Andriy Bokotey or Andrii Bokotei (; born 21 March 1938), is a Ukrainian artist. He became a pioneer in Ukraine as a representative of the global movement of artistic studio glass. Full member (academician) of the National Academy of Arts of Ukraine (2000). Founder and chairman of the organizing committee of ten International Symposiums on Glass Art in Lviv (1989âÂÂ2016).
Andriy Bokotey was born in Brid, Khust Raion, Zakarpattia Oblast. He received his art education at the Department of Artistic Ceramics of the Lviv Institute of Applied and Decorative Arts. He studied under Roman Selskyi, Karlo Zvirynskyi, , and . In 1965, after graduating, he began teaching at the department where he studied. At the beginning of his creative career, he worked in the field of artistic ceramics, artistic glass, and painting. In 1970, he became a member of the Union of Artists of Ukraine. In 1991âÂÂ1992, he headed the Lviv organization of the Union of Artists of Ukraine. In 1994, Andriy Bokotey received the title of professor and headed the Department of Art Glass. From 1996, he was vice-rector for academic affairs, and in 2000, he was appointed rector.
On 1 July 2015, he resigned from his position as rector of the Lviv National Academy of Arts at his own request. That same month, he became head of the newly established Western Regional Scientific and Art Center of the National Academy of Arts of Ukraine, which he led until July 2022.
Father Andrii Leontiiovych (1909âÂÂ1992) â Greek Catholic priest; mother Mariia Mykolaivna (1912âÂÂ1996) â musician; wife Oresta Mykhailivna (1947âÂÂ2014) â economist, chief accountant of the Lviv State Technical and Economic College. He has two sons. The elder â (1966), ornithologist, Doctor of Biological Sciences, professor at the Ivan Franko National University of Lviv. The younger son, Mykhaylo Bokotey (1976), worked in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine, in diplomatic positions at the Embassy of Ukraine in the Republic of Poland, and today heads the and the Department of Art Glass at the Lviv National Academy of Arts.
Solo exhibitions were held in Nancy (1992, France), Lviv (1988, 1995, 2018), Liège (1993, Belgium), Utrecht (1996, Netherlands), and Kyiv (2001).
Among his works: