Education Bulatov was born in Sverdlovsk to Vladimir Borisovich Bulatov (1901-1944) and Raisa Pavlovna Shvarts (1907–1986), a stenographer. He studied painting at the
Surikov Art Institute in Moscow, graduating in 1958. He began working as a children’s book illustrator with friend and collaborator,
Oleg Vassiliev for which he won numerous awards. Both artists were immensely influenced by
Robert Falk and
Vladimir Favorsky two artists of the early-twentieth century
Russian avant-garde.
Sretensky Boulevard Group In the 1960s, Bulatov formed the
Sretensky Boulevard Group with
Ilya Kabakov,
Edik Steinberg,
Oleg Vassiliev,
Vladimir Yankilevsky, and
Viktor Pivovarov. Named so by the Czech art critic and historian Jindřich Chalupecký for the block on which they lived, the group often met at Kabakov's to discuss and show their work as they were not permitted to do so in "official" settings. This group was more of an association of like-minded artists rather than a school with similar stylistic tendencies. Through the Sretensky Boulevard Group, Bulatov became a prominent member of the loosely affiliated
Moscow Conceptualists. This group, related ideologically rather than stylistically, has defined the "Moscow School" of contemporary Russian art as it is known today. == Style ==