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Nenov, Ivan
(b Sofia, 17 May 1902). Bulgarian painter, ceramicist, sculptor, mosaicist and designer. In 1925 he graduated in painting from the National Academy of Arts (Natsionalna Hudozhestvena Academia) in Sofia. During the 1930s he declared his support for progressive tendencies in Bulgarian art by joining the NEW ARTISTS SOCIETY, meanwhile working in his preferred media of oils and tempera. His compositions of monumental figures are painted in a style that stresses classical purity and decorative details (e.g. Morning, 1936; Sofia, N.A.G.). In 1932 and during 19368 he worked in a design studio in Italy and during that time experimented with a post-Cubist style (e.g. Dolphinarium, 1938; Sofia, N.A.G.). Paintings such as By the Sea (1943), Girl with Fish (1946) and Sozopols Window (1958; all Sofia, N.A.G.) have vivid colour and strongly synthesized forms. From the 1930s he also produced ceramic objects and sculpture and worked in mosaic. He received an award for his work at the Triennale of Applied Arts in Milan in 1936. By the 1950s he was principally a ceramicist, exhibiting decorative pots with zoomorphic and anthropomorphic designs and small figurines, all made of terracotta or glazed chamotte, and having the female form as their principal subject. He regularly participated in the Venice Biennale, the Concórso Internazionale della Ceramica dArte in Faenza and in exhibitions in New York.
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