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Liudmila Kondakova is an iconographer of the city. Describing
her style as Romantic Realism, it is the meticulous attention to every
detail that allows the viewer to become intimately involved in the life
of her paintings.
Since her childhood in Russia, Liudmila has been fascinated by
traditional art, by a sense of spirituality that transcends common
existence. Her painting technique is that employed by medieval
egg-tempera painters. Her palette - cultivated by the icon painters of
Byzantium and later, Russia - is both vibrant and beautiful, with colors
that blend in a subtle, poetic balance.
The artist received intensive, practical training while and
apprentice in
Moscow under the guidance of monastic icon
painters. Of this stage in her training, she recalls, "The monks shared
the secrets of the solemn beauty of icon painting with me, a beauty that
lies in the love that goes into each detail, no matter how small or
insignificant. In my art, the essence and beauty has always rested in
the details."
Liudmila has worked in a variety of media from tiny miniatures
to traditional lacquer Easter eggs to colossal murals. Since coming to
America,
she has created conventional palekh style paintings, traditional icon
paintings, and paintings for children's books, as well as being
commissioned to create a cathedral's wall and ceiling frescoes by the
Russian Orthodox Archdiocese of San Francisco.
Born in Russia in 1956, Liudmila emigrated to the
United States
in 1991. A graduate of the
Grabar
Center in
Moscow, she also attended Russia's School of Sacred Arts, the Moscow
Pedagogical Institute and the Moscow
Art Institute. Her influence is found in her restorative work at the
17th century St. Alexi Cathedral in
Moscow and has been a guest lecturer at the San Carlos County Museum of
Art. In 1993, she was featured in a PBS television special devoted to
her art. With her work in private collections around the world, original
painting and serigraphs by Liudmila Kondakova can be found in galleries
nationwide.
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