Albert
Agafonovich Chetverikov

Russia • 出生于 1930

生平和信息

Albert Agatonovic Chetverikov was born on 2 October 1930 in the village of Belyanitsy one kilometer from the city of Ivanovo. In 1951 he graduated from the Ivanovo art College. Member of the Union of artists since 1977. The artist traveled around Russia collecting natural material for their art, visiting the Caucasus, Central Asia, Siberia, the Urals, the Volga region, in the Russian North. Since 1975, lives in Petrozavodsk. In recent years there is an artist workshop and in the South of Russia, in the city of Armavir in Krasnodar region.
Artist albert Chetverikov was a great master of painting, working in the genres of landscape, still life, portrait. His work has been exhibited in many countries of Europe, Asia and America, are in museums and private collections in Russia, England, Belgium, USA, Holland, Japan. One of the works of albert Chetverikova – "Quiet autumn" - was acquired in 1967 by the Royal Academy of arts UK for the collection of Queen Elizabeth II. However, his creative life in Karelia was difficult.
Participant in numerous national and international exhibitions, whose work has been exhibited in 21 countries, and reproductions were published in magazines with millions of copies; in South Korea, for example, and now the cards work Chetverikova sold in every Newsstand; on exhibition in London at the Royal Academy of arts the work of an artist "Quiet autumn" bought by Queen Elizabeth II.
Born in Ivanova, about thirty years of living in Petrozavodsk. Therefore, the main theme of his work - Karelia. On approval of the artist, he follows in the footsteps of the Impressionists. In his works, bright colors and plenty of sunlight. Albert Chetverikov does not accept the conventional statement about the dark and muted motifs of Karelia. He appeals to the historical and fairy-tale motifs. The artist believes that his realism is not a reflection of the genuine items but with the transfer of "the natural properties of nature, its vibrations and movement of air and water."