His father was an
icon carver of Ukrainian descent. From an early age he showed an interest in art; copying pictures from books. In 1858, the family moved to Kyiv. Five years later,
Ivan Soshenko, a teacher at the
gymnasium, recommended that he pursue training in art. That same year, he began auditing classes at the
Imperial Academy of Arts in Saint Petersburg. Illness prevented him from completing his course of study and he settled in
Voronezh, but continued to send works to the Academy. On this basis, he was certified as an art teacher and began his career in a local primary school in 1868. In 1879, the Academy named him an "Artist, 3rd Degree". Teaching, however, was always his priority and his students were given individual attention. In addition, he made numerous trips to Vienna, Paris, Rome and other notable art centers to study the latest teaching methods and wrote articles for a variety of local and national periodicals. After the school closed, he retired to the village of Bucha and began to write "Memoirs of an Old Master". Two parts were published, but the book was never finished, due to illness. == Works ==