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  1. Using bold typefaces, vibrant colors, and energetic brush strokes, Burliuk turned against the artistic conventions of the past, capturing Russian Futurism’s ideas of dynamism, innovation, and revolution, declared in the 1912 manifesto A Slap in the Face of Public Taste.

  2. Considerado el padre del futurismo en el Imperio ruso, el pintor ucraniano David Burliuk fue el primogénito de una familia de artistas. Comenzó sus estudios artísticos en Kazan y Odesa y partió a Múnich junto a su hermano Volodymyr, donde ambos estudiaron en la Königliche Bayerische Akademie con Anton Ažbe.

  3. David Davidovich Burliuk was a Russian-language poet, artist, publicist and book illustrator associated with the Futurist, Neo-Primitivist and Futurism movements. Burliuk is often described...

  4. A large scale exhibition “Futurism and After: David Burliuk, 1882-1967” which was on view through March 2009 in the Ukrainian museum in New York is an homage to the artist and the first major US show of Burliuk’s art in nearly half a century.

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  5. David Burliuk. Semyrotivka, 1882-Southampton, 1967. Print page. Hailed as the father of Futurism in the Russian empire, the Ukrainian painter David Burliuk was the first born of a family of artists. After beginning his training in Kazan and Odesa, he moved to Munich with his brother Volodymyr.

  6. David Davidovich Burliuk (Дави́д Дави́дович Бурлю́к; 21 July 1882 – 15 January 1967) was a Russian poet, artist and publicist of Ukrainian origin associated with the Futurist and Neo-Primitivist movements.

  7. 11 de ene. de 2009 · Back in time — and back in pre-Stalinist USSR — Burliuk became a leading light of Russian Futurism, among other things initiating art performances called “poezoconcerts” now represented only by handbills and a few, very rare, very fuzzy photographs.