George Virine (1920-2017) was a Russian-Australian sculptor. He taught art and exhibited his work in France and Australia. He worked in the classic realism style.
George Michael Virine was born Yuri Millievich Ezersky on March 15, 1920 in Moscow, Russia. [1] His father Millievich Ezersky was an academic and writer and his mother Zinaida worked in the costume production unit of the Bolshoi Ballet. [2] [3] The young Ezersky studied classical art [4] and was conscripted into the Red Army in 1939. After training in Mongolia, his unit was sent to Smolensk and they were bombed during the battle of Smolensk. [2] He was arrested by the Germans and eventually sent to a prison camp in Poland. After escaping this camp, he was transferred to Buchenwald concentration camp. [5] Again Ezersky escaped and travelled west. Following the war, he continued working as a sculptor of souvenir goods in Luxembourg, [6] despite lacking identity papers. He changed his name to Juri Wiardo. After Soviet secret police were detected in Luxembourg, he moved to Paris, France where he sculpted artwork for movie theatres. He changed his name to George Virine and studied in Paris and his works showed at the Salon de Vedettes in 1950. His work was admired by Pablo Picasso but Virine objected to Picasso's communist sympathies. [2]
Virine applied for refugee entry to Australia in 1951. His wife followed him shortly after. [2] They moved from Sydney to Brisbane after an unsuccessful exhibition and he took up work as a house painter. After his work showed at Finney's Art Gallery (David Jones department store) in 1955, he was invited to teach sculpture, modelling and art restoration at the Brisbane Central Technical College (now QUT). [5] He served as the sculpture instructor from 1958, helping train many young sculptors [7] including Rhyl Hinwood and Philip Piperides, [4] until he resigned in 1976. He operated a private studio at Kangaroo Point and at Rochedale in Brisbane until his mid 90s. [8]
Virine's work is held in many collections.
Virine married Irina Pavlenko in St Etienne, France. They had three children. He died on 1 June 2017 and was survived by his daughters Galina and Tatiana. [15] [16] [2]
1964, first place in John Birch Society international competition [2]
The Queensland Museum [1] and State Library of Queensland [17] hold selected papers from George Virine's private collection. His sculptures are a part of a number of university collections.
Bundaberg is a city in the Bundaberg Region, Queensland, Australia, and is the tenth largest city in the state. Bundaberg's regional area has a population of 70,921, and is a major centre of the Wide Bay–Burnett geographical region. The Bundaberg central business district is situated along the southern bank of the Burnett River, about 20 km (12 mi) from its mouth at Burnett Heads, and flows into the Coral Sea. The city is sited on a rich coastal plain, supporting one of the nation's most productive agricultural regions. The area of Bundaberg is the home of the Taribelang-Bunda peoples. Popular nicknames for Bundaberg include "Bundy" and "Rum city". The demonym of Bundaberg is Bundabergian.
Herbert John Louis Hinkler, better known as Bert Hinkler, was a pioneer Australian aviator and inventor. He designed and built early aircraft before being the first person to fly solo from England to Australia, completed on 22 February 1928, and the first person to fly solo across the Southern Atlantic Ocean. He married in 1932 at the age of 39, and died less than a year later after crashing into remote countryside near Arezzo, Tuscany, Italy during a solo flight record attempt.
Harold Parker was a British-born sculptor, raised in Queensland, Australia, and subsequently worked in the United Kingdom.
Sir Thomas Brock was an English sculptor and medallist, notable for the creation of several large public sculptures and monuments in Britain and abroad in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. His most famous work is the Victoria Memorial in front of Buckingham Palace, London. Other commissions included the redesign of the effigy of Queen Victoria on British coinage, the massive bronze equestrian statue of Edward, the Black Prince, in City Square, Leeds and the completion of the statue of Prince Albert on the Albert Memorial.
The following lists events that happened during 1928 in Australia.
Bundaberg Airport is a regional airport serving Bundaberg, a city in the Australian state of Queensland. It is located 2.5 nautical miles southwest of the city centre, on North Childers Road and Takalvan Street. The airport is owned and operated by the Bundaberg Regional Council. It is also known as Bundaberg Regional Airport.
Arthur H. Clark was an Australian sculptor from Bundaberg, in Queensland.
Michael Te Rakato Parekōwhai is a New Zealand sculptor and a professor at the University of Auckland's Elam School of Fine Arts. He is of Ngāriki Rotoawe and Ngāti Whakarongo descent and his mother is Pākehā.
Leonard and Kathleen Shillam were Australian sculptors.
In 1976 they were awarded life membership of the Society of Sculptors, Queensland.
On 26 January 1986 they were appointed Members of the Order of Australia.
In December 2000 they were awarded Honorary Doctorates of Philosophy for services to the arts, notably sculpture, from the University of Queensland.
Ah Xian is a Chinese-born artist based in Sydney, Australia.
Bundaberg Central is the central suburb and central business district of Bundaberg in the Bundaberg Region, Queensland, Australia. In the 2021 census, Bundaberg Central had a population of 162 people.
Peter Fishman is a Russian sculptor and painter of Jewish ancestry, Professor ordinarius in sculpture at the Smolensk University for Humanities.
William Leslie Bowles, commonly referred to as Leslie Bowles or W. Leslie Bowles, was an Australian sculptor and medallist.
James Laurence Watts (1849–1925) was a sculptor in Queensland, Australia. He was one of the pioneer sculptors in Australia and his works appear in many Queensland public buildings and places.
Marc Clark was a British-born Australian academic, sculptor and printmaker.
Rhyl Kingston Hinwood is a sculptor in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. She designed and produced over seven hundred commissioned public artworks. In 2006 she became a Member of the Order of Australia for "service to the arts as a sculptor of artworks for public places and buildings, and through teaching roles and support for students".
Donald Cowen was an Australian-American artist, sculptor and scientific illustrator, whose work is featured in buildings and galleries in Australia and the United States.
Melville Haysom (1900-1968) was an Australian artist, sculptor, instructor and musician. He specialised in portrait, coastal and animal paintings and alternated between impressionist and abstract styles. His work is held in galleries in Canberra, Sydney and Brisbane.
Braham Stevens is an Australian sculptor whose work is influenced by networks of human activity, environmental processes and the intricate patterns found in nature and science.