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254:(1895–1897). At that time Russian artists usually went abroad either having some sort of a stipend or sufficient independent income. Golubkina was one of the first of those who came to Paris having almost no money. She literally starved but managed to produce significant sculptures including 'The Iron One'.
359:. She had surgery and was forbidden to handle heavy items. However, work on the large wooden sculpture required a lot of physical effort. Golubkina felt quite ill and went to Zaraysk to her sister, Alexandra Golubkina, expecting Alexandra to help her. She died a few days after arriving there.
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Golubkina did not receive even a primary school education until the age of 25. Despite their total lack of formal schooling, all the children in
Golubkin's family were literate and Golubkina's older sister Alexandra later got a nurse
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190:. Her father died when Golubkina was only two years old. She was raised by her grandfather, Policarp Sidorovich Golubkin, who was a profitable vegetable farmer and probably the head of the local
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309:, was arrested and sentenced to one year in prison for distribution of leaflets and was freed due to her bad health. She also produced a number of sculptural portraits, including portraits of
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as well). Rodin requested her work on the hands and legs of his sculptures. At that time, she also produced 'The Old Age', 'The Fire',
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she employed a direct allusion with the work of Rodin himself. She used the same model, sitting in the same pose as Rodin's
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prize, she is regarded as the first female
Russian sculptor of note. Golubkina also had an exhibition at the prestigious
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where she studied from 1890 to 1894 under
Professor Sergey Ivanov. One of her classmates was another famous sculptor
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Golubkina's studio in Moscow became a museum in 1932. It was the first
Russian museum of that type.
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In 1897, she briefly returned to Russia, then became an assistant to
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The next year, the school closed due to bankruptcy. Anna entered the
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Anna
Golubkina died in 1927, while working on the sculpture of
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Moscow School of
Painting, Sculpture and Architecture alumni
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Golubkina was initially very enthusiastic about the 1917
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sculptor. As the first
Russian sculptor to receive the
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Moscow School of
Painting, Sculpture and Architecture
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250:In 1895 she went to Paris where she studied at the
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460:19th-century women artists from the Russian Empire
480:19th-century sculptors from the Russian Empire
140:; January 28, 1864 – September 7, 1927) was a
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109:Learn how and when to remove this message
470:Women sculptors from the Russian Empire
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275:and many other original sculptures. In
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301:was considered a symbol of Russian
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261:(1897–1899) taking the position of
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403:E.P. Nosova-Ryabushinskaya, 1912
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130:Anna Semyonovna Golubkina
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379:L.I. Sidorova, 1906
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357:Leo Tolstoy
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