Hanna Shabatura was born into a family of
Semanyks in the village of
Ivane-Zolote (
Zalishchytskyi County of
Austria-Hungary, now
Chortkiv Raion,
Ternopil Oblast, Ukraine). Her family included church builders and village sculptors. She was engaged in agriculture. Throughout her life, she reproduced ancient patterns of embroidery, was engaged in Easter-egg painting and decorative painting, and knew many folk songs. However, she began to paint only after she turned fifty. She was encouraged to do so by her daughter, who at that time worked as an artist in the textile industry. On 12 January 1972, the
KGB arrested Shabatura's daughter, Stefania, on suspicion of "anti-Soviet activity" and in the same year she was sentenced in
Lviv for "anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda" under Article 62, Part 1 of the Criminal Code of the
Ukrainian SSR to five years in strict regime camps and three years in exile. Shabatura was repeatedly summoned to the KGB, her apartment was searched, and attempts were also made to evict her. While her daughter was in prison and exile, Shabatura supported the children of political prisoners and painted a lot. She created series. She depicted Easter groves, New Year celebrations, churches, landscapes, and peasants in their daily chores. Art historians have noted her works:
Nativity Scene,
Holy Supper,
Epiphany. Jordan,
For Easter,
They Are Weaving a Wedding Tree,
A Boy on a Horse,
Threshing,
Quarry,
Mill, and
Plowman. Representatives of the G. Veryovka Ukrainian Folk Choir recorded samples of her folk songs. In the 1990s, her works were exhibited at exhibitions in Lviv and
Kyiv. She was awarded the
K. Bilokur Prize. In 2004, the
Hanna Shabatura book was published in the series
Ukrainian Naive Painting with research by Antonina Palahniuk.
Death Shabatura died in Lviv and was buried in field 79 of the
Lychakiv Cemetery. == References ==