Alexander Kostetsky
Alexander Kostetsky was a Ukrainian painter and sculptor. His name has various transliterations into English and variants include Aleksandr Kostetsky, Alexander Kostecky, Alexander Kostetski and Aleksandr Kosteckij. His art style is Magic Realism, Fantastic art.
Biography
Kostetsky was born into a family of artists on 14 November 1954 in the Ukrainian capital of Kiev. His father was the academician painter Vladimir Kostetsky and his mother the sculptor Galina Novokreshchenova. He was the grandson of the biologist Nikolai Danilovich Kostetsky. He developed his artistic talent under the guidance of his parents and attended the Shevchenko State Art School in Kiev, where he graduated in 1975. He extended his studies at the National Academy of Visual Arts and Architecture in Kiev and graduated it in 1979 before beginning work in an art workshow. During the repressive Soviet period, when artists needed state approval to exhibit in official galleries, he participated in underground art shows. He travelled widely in Ukraine and also visited the Caucasus and Central Asia. In 1988 he visited the United States with his first wife Helen Granova and was able to place his art in exhibitions in New York City, Washington, Philadelphia and other cities. Some of his paintings were bought by Norton Dodge's personal museum and are still on display there. He also painted icons for Eastern Orthodox churches in New York. Up to 1995 he regularly held exhibitions in the United States.In 1998 he published an album of his prints in Kyiv. It was edited by his second wife, a teacher and mathematician, who also wrote the introduction. He continued to hold regular exhibitions in Kyiv, usually in the gallery "Nef" in Laurel, where some of his work is on permanent display. In 2001 he visited the United States again to exhibit his art and in 2003 he exhibited in the German city of Mannheim. In November 2003 he was made a member of the Union of Artists of Ukraine. He continued to travel widely, visiting Egypt in 2007 and also India and Nepal. However, he began to suffer from problems with his heart and lungs, and he died January 4, 2010, at his home in Ukraine aged only 55.