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"Telling the Story of Ukraine through Postcards "
A Book Review by Marta Kolomayets
"In Memory of Native Land: Ukraine in Old Cards"
Written for The Ukrainian Weekly, Fall, 2000
Ukraine in Old Postcards, An
Album-Catalog By Mykhailo Zabochen, Oleksander Polishchuk and Volodymyr Yatsiuk
Published by Krynytsia Publishers, Kyiv, 2000
Printed at the POLYGRAF Printing House, Priashiv, Slovakia.
Over 100 pages of color photos/reproductions, 400 pages of black
and white miniatures. 505 pages, ISBN 966-7575-02-0.
Close to five years in the making, Ukraine in Old Cards is more than just a
505-page coffee table book about Ukrainian postcards. It is a unique
catalogue of close to 8,000 Ukrainian cards, dating from the 1890s to 1990,
depicting Ukraine and its people as they struggled for independence over the
centuries.
The encyclopedia is divided into four sections – Ukraine and Ukrainians,
Ukraine in the Struggle for Independence, Taras Shevchenko: Poet, Artist,
Symbol of Ukraine; and Ukrainian Culture. Although the introduction is
written in four languages: Ukrainian, Russian, English and German, the
comprehensive narrative is provided only in Ukrainian. Compiled over many
decades by Mykhailo Zabochen, 75,who has been called a genius and a
gentlemen by his collector colleagues, it chronicles the history of the
Ukrainian postcard from both the days of the Austro-Hungarian Empire
(1869) and the days of the Russian Empire (1872).
Painstakingly researched by Mr. Zabochen and his team, the postcards
not only tell the history of Ukraine, they also fill in the blank pages of
the
Soviet era, picturing monuments and churches that were destroyed during
Communist times. The album, which is dedicated to the well-known
Ukrainian collector and benefactor Vasyl Tarnovsky (1837-1899),
also brings back to life the names of a number of Ukrainian artists and
ethnographers whose works were destroyed during the Stalinist period
of repressions, but these postcard images survive to the present day.
A collector for more than fifty years, Mr. Zabochen told the Kyiv Post
recently that his hobby was no easy task during Soviet times. But what
started out as a hobby turned into a passion. In his essay on the history
of postcard collecting, he recalled the period from 1932 to 1957 when
collections of printed material were strictly forbidden and the year 1967,
on the eve of the Soviet World Youth Festival, when the ban was lifted as
Soviet authorities were embarrassed to find that their was no literature
on stamp and postcard collecting in the USSR.
Mr. Zabochen, who had illegally collected postcards throughout the decades,
emerged as an expert collector and by the early 1970s he began publishing
articles on postcard collecting. By this time, his collection was quite
impressive and his colleagues agree that he perhaps had an easier time
collecting Ukrainian postcards from his residence in Moscow than he would
have if he had lived in Ukraine.
And, all agree that the publication of such a jewel of a book would have
been impossible in Soviet Ukraine.
" We could not have even dreamed of something like this before Ukraine
became independent," said Volodymyr Yatsiuk, who spent, literally,
thousands of hours picking, choosing, researching, investigating the myriad
postcards for the publication. [According to Morgan Williams, an American
avid collector and friend of the authors, the three men have pulled together
15,000 additional Ukrainian postcards showing Ukrainian towns, villages,
buildings, markets, most of which are pre-revolution and did not make it
into the first book; they already have plans for a companion to this
volume].
In addition, Mr. Yatsiuk, who is an expert on Shevchenkiana, bemoans
the fact that only 1,000 postcards picturing Shevchenko made it into a
book of 8,000 cards.
"You don’t understand, Shevchenko’s image on a postcard is unrivalled
by any other literary figure in history. Because for Ukrainians, he is a
literary figure, an artist, a symbol of national identity, a hero," he
noted.
He is already planning an extensive volume on the postcards relating to
Taras Shevchenko, many of which can be seen at the Shevchenko
Museum in Kyiv until the end of August (2000).
But the problem of financing such professional ventures remains. Thanks to
the aggressive style of Mr. Polishchuk, enough private money was raised to
publish 1,000 copies of this wonderful treasure, but such a small print run
will deprive so many who want to learn more about Ukraine and its people,
its
culture. And, unfortunately the high cost and low quality of printing in
Ukraine remains a problem, as this volume had to be printed in Slovakia.
Curiously, many of the postcards which deal with Ukrainian motives through
the last century were also printed outside the boundaries of Ukraine, in
such
cities as St. Petersburg, Vienna, Krakow, Stockholm, precisely
because of low quality printers in Ukrainian cities at the beginning
of the 20th century.
"It’s wonderful that there is something for everyone in this book, in this
encyclopedia", said Mr. Yatsiuk, one of the authors of the book during a
recent interview. "The audience is broad --historians, Ukrainianists,
artists, architects, teachers, ethnographers, museum curators, political
scientists, journalists, publishers, book lovers, people interested in the
history of printing..the list goes on," he noted.
Although the book itself is exceptional, the real phenomena are the
three authors – Messrs. Zabochen, Polishchuk and Yatsiuk -- who
managed to compile such a vast collection of both color and black
and white postcards, trace their origins, history, catalogue their findings
and secure money for the publication of this historic work
"Here you have three men, three different talents, all true collectors,
all very committed and dedicated to the project, all in love with
Ukraine ---for without this love the book would never have been
completed. This book was a labor of love for these three men,"
explained Mr. Williams, an American collector who describes
himself as a cheerleader for the project. [Mr. Williams and 20 other
collectors contributed to this book, but the bulk of the postcards
come from Mr. Zabochen, whose collection numbers over 140,000
postcards.]
Mr. Williams that this project was monumental in scope and he
has yet to hear of any authors in any other country who have
even attempted to produce a book of such magnitude and scope.
In the forward to the book, Pedro Pablo Villanueva, United Nations
Resident Coordinator and UNDP Resident Representative in Ukraine,
whose fund helped to promote the book, noted:
"This book is important not only because it promotes Ukraine’s history and
culture, but because it brings out true Ukrainian identity, which has often
been overlooked. This is a wonderful way to continue the integration process
necessary for Ukraine in regards to the international community. For the
UNDP, this project is part of larger comprehensive efforts in supporting the
continuous development of Ukraine. This book has captured the spirit of
Ukraine and the UNDP is proud to be a part of it."
" I think the postcards and photographs from Ukraine are especially
interesting as historical documents in light of all the turmoil Ukraine has
experienced in the last 100 years. One can experience history in a special
ways as it marches by when one discovers photographs and postcards both for
the image on the card and for the message written on the card," said Mr.
Williams, a true champion of the project.
Many readers of the Weekly will come upon names familiar in the diaspora,
such has Jacques Hnizdovsky, Yaroslava Surmach-Mills, Sviatoslav Hordynsky,
Edward Kozak, Mykhailo Moroz, whose works of art contributed to the history
of the Ukrainian postcard so splendidly documented in this outstanding book
published in April of this year.
Mr. Zabochen recently commented that there is no other book like this in
Ukraine, and that it will remain the only one for many years to come. There
is wholehearted agreement on the former point and sincere hope that the
latter will be proven wrong.
The book, "In Memory of Native Land: Ukraine in Old Cards" can be
purchased through ArtUkraine. Please contact us at ArtUkraine@starpower.net
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