Leonid Vysheslavsky

Leonid Vysheslavsky
Born (1914-03-18)March 18, 1914
Nikolayev in Ukraine, Russian Empire
Died December 26, 2002(2002-12-26) (aged 88)
Kiev
Occupation Poet, literary critic, translator
Language Russian, Ukrainian
Nationality Ukrainian
Citizenship USSR, Ukraine
Notable awards Taras Shevchenko Prize, 1984
Website
www.leonid.vysheslavsky.name

Leonid Vysheslavsky (Ukrainian: Леонід Миколайович Вишеславський; born March 18, 1914, Nikolayev, died December 26, 2002, Kyiv) was a Soviet and Ukrainian poet, literary critic and translator. He wrote in the Russian and Ukrainian languages and published more than 60 books of poems, prose and translations. Vysheslavsky’s works were published in the Ukrainian, Polish, German, French and other languages. He had supporters and friends in many countries.

Biography and creation

Leonid Vysheslavsky was born in Nikolayev 18 March 1914. His father Nikolai Vysheslavsky (1888–1979) was engineer, his mother Cleopatra Platonova (1892–1939) was the daughter of a priest. He spent his childhood in the family's maternal grandfather, a priest Harlampy Platonov, in a family with great cultural and spiritual traditions. His wife Agnessa Baltaga (1905–1991) was literary critic. Their daughter  Irina Vysheslavska   — is artist, their grandson   — Glib Vysheslavsky   — is artist and art critic.

In his youth he was interested in futurist poets, especially Vladimir Mayakovsky, (many years later, he wrote about him literary studies). First poems he published in 1931 in Kharkiv and in Moscow. He graduated from Taras Shevchenko University of Kyiv in 1938, philological department. Since 1948 until 2002 Vysheslavsky was the editor of the magazine Raduga (means: rainbow), (renamed in 1963 from "Soviet Ukraine").

One of the main themes in the Vysheslavsky’s poetry is a flight into space, as a human contact with the Universe. After Yuri Gagarin’s flight Vysheslavsky wrote several poetry books. The First Astronaut liked his poems very much and ever wrote himself introduction to one of them. Vysheslavsky had active creative life and communication with prominent contemporaries: priest Alexander Men, poets David Burliuk, Boris Pasternak, Mikola Zerov, Pavlo Tychina, Ivan Druch and other.

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