New Year's cards from the artist Zarubin. Zarubin Vladimir Ivanovich
Vladimir Ivanovich Zarubin
Vladimir Ivanovich Zarubin(August 7, 1925, Andriyanovka, Oryol region - June 21, 1996, Moscow) - Russian Soviet artist, cartoonist (animator).
Content
1. Biography and career
2. Making postcards
3. List of cartoons
4. New Year cards (Happy New Year cards, cards from the last century, retro, children's cards. New Year, drawings, children, Santa Claus, animals, snowman, Christmas tree) (36 postcards)
Biography and career
Vladimir Ivanovich Zarubin
Born in the village of Andriyanovka, Oryol region. Participated in the Great Patriotic War. According to the story of his son, at the beginning of the war he lived with his parents in Lisichansk, from where, when the city was captured by German troops, he was driven to Germany and worked in a labor camp in the Ruhr, from where he was liberated by American troops.
After the war, from 1945 to 1949 he served as a rifleman in the commandant's office of the Soviet Army. In 1949 he began his career as an artist. At first he worked as an artist at the Ministry of Coal Industry (until 1950), from 1950 to 1958 he was an artist at a plant (now NPO Giperon).
In 1956 he entered the Moscow Evening School high school, from which he graduated in 1958. In parallel with his studies, he took courses for animators at the Soyuzmultfilm film studio and at the University of Marxism-Leninism MGK CPSU.
From 1957 to 1982 he worked as an animator at Soyuzmultfilm, taking part in the creation of about a hundred hand-drawn animated films. At the end of the 1970s he was admitted to the Union of Cinematographers of the USSR.
Making postcards
Catalog cover
postcards by V. Zarubina
Vladimir Zarubin is also known as an artist greeting cards(mainly on cartoon themes), drawings on envelopes, calendars, etc. His works are valued by collectors. Collecting Zarubin's postcards is an independent topic in philocarty. In 2007, a catalog of postcards by Vladimir Zarubin was published.
List of cartoons
01. "It'll Rain Soon" (1959)
02. "The Legend of the Moor's Will" (1959)
03. "The Fox, the Beaver and Others" (1960)
04. "Murzilka on the satellite" (1960)
05. "Tsokotukha Fly" (1960)
06. "The Thirteenth Voyage" (1960)
07. "Dear Penny" (1961)
08. "Kid" (1961)
09. "MUK (Cartoon Crocodile) No. 4" (1961)
10. "MUK (Cartoon Crocodile) No. 5" (1961)
11. "Funtik and cucumbers" (1961)
12. "Wild Swans" (1962)
13. "Heavenly Story" (1962)
14. "Shareholders" (1963)
15. "Run, little stream!" (1963)
16. "On the Edge of Mystery" (1964)
17. "Firefly No. 5" (1964)
18. "Calico Street" (1964)
19. "Tracks on the Asphalt" (1964)
20. "Your health!" (1965)
21. "Gunan Bator" (1965)
22. "The Picture" (1965)
23. "Portrait" (1965)
24. "The Adventures of Comma and Period" (1965)
25. "Chief Star" (1966)
26. "The Proud Ship" (1966)
27. "Blacksmith-sorcerer" (1967)
28. "Mowgli. Raksha" (1967)
29. "Between" (1967)
30. "Mowgli. The Kidnapping" (1968)
31. "Eaglet" (1968)
32. "Traffic Accident" (1968)
33. "The Stolen Month" (1969)
34. "The Fox, the Bear and the Motorcycle with Sidecar" (1969)
35. "Snow Maiden" (1969)
36. "Forest Chronicle" (1970)
37. "Well, wait a minute! (Issue 2)" (1970)
38. "The Tale Tells" (1970)
39. "Three Bananas" (1971)
40. "Argonauts" (1971)
41. "Well, wait a minute! (Issue 4)" (1971)
42. "Tales of an Old Sailor. Antarctica" (1972)
43. "Foka - a jack of all trades" (1972)
44. "Cornflower" (1973)
45. "Childhood of Ratibor" (1973)
46. "Perseus" (1973)
47. "In the footsteps of the Bremen Town Musicians" (1973)
48. "The Invisible Cap" (1973)
49. "Mowgli" (1973)
50. "From the forest to the pine tree" (1974)
51. “There was a tram number ten” (1974)
52. "Vasilisa Mikulishna" (1975)
53. "And Mom will forgive me" (1975)
54. "On the Forest Path" (1975)
55. "An Unusual Friend" (1975)
56. "Mirror of Time" (1976)
57. "The Legend of the Old Lighthouse" (1976)
58. "Well, wait a minute! (Issue 9)" (1976)
59. "Change No. 1" (1976)
60. "The case of... is being heard, not a very comic opera" (1976)
61. "Brave Daredevil" (1976)
62. "Tom Thumb" (1977)
63. "Proving Ground" (1977)
64. "How a duckling musician became a football player" (1978)
65. "Robbery by..." (1978)
66. "Poiga and the Fox" (1978)
67. "Hunting (Nazarov)" (1979)
68. "Salute, Olympics!" (1979)
69. "Swans of the Nepryadva" (1980)
70. "Solnyshkin's Sailing" (1980)
71. "Granny's Birthday" (1981)
72. "One Morning" (1981)
73. "He's caught!" (1981)
74. "Reflection" (1981)
75. "The Adventures of Vasya Kurolesov" (1981)
76. "One is peas, two is peas" (1981)
77. "The Mystery of the Third Planet" (1981)
78. "Once Upon a Time There Was a Dog" (1982)
79. "The Adventures of a Magic Globe or the Tricks of Witches" (1982)
80. "Grief is no problem" (1983)
81. "Snake in the Attic" (1983)
82. "Losers" (1983)
83. "The Pill" (1983)
84. "Ant's Journey" (1983)
85. "The House That Everybody Built" (1984)
86. "The Tale of Tsar Saltan" (1984)
87. "Panteley and the Scarecrow" (1985)
88. "The Tale of Evpatiy Kolovrat" (1985)
89. "Terekhin's Taratayka" (1985)
90. "Royal" (1985)
91. "Hercules at Admetus" (1986)
92. "Lonely Piano" (1986)
93. "Gray Bear" (1988)
94. "Robbery by..." (new edition) (1988)
Collection of Happy New Year cards
(Beautiful hand-drawn Happy New Year cards, made in a children's style. Suitable for both New Year's greetings: boss, colleague, children, girlfriend, friend, relatives and loved ones)
(36 postcards)
Description: A boy sends a letter. Snowman, child, boy, letter, mailbox, mail, tree in the snow, bullfinch, bird, little bird
Date: 05/10/67 Artist V. Zarubin, 1967.
Description: A girl and a boy are sitting on a moon on the back of a bear. Boy, girl, Snow Maiden, bear, teddy bear, month, space, children
Publishing house "Ministry of Communications of the USSR". Date: 03/10/71 Artist V. Zarubin, 1971.
Description: Boy with a drum and Santa Claus with gifts. Drawing, boy, drum, musical instrument, Santa Claus with a bag of gifts for children, gifts, toys
Description: Santa Claus and a boy play hockey. New Year, drawing, winter folklore characters, New Year's characters, Russian fairy tale characters, Santa Claus, child, boy, hockey, hare, whistle, bunny
Date: 02.23.77 Artist V. Zarubin, 1977.
Description: Boy, Santa Claus and hare. Happy New Year, drawing, Santa Claus, sleigh, bag with gifts, New Year tree, boy, bunny with candy, snow, snowflakes, night
Date: 03/10/77 Artist V. Zarubin, 1977.
Description: A little boy and a snowman under an umbrella. Boy, umbrella, snowman, broom, parasol
Date: 10.10.77 Artist V. Zarubin, 1977.
Description: Santa Claus, boy, snowman and hare. Santa Claus with a pipe, a child, a boy with a guitar, a snowman with a drum, a hare with a microphone, a bunny singing, musical instruments, Christmas tree, snowflakes
Date: 03.13.78 Artist V. Zarubin, 1978.
USSR cartoon characters
The picture shows cartoon characters: “Well, just wait!” - Wolf with a guitar, Hare with a pipe. Crocodile Gena and Cheburashka. Winnie the Pooh and others fairy tale characters.
Description: New Year, drawing, cartoon characters, fairy-tale characters, fairy tales, Russian fairy tales, animals, bear, bear, fox, squirrel, beaver, puppy, dog, boy, snowman, sleigh, New Year tree, snowflakes
Date: 05/06/78 Artist V. Zarubin, 1978.
Description: A bear and a hare are skiing. Happy New Year! Bunny, bunny, bear cub, bear, animals, skiing, skiing, birds, birds, bullfinches, snowflakes, snow
Date: 11/24/80 Artist V. Zarubin, 1980
Description: Teddy bear, hare and snowman with a clock. New Year, drawing, bear, teddy bear, bear and hare on skis, bunny, animals, snowman with a flag and alarm clock, snowflakes
Date: November 24, 1980. Artist V. Zarubin, 1980.
Description: Boy Santa Claus and bunny. Happy New Year, drawing, boy, Santa Claus, hare, Christmas tree, forest, snowflakes
Date: 01/05/81 Artist V. Zarubin, 1981.
Description: Boy-Santa Claus. Happy New Year, Santa Claus, child, boy, smiling, smile, Christmas trees in the snow, snowflakes
Date: 08.28.81 Artist V. Zarubin, 1981.
Description: The hare is talking on the phone. New Year, drawing, bunny, hare, telephone, Christmas tree, New Year tree, spruce, bullfinch, animals (children's picture).
Ministry of Communications of the USSR. Circulation 3.7 million. Price 5 kopecks.
Description: A hare and a squirrel are talking on the phone. New Year, drawing, bunny, hare, telephone, squirrel, Christmas tree, Christmas tree, spruce, bullfinch, animals.
Ministry of Communications of the USSR. Circulation 3.7 million. Price 5 kopecks.
Date: 09.11.81 Artist V. Zarubin, 1981.
Description: Santa Claus on a flying carpet. Winter folklore characters, New Year's characters, characters from Russian fairy tales, Santa Claus, flying carpet, flying, big bag with gifts, snowflakes
Description: Baby elephant, bear cub and bunny on skis. New Year, drawing, elephant, bear, bear, hare, bunny, skating, skiing, squirrel on the tree, animals
Date: 08/02/82 Artist V. Zarubin, 1982.
Description: A hare and a bear with a New Year tree. Happy New Year! Bunny, hare, bear cub, bear, tree, animals, run, running, forest, bird, bird, tit, snowflakes
Publishing house "Ministry of Communications of the USSR". Date: 10/06/83 Artist V. Zarubin, 1983
Description: Bear, alarm clock, tree and hare. Bunny, bunny, teddy bear, teddy bear, clock, Christmas tree, snowflakes
Date: 10/31/83 Artist V. Zarubin, 1983
Description: Santa Claus talking on the phone, hare, bag with gifts, bird, bullfinch on the tree, bird, snowflakes
Publishing house "Ministry of Communications of the USSR". Date: 10.31.83 Artist V. Zarubin, 1983.
Description: The hare interviews Santa Claus (the boy). New Year, bunny, Santa Claus, boy, bag with gifts, tape recorder, interview, tree in the snow, snowflakes
Publishing house "Ministry of Communications of the USSR", 1983. Artist V. Zarubin, 1983.
Description: A bear and a hare are running towards each other with gifts. Bear, teddy bear, bunny, bunny, bag of gifts, Christmas tree, fir trees, forest
Publishing house "Ministry of Communications of the USSR". Goznak. Date: 11/26/84
Artist V. Zarubin, 1984.
Description: Santa Claus and the hare. Santa Claus, stump, stump, hare, bunny, write, bag with gifts, basket, carrots, basket, carrots, snowy forest, fir trees, snowflakes
Date: 01/04/85 Artist V. Zarubin, 1985.
Description: Boy, hare and snowman. Child, boy, bunny, snowman, sled, shovel, Christmas trees in the snow, spruce, forest
Date: 10/17/85 Artist V. Zarubin, 1985.
Description: A cheerful hare and a joyful snowman are dancing Christmas tree. Bunny, animals, snowman, radio, Christmas tree, snowflakes
Publishing house "Ministry of Communications of the USSR". Date: 12/04/85 Artist V. Zarubin, 1985
9 chosen
Probably everyone born in the USSR has special memories imbued with the warmth of New Year's anticipation. My conscious childhood took place already in the 90s, but it contained many signs of a bygone era associated with the most important and most desired holiday of the year. Now the store shelves are bursting with abundance New Year's toys, postcards and other paraphernalia, certainly attractive, but not as soulful as what decorated our New Year's childhood.
IN parental home Among the glass toys that grandma brought from the GDR, there is still a box of New Year's greeting cards from previous years. My sister and I really loved sorting through and looking at them on the eve of the holiday: there was something magical about it. And later in school years As a representative of the editorial board, I often used the treasured box in search of inspiration when releasing the next New Year's wall newspaper.
The box, I must say, is impressive, and most of it is occupied by my favorite greeting cards created by Vladimir Ivanovich Zarubin. It is impossible not to recognize them: bright, kind and light, depicting small scenes with carefully drawn details. The heroes of his postcards are touching, as if alive, with their own character, with a mood corresponding to the plot. And how can you not smile when you pick up a card slightly yellowed by time... Nostalgia...
The creator of these postcards, Vladimir Ivanovich Zarubin, had a very difficult fate. How, after a youth filled with grief and loss, he managed to maintain a bright outlook and share it with his compatriots throughout his life is simply amazing...
Vladimir Zarubin was born on August 7, 1925 in the village of Andriyanovka, Oryol region. During the war, Zarubin lived with his parents in Lisichansk, Ukraine. After the city was captured by the Germans, the young boy was driven to Germany and worked in a prisoner labor camp in the Ruhr, where he had to experience a lot: cruelty, bullying, hunger, fear of death... A few years later, the city was liberated by American troops, and Vladimir Zarubin moved to our occupation zone, where he served in the army for several years. It is known that he was interested in boxing and shooting. And, of course, even then he began to draw seriously. Here is from his memoirs: “Since childhood, I have really loved animals and birds. And now there is a feeder with lard on the balcony. In the morning, a woodpecker flew in... As far as I remember, my first drawing in my life is connected with animals and with... a smile: a horse is running, and “apples” are falling from under its tail. I was five years old at the time, and this drawing passed from hand to hand all over the village. It was there, in a rural house, that he first became familiar with art. Father brought a lot of books on painting, had a good (and by the standards of rural areas, simply wonderful) - five thousand copies - collection of postcards.”
In 1949, Vladimir Ivanovich began his career as an artist: he worked at the Ministry of Coal Industry, then at a factory. In 1956, he entered the Moscow Evening Secondary School, parallel to his studies, taking courses for animators at the Soyuzmultfilm film studio. Since 1957, Zarubin worked as an animator at Soyuzmultfilm, taking part in the creation of about a hundred hand-drawn animated films.
The artist devoted all his strength to his favorite work. In 1973, he received the title of winner of a social competition at the studio and had his first heart attack. The fact is that the work of a Soviet animator was only art on one side, but on the other hand it was equated to the same production with a plan, invoices, outfits, and so on. In addition, his passion, honesty and openness often ran into traditional intrigue and cronyism. Only in the late 1970s, Zarubin was accepted into the Union of Cinematographers of the USSR, but he was often called the best animator in the country.
In parallel with animation, Vladimir Zarubin talentedly and fruitfully worked in the genre of postal miniatures - he created greeting cards, drawings on envelopes and calendars. His first postcard was released in 1962.
Zarubin himself believed that he started creating postcards and envelopes relatively late: “ You know, I wanted to find an outlet, because the work of an animator is exhausting and nervous. So I tried my hand first in “Crocodile”, “Kid”, “Izogiz”. The first postcard was published under the editorship of Yuri Ryakhovsky. He helped me find myself in the postal schedule. And the little animals - bear cubs, hares, hedgehogs, as well as gnomes and other heroes - are mine, only mine.
They are truly recognizable and have their own unique face. It was precisely because of this originality that I had difficulties at artistic councils. Well, this is back in “those” times. They would sometimes look at a sketch and begin to analyze it from a socialist realist perspective: “Where have you seen a dog walking on two legs?”, or: “What kind of bear would shout “Aw!” in the forest?” How can you explain? Or here’s the story with a spring card in which Hedgehog presents Hedgehog with a candy rooster. He was wearing my boots, so the artistic council forced Hedgehog to take his shoes off. I remade the postcard, but I felt sorry for the Hedgehog - is it easy to be barefoot in the March snow? So I raised one of his paws so that he wouldn’t freeze...
In previous years, quite a few of my postcards and envelopes, as they say, were fluffed up for nothing at the artistic council».
Many years later, Zarubin left the studio and started working at home.
« It’s nice, of course, that people don’t ignore my work., - said Vladimir Ivanovich. - They write, ask to draw more, and the most active ones suggest plots. It helps, but only morally. It’s generally difficult for me to work on orders. I invent everything myself. But I always want to draw. Even if I’m sick, I just lie down and think. I first “roll” a postcard or envelope in my head so that then everything transfers to paper very quickly. But then I sometimes redraw the plots several times: I’ll finish, as if I’ll take a closer look - no, not quite right. I undertake to add and remove details of the drawing again. A little fairy tale in a drawing...»
In the early 1990s, the artist began working full-time with one small publishing house. Over time, it grew, mainly thanks to Zarubin's work, but soon the publisher began to delay payment, and then stopped paying altogether, demanding new postcards. This went on for over a year. On June 21, 1996, Vladimir Ivanovich was informed by telephone that “the company had gone bankrupt.” A few hours later the artist died.
Surely you have seen colorful Soviet New Year cards, which with their cuteness leaves even cat videos far behind. They were created by the wonderful Russian artist Vladimir Ivanovich Zarubin. Few people know how interesting the fate of this amazing person.
Volodya was born in a small village Andriyanovka Alekseevsky village council of Pokrovsky district Oryol region. There were three children in the family: the eldest son was drawn to technology, the middle one wrote poetry, and the youngest son loved to draw since childhood. Volodya's parents had a large collection of postcards and books with reproductions of paintings. My father was a representative of the working intelligentsia, worked as an engineer at a factory and bought books with pictures, which the children loved very much. Volodya looked at the paintings of old masters for a long time, listening to the explanations of the adults, and tried to draw something himself. One of his first drawings delighted the villagers so much that the picture began to be passed from hand to hand. The boy was only 5 years old, but probably one of his fellow villagers predicted his future as an artist.
The family moved to the city in Ukraine Lisichansk, where in Soviet years created a large-scale industrial production cluster. Life in the city promised great prospects for the already grown-up sons, but then the war began. Nazi troops invaded the territory of the USSR. Volodya's eldest sons went to the front to fight the aggressor, and Volodya, who was barely 16 years old, fell into occupation. After which he was hijacked by the Germans to Germany. There he ended up in a “labor camp” at one of the factories in the city of Ruhr.
Cruelty, bullying, meager food, fear of execution - this is how the childhood of the future artist ended. For several years Volodya was in labor slavery in a foreign country. In 1945, he and other prisoners were released by American troops. Immediately after his liberation, Vladimir wanted to return home and, having moved to the Soviet occupation zone of Germany, went to serve in Soviet army. From 1945 to 1949 he served as a rifleman in the commandant's office. After demobilization, he moved to Moscow for permanent residence and got a job as an artist at one of the factories. Here begins the story of his success and future national fame.
One day, while reading a magazine, he saw an advertisement for enrollment in animator courses at the Soyuzmultfilm film studio. Vladimir became eager to master this profession and began studying. From 1957 to 1982 he worked as a cartoonist at Soyuzmultfilm. From his pen came the images of characters from about 100 cartoons, including his favorites: “Well, Just Wait,” “Mowgli,” “In the Footsteps of the Bremen Town Musicians,” “The Secret of the Third Planet” and many others.
At the same time, the artist began to try his hand at postal miniatures. In 1962, his first postcard was issued with the symbol of that time - a cheerful astronaut.
Subsequently, Vladimir Ivanovich illustrated many books, but his main love remained postcards. In Soviet times, dozens of them were brought to every home - the tradition of congratulating relatives, friends, teachers, classmates, former neighbors by mail was established and beloved.
Quite quickly, Zarubin’s postcards became the most popular in the country. People asked for them at the post office, queues lined up for them in stores, and children, of course, collected these postcards and wrote letters to the artist. Surprisingly, he found time to answer. The kindest artist in the country was still very kind person. When Vladimir Ivanovich was asked what was the main thing in his work, he invariably answered: “Maybe my postcards will help people become a little kinder.”
Their total circulation, including envelopes and telegrams, amounted to 1,588,270,000 copies. At the end of the 1970s he was admitted to the Union of Cinematographers of the USSR.
This is truly a wonderful artist from God, the warmth of his heart was reflected in his work. And now people are touched by the simple beauty of his works; Vladimir Zarubin’s postcards are valued among collectors. But most importantly, his cards really bring joy to people. It’s worth looking at a perky, cheerful little squirrel or a hare peeking out from under the tree with a gift, and a person feels a surge of New Year’s mood.
I would like to give all the readers of my blog a New Year's mood. And, it seems to me that there is nothing better than eating a tangerine and looking at the paintings created by such a talented and kind person. With coming!
- How people come to Buddhism and live in it
- Ole nidal Ole nidal as a lama and as a spiritual invalid - the whole truth about the neo-Buddhist sect of kkon
- Modern Spartans. History of ancient Sparta. History of Sparta in the classical era
- Ancient Sparta is one of the most interesting states in history