Stepan Mamchich (; ; 14 August 1924 â 3 April 1974), was a Soviet Crimean and Ukrainian painter, teacher and representative of the .
Stepan Havrylovych Mamchich was born on 14 August 1924 in the village of in Crimean ASSR. In the late 1920s Mamchich's family moved to Feodosia.
From 1937 to 1941, Mamchich studied at the art studio at the Aivazovsky National Art Gallery. Mamchich later resumed his studies 1944.
In 1949, Mamchich left the Aivazovsky National Art Gallery and enrolled at the . Studying under , Mamchich graduated in 1951.
In 1945, Mamchich began working for the artel "Crimean. artist" (), where he copied the artwork of Ivan Aivazovsky.
In 1951, Mamchich began teaching in , North Ossetian ASSR (present-day North OssetiaâÂÂAlania, Russia). Mamchich returned to Feodosia a year later and taught at the Feodosian children's art school until 1954. From 1952 until his death in 1974, Mamchich a taught workshops for the Art Fund of the Ukrainian SSR ().
In 1954, Mamchich moved to Simferopol where he continued to cooperate with the artel "Crimean. artist". In 1962, under the recommendation of Tetyana Yablonska, Mamchich was accepted to the USSR Union of Artists.
Mykola Barsamov, the director of the Aivazovsky National Art Gallery, had a significant influence on Mamchich's early art works (ëView of Feodosiyaû, 1948; ëFeodosiyaû, 1948). With time realism features of this period transform into romantic realism painting of the second half of the 1950s (ëSea of Azov. Geese on the Shoreû, 1960, NAMU).
Impressionistic and postimpressionistic influence is apparent in his 1960s art works (ëIn Henicheskû, 1961; ëYacht Clubû, 1961; ëFishing Harborû, 1964, SAM; ëSouthern Bayû, 1964). Starting with the canvas ëSwifts and roofsû (1965, SAM) critics start to identify the appearance of new motives in the Stepan's art works which make him easily related to such Cimmerian Art School artists as Konstantin Bogaevsky.
Motives of symbolism deepen in Stepan's works of the second half of the 1960s â beginning of the 1970s, some researchers remark the distinct features of fauvism in the artistic picturesqueness of later period canvases (ëFishermenû, 1967; ëOld Settlementû, 1968, SAM; ëOld City Roofsû, 1969; ëTremontan â northern windû, 1969; ëBreath of Historyû, 1973; ëFate. Mistletoe Cottonwoodû, 1973).
By the mid-1960s Stepan Mamchich elaborated his own author's manner of painting which positions him at grade with older representatives of the Cimmerian Art School.
In 1951, Mamchich married Vera Demushkina. Mamchich is the father of the fashion designer Olga Stepanivna Mamchych (; born 1952).
On 3 April 1974 Mamchich died in Simferopol aged 49.