Lukych-KropivnickijMarko Lukich Kropyvnytskyi (1840-1910) is one of the founders of the Ukrainian professional theater, writer, playwright, theater director and actor.