Abram Grushko

Abram Borisovich Grushko (Russian: Абра́м Бори́сович Грушко́; 6 June 1918 – 15 March 1980) was a Soviet painter and art teacher that lived and worked in Leningrad.

[3] He studied the works of Boris Fogel, Semion Abugov, Lia Ostrova, Genrikh Pavlovsky, and Joseph Serebriany.

The main subjects of Abram Grushko's artwork were nature and the people of Zaonezhye (Onega Lake region, Karelia).

His traditional plain air paintings in 1960 were replaced by decorative graphics solutions, similar to "severe style" with clarity of the silhouette, saturated colors, or a generalized drawing.

His paintings reside in Art museums and private collections in Russia,[5] Israel, Germany, the USA, England, Japan, France,[6] and other countries around the world.