Slava Gerulak Explained

Birth Name:Yaroslava Gerulak
Birth Date:5 May 1933
Birth Place:Stopnica, Poland

Slava Gerulak (born May 5, 1933) is a Ukrainian-American ceramic artist known for her sculpture based in New York.[1] [2] In the mid-1950's she was part of the New York Group [Нью-Йоркська Група; Niu-Iorkska hrupa], a group of poets and artists, which developed spontaneously from friendships and discussions around the Students’ke slovo (Student Word) supplement to the Ukrainian American newspaper Svoboda.[3]

Biography

Gerulak was born in the town of Stopnica in southern Poland. She immigrated to the United States in 1950 from the DP Camp in Mittenwald, Germany. She studied at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and earned a BA from Sienna Heights College (1954) and an MA from Northwestern University (1959). From 1959 to 1962 she lived in Paris, settling in New York City afterwards.[4] She taught at Manhattan College in Purchase NY from 1955 to 1957.[5]

Exhibitions

Gerulak participated in many exhibits at The Ukrainian Museum, including Members Collect (2014) and The Ukrainian Diaspora: Women Artists, 1908–2015 (2015)[6] and The Ceramic World of Slava Gerulak 2021–23. The artist participated in many exhibitions as a member of the Association of Ukrainian Artists in America in addition to group shows in Paris, Toronto, Philadelphia, Chicago, New York, Ohio, and elsewhere. Her work is found in many public and private collections nationally and internationally.[7]

Style and technique

Gerulak worked primarily in clay creating works that could functional or purely decorative. She was most often inspired by her heritage and it's folklore adapting images of mermaids, nymphs, protectresses, a mother and child, villagers in folk costumes, and girls with head adornments/floral wreaths to create her own style of figurative ceramics which explores Ukrainian life.[8]

Notes and References

  1. News: Mohn . Tanya . 27 April 2022 . Canvases, Clay and Cameras, Preserving the Spirit of Ukraine . 23 September 2024 . The New York Times . 6.
  2. News: Woodard . Josef . 18 March 1993 . SIGHTS AROUND TOWN / THE ART SCENE : Culture Ukrainian : A show of folk crafts in Thousand Oaks offers a look at history on a whole shell. . 23 September 2024 . Los Angeles Times . en-US.
  3. Web site: New York Group . 23 September 2024 . www.encyclopediaofukraine.com.
  4. Web site: Facebook . 23 September 2024 . www.facebook.com.
  5. Book: Markus . Vasyl . Encyclopedia of Ukrainian Diaspora . Markus . Daria . Shevchenko Scientific Society . 2009 . 978-0-88054-145-9 . 1st . New York - Chicago . 203 . Ukrainian .
  6. Web site: Kochman . Adrienne . 23 September 2024 . New exhibition studies Ukrainian women artists in the diaspora, 1908-2015 . Art Daily.
  7. Web site: Ukrainian Museum features works by local Ukrainian artists Hamtramck Review . 23 September 2024 . en-US.
  8. Web site: Slava Gerulak: Ceramics . 23 September 2024 . Ukrainian Museum.