Yevgeny$500706$ - перевод на Английский
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Yevgeny$500706$ - перевод на Английский

RUSSIAN PAINTER AND AUTHOR (1901–1965)
Charushin; Yevgeny charushin; Yevgeny Ivanovich Charushin

Yevgeny      
n. Yevgeny, russischer Vorname
Yevgeny Primakov         
  • link=Jubilee Medal "In Commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of the Birth of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin"
  • Farewell to Yevgeny Primakov on 29 June 2015
  • link=Russia
  • link=Soviet Union
  • link=Lomonosov Gold Medal
  • link=USSR State Prize
  • Order "For Merit to the Fatherland" 1st class
  • Order "For Merit to the Fatherland" 2nd class
  • Order "For Merit to the Fatherland" 3rd class
  • link=Order of Honour (Russia)
  • Order Dostik 1st class
  • link=Order of the Badge of Honour
  • link=Order of Friendship of Peoples
  • link=Order of Alexander Nevsky
  • link=Order of the Red Banner of Labour
  • isbn=9780300226294}}</ref>
  • link=Medal "In Commemoration of the 850th Anniversary of Moscow"
  • alt=Order of Prince Yaroslav the Wise 4th class
  • link=Medal "Veteran of Labour"
  • Leader of [[Fatherland – All Russia]] Duma faction Yevgeny Primakov meets President [[Vladimir Putin]], 2000
RUSSIAN POLITICIAN AND DIPLOMAT (1929–2015)
Yevgeni Primakov; Yevgeniy Primakov; Evgeny Primakov; Evgeniy Maksimovich Primakov; Yevgeny Maksimovich Primakov; Evgeni Primakov; Евгений Максимович Примаков; Evghenii Primakov; Yevgeny Maximovich Primakov
Jevgeni Primakov, Premierminister Russlands seit 1998 (ehemaliger Leiter des Geheimdienstes, altgedientes Parteimitglied)
Boris Leonidovich Pasternak         
  • ''Boris Pasternak in 1910,'' by his father Leonid Pasternak
  • Portrait by [[Yury Annenkov]], 1921
  • Pasternak at Peredelkino in 1958
  • Pasternak, 1958
  • Pasternak at Peredelkino in 1959
  • Pasternak c. 1908
  • Pasternak with Evgeniya Lurye and son
  • Boris Pasternak's [[dacha]] in [[Peredelkino]], where he lived between 1936 and 1960
  • Pasternak (second from left) in 1924, with friends including [[Lilya Brik]], [[Sergei Eisenstein]] (third from left) and [[Vladimir Mayakovsky]] (centre)
  • Boris Pasternak Street [[Zoetermeer]], [[Netherlands]]
  • Pasternak on a 1990 Soviet stamp
RUSSIAN WRITER (1890-1960)
Boris Leonidovich Pasternak; Yevgeny Pasternak; Pasternakian; My Sister - Life; My Sister, Life; Josephine Pasternak; Boris Leonidovic Pasternak; Ida Wissotzkaya
n. Boris Leonidovich Pasternak (1890-1960), russischer Schriftsteller und Übersetzer bekannt für sein Roman Doktor Zhivago (1957) von den sovietischen Behörden gebannt jedoch in anderen Ländern übersetzt und veröffentlicht (wurde gezwunden den Nobelpreis für Literatur abzulehnen)

Определение

foxhound
¦ noun a dog of a smooth-haired breed with drooping ears, trained to hunt foxes in packs.

Википедия

Yevgeny Charushin

Yevgeny Ivanovich Charushin (Russian: Евгений Иванович Чарушин; 11 November 1901 Vyatka – 18 February 1965 Leningrad) was a Russian illustrator and author of children's literature in the Soviet Union.

Charushin was born into the family of a Vyatka architect. His father, Ivan Charushin, encouraged his early artistic efforts and his love of nature and hunting, all of which played a role in his development as an illustrator and writer. After graduating from high school in 1918, Charushin was drafted into the army. He was posted to Petrograd in 1922 to attend the Russian Academy of Arts, and he graduated in 1926.

After graduation from the academy, Charushin started to work as an illustrator under the guidance of Vladimir Lebedev, who was at that time the artistic director of the children's literature department at the Leningrad offices of Gosizdat (the Soviet government publishing house). The first book with his illustrations, Murzik by Vitaly Valentinovich Bianki (1928) was a success that led to invitations to illustrate many more books by, among others, Samuil Marshak, Korney Chukovsky, Dmitry Mamin-Sibiryak, Mikhail Prishvin, Vladimir Arsenyev and Alexander Vvedensky. At the same time, Charushin began writing and illustrating his own children's books, including "Little Beasties" ("Zveryata"), "Mishka," and "Wolf Cub" ("Volchishko"). He would be best known for his stories and illustrations of animals. In an essay he wrote about his work for the magazine, "Children's Literature," in 1935, Charushin stated that "More than anything else, I love to depict young animals, touching in their helplessness and interesting, because within them one can already see signs of the full-grown beast."

During World War II, Charushin lived in his native city (renamed Kirov in 1934) and directed his creative energies toward supporting the Soviet Union's war efforts. He designed panels and drawings for the "TASS Windows" project, painted agitational murals and paintings of partisans, and organized performances at the Kirov Drama Theater. Perhaps his most significant artistic work during those years in Kirov was a mural for a factory kindergarten and the foyer of the local House of Pioneers and Schoolchildren.

Charushin returned to Leningrad in 1945 and turned once again to books, as well as to a series of prints and easel compositions on his favorite themes: "Tiger cub" ("Tigrenok"), "Mother Rabbit and her Babies" ("Zaichikha s zaichatami"), "The Crow's Breakfast" ("Vorona za zavtrakom"), "Mother Bear and her Cubs" ("Medveditsa s medvezhatami"), "The Wolf" ("Volk"), and others. He also began to do more sculpting, continuing to work on a series of animal figurines that he began in 1941. The last work he completed before his death was the illustrations for Samuil Marshak's "Cubs in Cages" ("Detki v kletke"). He was awarded the gold medal in the children's book category at the Leipzig International Exhibition in 1965.