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HONCHAR MUSEUM, Kyiv, Ukraine
"Ivan Honchar Museum, A Treasure House of
Ukrainian Folk & Decorative Arts"
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By Ihor Poshyvailo, Department Head
Ivan Honchar Museum
Photos by Volodymyr Zaitsev
Welcome to Ukraine Magazine
Issue Number Two, 1999
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All-Seeing Eye. Second half of the 19th century, the town of
Skvyra, Kyiv Oblast.
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Let everything you see in the
museum awake in you ardent, heartfelt love for the spirit of our
mother-Ukraine, and let this love become a powerful incentive for
turning it into a wonderful and rapidly developing country. Ivan
Honchar
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National
Ukrainian culture had reached considerable heights in its development when
its further progress was checked by the Russian imperial domination in the
18th- early 20th centuries.
The Ukrainians were confronted
with an urgent need of preserving their their ethnicity and national
cultural heritage, keeping up traditions and searching for ways of
regaining independence. In the first quarter of the 19th century a
movement of establishing ethnographical museums began with an intention of
preserving artefacts of decorative arts and everyday life of the past.
Leading figures of Ukrainian culture, patrons of art, art collectors and
philanthropists gradually accumulated impressive collections of Ukrainian
art and everyday artefacts that had been used in the past. But a lot had
been irretrievably lost. Damage to Ukrainian culture done in the
russification campaigns launched in the Imperial Russia and by the Soviet
regime was great indeed. World War II took its heavy toll of Ukrainian
lives and inflicted a further heavy damage upon Ukrainian culture. In
the mid-sixties of this century, there were about 130 museums in Ukraine
but none of them presented Ukrainian art objectively or comprehensively.
The Soviet rulers wanted art to represent Soviet ideology and Ukrainian
national art did not quite fit the ideological frame. "Soviet socialist
realism" reigned supreme. State-run museums did not exhibit "primitive
art", "folk icons" (that is icons, created by amateur icon painters in
villages and towns) and other artefacts of Ukrainian folk and decorative
arts. Prospects for the survival of Ukrainian culture seemed glum. It
looked as though it was doomed to decline irrevocably, degrade and finally
be assimilated into the uniform "Soviet culture". But luckily enough it
did not happen, mostly thanks to a number of people totally devoted to the
idea of preserving Ukrainian cultural heritage and developing it. One of
them was Ivan Honchar (Jan. 27, 1911- June 18, 1993), a prominent and
distinguished cultural figure.
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Blessing Christ. 18th
century. From the Motronynsky monastery, Cherkasy
Oblast.
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Embroidered towel. Early 20th century, the village
of Velyki Sorochyntsi, Poltava Oblast.
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He was one of the co-founders
of the Ukrainian Society for Preservation of Historical and Cultural
Landmarks and of the Museum of Folk Architecture and Everyday Life of
Ukraine, one of the biggest of its kind in the world. As an adolescent
boy, at the time when Ukraine was in the throes of civil war and
bolshevik-inspired vandalism, Honchar solemnly swore to devote his life to
preserving and developing Ukrainian cultural heritage. His crusade to save
Ukrainian culture from disintegration earned him a nickname of "apostle of
truth." Ivan Honchar verbally lashed "idiotic, retrograde and criminal
practices" of hiding treasures of Ukrainian culture of the past in the
museums' vaults. He was of the opinion that "to hide artefacts of cultural
heritage of a nation is to break this nation's wings preventing it from
flying into the future, to rob this nation of its pride, its national
identity, its right for originality, and thus of its right for
self-determination." Ivan Honchar started actively collecting cultural
artefacts in the early fifties, and soon enough his house turned into a
private "clandestine" museum. His devotion to Ukrainian culture, his zeal
in collecting museum pieces, his artistic talents looked very suspicious
in the eyes of the KGB, Soviet secret service.
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Nevertheless, the KGB
"unwinking eye" and its "long arm" did not prevent Ivan Honchar from
building up his collection and inspiring and encouraging scholars, artists
and ethnographers to study national cultural heritage and developing
Ukrainian art. Ivan Honchar, ignoring the official pressure and the
then current ideological precepts, went on collecting art objects which
otherwise would have been irretrievably lost. Honchar's home became a
veritable treasure house of Ukrainian fine, decorative and folk art of the
18th-20th centuries. In September of 1993, shortly after Honchar's
death, his private collection was given the status of a state-run museum.
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The
Holy Mother of God of Pechersk and All-Seeing Eye. Icon, 18th century, the
village of Chopovychi, Zhytomyr Oblast.
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Further efforts of a number of
leading Ukrainian cultural figures made it possible for the museum to move
into a house more suitable for exhibition its vast collection. Today,
this collection includes over 15,000 exhibits dating from the 16th-early
20th centuries, most of which were accumulated by Ivan Honchar himself and
his son, Petro Honchar, who is currently curator of the museum. Among the
artefacts are: embroidered towels (which in Ukrainian life were used for
many purposes); rugs; clothes; head gear; pottery of many kinds;
earthenware; toys, Eastern eggs; wood carvings; folk musical instruments;
primitive art paintings; sculpture); icons created by folk artists. The
fine arts are represented by paintings and graphic works (V.Krychevsky;
V.Makovsky; P.Levchenko; A.Zhdakha; S.Vasylkivsky; S.Svitoslavsky;
H.Svitlytsky; O.Murashko; O.Kurylas; K.Trutovsky; O.Kultchytsky; H.Narbut;
F.Krasytsky; I.Yizhakevych; H.Yakutovych; V.Lopata and
others). Honchar's private library of about 3,000 volumes became part
of the museum too. Many of the books are Ukrainian incunabula and other
rarities.
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A jar.
End of the 19th century, the town of Sokal, Vinnitsya
Oblast.
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Lion
(zoomorphic vessel). Early 20th century, the town of Myrhorod,
Vinnitska Oblast.
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that in the Soviet times were kept in the "special depositories," and
possession of which could land the possessor in prison. Of a great
scholarly value are Honchar's archives which include manuscripts
(Honchar's and of other authors); letters; diaries; tapes and photographs.
Honchar's own works make up a considerable part of the museum's collection
- there are about one thousand paintings in it and about six hundred
pieces of sculpture. Ethnographic materials of the museum are of great
interest and of considerable scientific value. They include, among other
things, portraits of Ukrainians in national dresses and of remarkable
Ukrainian historical and cultural figures.
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Embroidered towel
(detail). 19th century, the town of Komarhorod, Vinnitsya
Oblast. |

A woman's embroidered
shirt. Early 20th century, Poltava Oblast. |

A woman's embroidered
shirt. 19th century, the village of Lokhvytsya, Poltava
Oblast.
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The Honchar Museum today is
more than just an exhibition of art objects and Ukrainian cultural
artefacts. It is a research centre that organized ethnographic
expeditions, conferences, seminars and lectures, traveling exhibitions.
Culture Studies and Art Clubs, and Avtentyka Ukrainian Traditional Culture
Centre, working under the auspices if the museum, disseminate and
popularize knowledge of Ukrainian art and ethnography in Ukraine and
abroad. The museum
seeks cooperation with other museums of Ukraine and of the world in order
to integrate Ukrainian traditional culture into the world cultural
processes.
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Embroidered towel. 19th
century, the village of Ubizhychi, Chernihiv
Oblast.
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The Ivan Honchar
Museum aims at combining purely museum work with revitalizing cultural and
art traditions of the Ukrainian people.
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The
Virgin Mary, St Mykola and St Ioan the Warrior. End of the 19th
century. Provenance unknown.
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Support for icons . 19th
century Provenance unknown.
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The museum is planning to set
up a children's folk art school, restoration shops, art studios, a folk
art lab with the purpose of maintaining and developing the best Ukrainian
folk and fine art traditions. Ivan Honchar's life and work can be
called a veritable cultural feat. What he has managed to do is comparable
to an achievement of a big cultural institution. It is time we realized
that a gifted person, armed with knowledge and inspired by love for this
native land, can work miracles. All the visitors to the museum are
invariably filled with gratitude to Ivan Honchar and his successors for
saving these exciting treasures of Ukrainian art and culture. Numbers of
visitors are constantly growing and it has become evident of more spacious
premises, which would allow showing the versatility and richness of
Ukrainian art and culture to the Ukrainians and to the
world.
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The connected jars with a
wooden cover. End of the 19th century, the village of Trostyanchyk,
Vinnitsya Oblast. |

Landscape
with a windmill. A folk painting. First quarter if the 20th
century. Poltava Oblast.

Ye.Davyskyba. Elope, Peter, with Natalka. Early 20th
century. Provenance
unknown.
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"Welcome to Ukraine" Magazine, Issue Number Two, 1999
Kyiv, Ukraine, http://www.wumag.kiev.ua
Ivan Honchar Museum, www.honchar.org.ua
Not for reproduction or distribution,
FOR PERSONAL and ACADEMIC USE ONLY
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