Illustrations for books Noskovich Nina Alekseevna (282 works)
The archive contains 15 books in full format with illustrations by Nina Alekseevna Noskovich
Nina Alekseevna Noskovich (maiden name Lekarenko) was born in St. Petersburg in 1911. Graduated from the M.N. gymnasium. Stoyunina. She entered and studied at the Academy of Arts in the department of newspapers, magazines and children's books, then transferred to the Moscow Printing Institute. From 1931 until her arrest, she worked in the Leningrad branch of the children's literature publishing house under the direction of the artist V.V. Lebedeva, published her works, in particular, in the children's magazine “Chizh”. At least two portraits of Nina Lekarenko, made by Lebedev, are known. One of them is in the Saratov Radishchev Museum.
She was married three times (not counting the fictitious marriage). The second husband, Mikhail Natanovich Borisov, was arrested in January 1937, and a few months later, in May, he was sentenced to ten years in prison without the right to correspondence (which meant execution).
Nina Alekseevna was arrested in the fall of 1937 as a member of the family of a traitor to the motherland (ChSIR), and sentenced to five years. She was imprisoned in the Tomsk camp for (ChSIR), since 1939 - in PromITK No. 1 Siblag (Yaya station, West Siberian Territory). She was released on September 1, 1942 and sent to work in production at the Tashtagol timber mill, Gorno-Shorsky district, Novosibirsk region. (now Kemerovo region) with attachment until the end of the war.
In August 1943, after the end of her term, she managed to come to her relatives in Kamensk-Uralsky, then she lived in Luga, where she met and married art critic V. Noskovich. In 1946 she returned to Leningrad. After returning from exile N.A. Noskovich worked in various Leningrad publishing houses. She illustrated many books and magazines. Rehabilitated by the Military Tribunal of the Leningrad Military District on February 22, 1957. Author of memoirs (partially published). So, in the Leningrad newspaper Smena, in the early 1990s, she wrote about Daniil Kharms, whom she knew.
She died in 1995.