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| INTRODUCTION |
Hailed as "one of the greatest novels
to ever come out of the SU" by the "NY Times," this
book is impossible to categorize. It is part satire, part fairytale,
part fable, part slapstick. It was written in the 1930s, the most
repressive period of Stalin's reign, as an elaborate allegory to convey
Michail
Bulgakov anti-Stalinist message, complete with a main character
named Satan who is accompanied by his talking black cat.
First Published: 1994. Kiev, Ukraine ISBN 5-7707-7064-3 (in Russian,
300 p.)
Illustrations for M. Bugakov's "Master and Margarita" by
Ruslan Israel Spivak (SANCK) they've never been published. Materials:
Rapidograph, yellow paper. |
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a fragment of the Picture | 1
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"Margarita's Dream".
Kiev, 1988
Materials: Rapidograph, yellow paper.
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"Pilatus Dream"
Pilatus and Joshua (Christ) Walking on the Moon-Light's road.
Kiev, 1989
Materials: Rapidograph, yellow paper.
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a fragment of the Picture | 1
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"Master and Besdomny" (Homeless)
Jerusalem, 1993
Materials: Rapidograph, yellow paper.
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about |
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"Appartment #50"
In Private Collection of Yaakov
Davodoff.
Jerusalem, 1993
Materials: Rapidograph, red velvet, yellow paper.
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about |
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"Avadon" (A lost one)
In Private Collection of Tal's Family.
Jerusalem, 1993
Materials: Rapidograph, yellow paper.
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a fragment of the Picture | 1
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"It is Time"
Jerusalem, 1994
Materials: Rapidograph, yellow paper.
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