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・ Sandor Harmati
・ Sandor Kalloś
・ Sandor Katz
・ Sandor Rado
・ Sandor Rivnyak
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Sandor Zicherman
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Sandor Zicherman : ウィキペディア英語版
Sandor Zicherman

Sandor Zicherman ((ロシア語:Шандор Зихерман)) (born 1935, Ungvar, Czechoslovakia, (now Uzhhorod, Ukraine)) is a Soviet and Hungarian artist.
Zicherman has been a member of the Union of Russian Artists since 1965,〔 〕 and is a member of the MAOE (Association of Hungarian Creators), the Association of Hungarian Fine and Applied Artists, the Hungarian Sculptor's Society, the World Artists Association, the AIAP (Association International des Arts Plastiques), and FIDEM (International Art Medal Federation). His works have been displayed at The Hermitage and many other museums.〔 〕
He lives in Budapest, Hungary. He is married to an actress, Zinaida Zicherman, and has two daughters and two sons.
==Life==
Sándor Robert Zicherman was born on the 6th of April 1935 in Uzhgorod. He spent his childhood and started his studies in Berehove (Beregszász) which is now located at the Ukrainian-Hungarian border.
In 1957, as a self-taught painter, he participated in his first exhibition at the Gallery of Fine Arts in Uzhgorod. In 1958 he was accepted to the College of Arts and Crafts in Lwow and started his professional studies at the faculty of monumental painting. After the first year he moved to Leningrad where he continued his studies at the Vera Mukhina Higher School of Art and Design (now the Saint Petersburg State Art and Industry Academy), also at the monumental painting faculty.
After graduating in 1964, Zicherman moved to Perm in the Ural region, where he worked for the Fine Arts Foundation on a number of commissions, as a specialist in monumental art. In Perm and the surrounding region he produced a number of frescos, mosaics, sgraffitos, and ceramic high reliefs, and also three large gobelins (tapestries after the manner of the Gobelins).
In addition to executing works linked to architecture, Zicherman also worked for Perm Television and the Perm theatres. In 1966, after participating in the art exhibition "Socialist Urals" sponsored by the Russian Soviet Republic he was accepted to the USSR Union of Artists as a candidate member, and in 1975 as a full member. Between 1969 and 1972 he worked and lived in a number of different cities and regions including Lviv, Jūrmala, Riga, Elista, and Moscow.
In 1972 Zicherman moved to Tolyatti (formerly Stavropol-on-Volga) at the invitation of the city administration for the organization of cultural and artistic life. He contributed to the founding of the Tolyatti Lyceum of Arts art gallery,〔 and was instrumental in founding the Tolyatti branch of the Union of Artists. In 1987, he organized Russia's first stone-carving sculpture symposium, in Tolyatti.
Zicherman later moved to Samara, where he married Zinaida Sokolova,〔 and in 1989 to Budapest. Of this move to Hungary, he said that "()ll of us are of mixed nationalities, I do not know a single person who is one hundred percent Russian or Mordovian". He describes himself as a Hungarian artist of Russian origin.〔(Art Exhibit at Yalgat )〕 In Budapest, he and his wife opened a Russian theater and studio at the Russian embassy.〔(History of the Russian Theatre-Studio )〕

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