- Alakbar Rezaguliyev
Alakbar Rezaguliyev (
31 January 1903 ,Baku ,Baku Governorate –31 January 1974 ,Baku ) (alternative spelling: Alekper Rzaguliyev) ( _az. Ələkbər Rzaquliyev; Russian: "Алекпер Рзакулиев") was anAzerbaijan i artist.Early life
Alakbar was born in
Baku , into the large family of a small businessman-shopkeeper. Although there were no artists in his family, Rezaguliyev showed artistic talent at an early age. He studied atMoscow Technical Art College from 1925 to 1928. [ [http://azer.com/aiweb/categories/magazine/ai103_folder/103_articles/103_rezaguliyev.html Art As Memory, Alakbar Rezaguliyev's Prints of Azerbaijan] by Jean Patterson. Azerbaijan International. Autumn 2002, #10.3] After graduation, he returned to Baku.Years in Exile
Alakbar was among the first to be arrested in what would later be termed as Stalin's Repression, in which 70,000 Azerbaijanis were executed or exiled along with hundreds of thousands of other citizens throughout the
USSR . His friend was accused of advocating "pan-Turkish ideas," and Alakbar was deemed guilty by mere association. When Alakbar was thrown into prison, he didn't even know what he was being accused of or why. Altogether, Alakbar spent more than 23 years of his life in exile. [http://www.azer.com/aiweb/categories/magazine/82_folder/82_articles/82_rezaguliyev.html Street Scenes from Yesteryear, The Prints of Alakbar Rezaguliyev] . Azerbaijan International. Summer 2000, #8.2] He was sentenced to six years. After being released, he returned and married Sona Huseynova in 1935; the couple had two daughters, Adila and Sevil. He and Sona later divorced.On November 3, 1937, again Alakbar was arrested. He told his fellow artist
Rasim Babayev how it happened: "One day I was walking down Komsomolskaya Street when I ran into Ruhulla Akhundov (one of theBolshevik s who helped establish theSoviet system in Azerbaijan). “Ruhulla looked annoyed at seeing me and remarked rudely: 'Hey, you dumb guy, are you back here again?' And with those words, I was sent directly back to prison" - this time, toSiberia and later on toSolovki , an island in theArctic where there are monasteries. Alakbar would go on to do a series of paintings depicting the isolation of those years there. [http://www.azer.com/aiweb/categories/magazine/82_folder/82_articles/82_rezaguliyev.html Street Scenes from Yesteryear, The Prints of Alakbar Rezaguliyev] . Azerbaijan International. Summer 2000, #8.2]During his exile, Alakbar married a German girl named Berta, who had been sent to Siberia from a German settlement in the
Saratov Autonomous Region. WhenWorld War II broke out,Stalin had exiled all Germans living in theSoviet Union . Alakbar and Berta had two sons, Ogtay and Aydin, and a daughter, Sevda.After Exile
After Stalin died in 1953, tens of thousands of prisoners were released from prison. Alakbar, too, was among those who eventually were able to return to Azerbaijan. The exile greatly affected his personality. He became very serious and morally broken. It even affected his creative activity. He very seldom used colors after returning home. The harsh experiences of imprisonment that he had suffered for more than two decades, after all, had been his fate merely through association and not based on any crime that he had ever committed himself. [http://www.azer.com/aiweb/categories/magazine/82_folder/82_articles/82_rezaguliyev.html Street Scenes from Yesteryear, The Prints of Alakbar Rezaguliyev] . Azerbaijan International. Summer 2000, #8.2]
References
External links
*To view works of Rezaguliyev, visit [http://www.azgallery.org Azgallery.org]
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