Nikolai Fedorovich Kozlovsky (Ukrainian: Микола Федорович Козловський, 1921–1996) was a Ukrainian Soviet photographer and teacher.[1]
Biography
Nikolai Fedorovich Kozlovsky was born 8 May 1921 in Sumy, now in Ukraine.
Career
In 1937 and 1938, while still in his teens, Kozlovsky photographed at ‘Artek’ children’s ‘pioneer’ camp on the southern coast of the Crimea in the village of Gurzuf, a "treatment camp" for children with tuberculosis, diseases of the nervous system, overfatigue and anemia, which by the beginning of the 1930s, had been made a year-round facility. Kozlovsky’s photographs show the children, sometimes dressed in sailor’s uniform, sunbathing, playing snooker, sightseeing and sounding the bugle.[2]
His first serious photo piece was titled "Ukrainian Nuremberg", depicting a trial of Nazis that took place in Kiev's Maidan Nezalezhnosti in January 1946.[3]
Magazine photographer
In 1948 he joined the magazine Ogonek[4] in Ukraine as a special photo correspondent, remaining with the magazine for nearly forty years.[5] Many of his photographs are in colour and are in an heroic socialist realist style depicting such scenes as father and son washing their Volga car before going to Stalino [Donetsk], a family of 'Heroes of Socialist Labor' enjoying an al fresco meal in their collective farm in Bedia, Georgia,[6] and tourism in the Carpathians.[7] For the magazine he made portraits of Ukrainian and Soviet personalities Buchma A., M. Krushelnitsky, N. Uzhviy, E. Ponomarenko, Y. Shumsky, N. Romanov, M. Litvinenko-Wohlgemuth, I. Patorzhinskogo, Jura, Z. Gaidai, N. Grishko. He was a prolific photographer of the city of Kiev, recording images which are now a valuable historic record.[8]
Kozlovsky was a teacher of photography, one of his students being the noted Yuri Buslenko (1951–2014).
Kozlovsky's many illustrated books were widely distributed and his prodigious output was recognised in 1986 when he was winner of the Shevchenko Prize for his book "Kiev".[12]
The photographer features in Anatoliĭ Sofronov's novel Meetings with Sholokhov[13]
He died on August 15, 1996, in his beloved Kiev.
Publications
Among his creative works are more than 30 photography books, including:
1956 «Peyzazhi Zakarpat'ya» ("Landscapes of Transcarpathia”)
1959 «Po Zakarpat'yu» (“In Transcarpathia”)
1960 «Snova tsvetut kashtany» ("The chestnuts are again in bloom”) with Dmitri Baltermants and Oles Honchar
^Sandeen, Eric J (1995), Picturing an exhibition : the family of man and 1950s America (1st ed.), University of New Mexico Press, p. 138, ISBN978-0-8263-1558-8
^Steichen, Edward; Steichen, Edward, 1879–1973, (organizer.); Sandburg, Carl, 1878–1967, (writer of foreword.); Norman, Dorothy, 1905–1997, (writer of added text.); Lionni, Leo, 1910–1999, (book designer.); Mason, Jerry, (editor.); Stoller, Ezra, (photographer.); Museum of Modern Art (New York, N.Y.) (1955). The family of man : the photographic exhibition. Published for the Museum of Modern Art by Simon and Schuster in collaboration with the Maco Magazine Corporation. {{cite book}}: |author6= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
^ abManagement Of Culture and Tourism of Sumso Regional State Administration, Regional Universal Scientific Library: Anniversary of the Shevchenko Prize 1961–2011 [www.ounb.sumy.ua/publish/2011/kob.doc]