He created in the fields of monumental church art and feature film. The author of poems on humorous themes, feuilletons, and two volumes of short stories "Hryts Zozulya" (1973) and "Na khlopskyi rozum Hrytsia Zozuli" (1982). From 1946 to 1991, he edited, published, and illustrated the satirical and humorous magazine "
Lys Mykyta" in
Munich,
New York, and
Detroit. In 1951–1957, he illustrated children's fairy tales on American television and was also a television film artist for the Jam Handy Film Studio in Detroit. In 1929–1930, he also painted churches in the Lviv Oblast. In the 1950s, he created Ukrainian design, posters, and wrappers in the United States, and in 1942–1944 he collaborated with the "Veselyi Lviv" Small Forms Theater. Author of the decorations for the main hall of the Ukrainian resort
Soyuzivka. He is the author of about 1000 paintings, several thousand caricatures, and illustrations on Ukrainian topics. In the 1930s, he participated in exhibitions, and in 1990, a personal exhibition was held in Lviv. Among the main works: • graphics: the cycle "Za motyvamy striletskykh pisen" (1930s); series of color postcards: on the theme of Ukrainian folk songs (Munich, 1949), "Selo" (Munich, 1956), to the 50th anniversary of the
Ukrainian Sich Riflemen (New York, 1965); "Lys Mykyta" (1960s), "
Volodymyr Velykyi", "Vesillia", "Ukrainskyi yarmarok", "Pokutskyi yarmarok", "Stara korchma", "Selo", "Hutsulska nich", "Trembity klychut", "Lisovyi chort", "Molfar", "Hutsuliia", "Divchyna z ptakhoiu", "Mamai", "Yidut do mista", "Duma pro kozaka Holotu", "Chornyi kozak" (all 1960s-90s); • painting: "Motyv Kosmacha" (1935), "Znesinska tserkva u Lvovi", "Syn Yurii" (both 1942). ==Awards==