Jacques Hnizdovsky, (1915–1985) was a Ukrainian-American painter, printmaker, graphic designer, illustrator and sculptor.
Jacques Hnizdovsky carving the woodblock "Two Rams" in his studio in New York, 1969
Young Hnizdovsky in the 1930s
Hnizdovsky with his painting "Displaced Persons", 1948, now in the Ukrainian Museum, New York
Hnizdovsky painting at the MacDowell Colony in Peterborough, New Hampshire in the early 60s
Ukrainian nobility of Galicia
The shlyakhta were a noble class of Ruthenians in what is now Western Ukraine that enjoyed certain legal and social privileges. Estimates of their numbers vary. According to one estimate, by the mid-19th century, there were approximately 32,000 Ukrainian nobles in the western Ukrainian territory of Galicia, over 25% of whom lived in 21 villages near the town of Sambir. They comprised less than 2% of the ethnic Ukrainian population. Other estimates place the number of nobles at 67,000 people at the end of the 18th century and 260,000 by the end of the 19th century, or approximately 6% of the ethnic Ukrainian population. The nobles tended to live in compact settlements either in villages populated mostly by nobles or in particular areas of larger villages.
Medal of 1782 commemorating the constitution of the parliament in Galicia and Lodomeria by Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor. It shows an allegorical depiction of imperial law (left) being handed over to the allegorical figure of Galicia with her shield showing the coat of arms of the lands
Natalia Kobrynska (born Ozarkevych), writer born into a noble priestly family, 1880s
Petty gentry family, modern Ternopil Oblast, 1880
Jacques Hnizdovsky of Korab coat of arms in wearing traditional Ukrainian szlachta clothing