Concept

Mykola Tseluiko

Summary
Mykola Ivanovych Tseluiko (Микола Іванович Целуйко, also 'Tseluyko'), born 3 July 1937, died 31 October 2007, was a Ukrainian painter and textile artist. Tseluiko was born and spent his early childhood in Slatyne, Derhachi Raion, Kharkiv Oblast. Tseluiko was the third and youngest child in the family. After his father went missing in the Second World War (1944), his family moved to Lviv, where they lived on Parkova (Park) Street. From 1959 to 1965, Mykola Tseluiko studied in the Lviv State Institute of Applied and Decorative Art, specializing in the artistic design of fabrics. In 1965, Tseluiko moved to the Kherson Cotton Combine as a fabric pattern artist. He worked there for the rest of his life. He became a leading artist at the Combine, which was the largest textile factory in the USSR. Tseluiko "created patterns for jacquard curtain and drapery fabrics making creative use of the Ukrainian folk art motifs and sketches from nature". Under the Communist system, patterns could only be brought into production when they had been reviewed and approved by the artistic council first in Kiev by the Ukrainian Institute of Light Industry, and then in Moscow by the All-Union Institute of Light Industry. These reviews were held three times per year. Tseluiko created "hundreds of square meters of sketches", and "hundreds of thousands of square meters of fabrics" were made by the Kherson Cotton Combine from his designs. Tseluiko also taught and supervised students at the Lviv State Institute of Applied and Decorative Art. He became chief lecturer of Weaving and Design at the Kherson State Technological University. He taught Basics of Composition and Drawing and Textile Products Design. Mykola Tseluiko painted with tempera and water-color on paper. Most of his works were painted from nature: he took a sketchbox, a board, and sheets of paper, and went sketching. He painted very quickly in a single session. He often went on painting trips: he travelled, sketching and painting in the Crimea, the Carpathian Mountains, the Caucasus including Baku, Central Asia including Samarkand and Bukhara, the Baltic including Tallinn, Moldova, and Russia.
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