Alexey Alexeevich Korolyuk (Russian: Алексей Алексеевич Королюк; 16 February 1933 — 10 May 2002) was a Soviet-Russian sculptor and medallist, and the first president of the Leningrad medal club.
[1][2][3] His early sculpture works include numerous monuments devoted to Great Patriotic War heroes and Soviet political and public figures, among the latter there are bas-reliefs for Saint Petersburg Metro underground platforms and sculptural decorations of Soviet nuclear-powered icebreakers Arktika and Sibir and space control-monitoring ships Kosmonavt Yuri Gagarin and Marshal Nedelin.
Throughout the following years he designed over 100 medals and plaquettes devoted to notable historical events, workers of culture and science.
Korolyuk's medals and plaquettes were presented on numerous Soviet and international exhibitions including FIDEM congresses in Prague (1970), Kraków (1975), Budapest (1977), London (1992), Neuchâtel (1996) and Berlin (2000).
[1][2][3] Alexey Korolyuk died on 10 May 2002 in Leningrad at the age of sixty-nine and was buried at Writer's Walkways of Volkovo Cemetery.