
Exhibition
Oleh Sokolov. UNIVERSE ON PAPER
Press release
Oleg Sokolov. The universe on paper
From June 13 to July 18, Goldens auction house presents a retrospective exhibition “Oleg Sokolov. The Universe on Paper”, which broadly presents the artist's work. The exposition includes more than 50 graphic works of the 1950s-1980s and offers a unique opportunity to immerse yourself in the artistic world formed at the intersection of Soviet reality, personal poetics and inner freedom.
Oleh Sokolov is one of the key figures of Ukrainian unofficial art, whose works are characterized by bold metaphor, experiments with form and color, and a hidden critique of social clichés. He is an almost mythological figure in the history of Ukrainian art. His work is a combination of deep intellectuality, philosophical sensitivity, and visual freedom. Working under the constraints of Soviet cultural policy, he was one of the artists who consciously avoided opportunism and chose the path of internal autonomy.
Sokolov was a part of the unofficial artistic environment, but he never belonged to radical avant-garde groups. His language is complex, metaphorical, and emotionally intense. In the 1950s and 1960s, he worked with abstractions and monotypes, and in the 1970s and 1980s, he created paintings that balanced between figuration and symbolism.
One of the characteristic features of Sokolov's creative style (especially in the 1970s and 1980s) was the active use of collage. At a time when artistic material was scarce, collage became for him not only a technical tool but also a conceptual gesture. He combined fragments of printed images, newspapers, and book illustrations with his own painting layer, creating a new reality on paper. It was in such works that the artist most clearly showed himself as a thinker of the image, who not only depicts but also assembles a new form of vision.
Despite the fact that his name remained in the shadow of official art for a long time, Sokolov had a significant influence on a generation of younger artists, primarily due to his consistency, loyalty to his own vision, and uncompromising approach. His work echoes the practices of European modernism, particularly German Expressionism, but is deeply rooted in the Ukrainian cultural context.
His art is not just a reaction to the times, but a foresight of new forms of sensibility that have already emerged in the post-Soviet period. Today, when Ukrainian culture is actively rethinking its own lost and marginalized narratives, Sokolov's figure is returning with renewed vigor and relevance.
The exhibition is open to the public from June 13 to July 18, Monday through Friday from 12:00 to 19:00.
Opening hours:
June 13 - July 18, 2025
12:00 - 19:00
Sunday is a day off
Admission is free
Address: Kyiv, 4 Leonid Pervomaisky str.
GOLDENS auction house
+38 050 462 95 32
[email protected]
www.gs-art.com
From June 13 to July 18, Goldens auction house presents a retrospective exhibition “Oleg Sokolov. The Universe on Paper”, which broadly presents the artist's work. The exposition includes more than 50 graphic works of the 1950s-1980s and offers a unique opportunity to immerse yourself in the artistic world formed at the intersection of Soviet reality, personal poetics and inner freedom.
Oleh Sokolov is one of the key figures of Ukrainian unofficial art, whose works are characterized by bold metaphor, experiments with form and color, and a hidden critique of social clichés. He is an almost mythological figure in the history of Ukrainian art. His work is a combination of deep intellectuality, philosophical sensitivity, and visual freedom. Working under the constraints of Soviet cultural policy, he was one of the artists who consciously avoided opportunism and chose the path of internal autonomy.
Sokolov was a part of the unofficial artistic environment, but he never belonged to radical avant-garde groups. His language is complex, metaphorical, and emotionally intense. In the 1950s and 1960s, he worked with abstractions and monotypes, and in the 1970s and 1980s, he created paintings that balanced between figuration and symbolism.
One of the characteristic features of Sokolov's creative style (especially in the 1970s and 1980s) was the active use of collage. At a time when artistic material was scarce, collage became for him not only a technical tool but also a conceptual gesture. He combined fragments of printed images, newspapers, and book illustrations with his own painting layer, creating a new reality on paper. It was in such works that the artist most clearly showed himself as a thinker of the image, who not only depicts but also assembles a new form of vision.
Despite the fact that his name remained in the shadow of official art for a long time, Sokolov had a significant influence on a generation of younger artists, primarily due to his consistency, loyalty to his own vision, and uncompromising approach. His work echoes the practices of European modernism, particularly German Expressionism, but is deeply rooted in the Ukrainian cultural context.
His art is not just a reaction to the times, but a foresight of new forms of sensibility that have already emerged in the post-Soviet period. Today, when Ukrainian culture is actively rethinking its own lost and marginalized narratives, Sokolov's figure is returning with renewed vigor and relevance.
The exhibition is open to the public from June 13 to July 18, Monday through Friday from 12:00 to 19:00.
Opening hours:
June 13 - July 18, 2025
12:00 - 19:00
Sunday is a day off
Admission is free
Address: Kyiv, 4 Leonid Pervomaisky str.
GOLDENS auction house
+38 050 462 95 32
[email protected]
www.gs-art.com

Press release
Oleg Sokolov. The universe on paper
From June 13 to July 18, Goldens auction house presents a retrospective exhibition “Oleg Sokolov. The Universe on Paper”, which broadly presents the artist's work. The exposition includes more than 50 graphic works of the 1950s-1980s and offers a unique opportunity to immerse yourself in the artistic world formed at the intersection of Soviet reality, personal poetics and inner freedom.
Oleh Sokolov is one of the key figures of Ukrainian unofficial art, whose works are characterized by bold metaphor, experiments with form and color, and a hidden critique of social clichés. He is an almost mythological figure in the history of Ukrainian art. His work is a combination of deep intellectuality, philosophical sensitivity, and visual freedom. Working under the constraints of Soviet cultural policy, he was one of the artists who consciously avoided opportunism and chose the path of internal autonomy.
Sokolov was a part of the unofficial artistic environment, but he never belonged to radical avant-garde groups. His language is complex, metaphorical, and emotionally intense. In the 1950s and 1960s, he worked with abstractions and monotypes, and in the 1970s and 1980s, he created paintings that balanced between figuration and symbolism.
One of the characteristic features of Sokolov's creative style (especially in the 1970s and 1980s) was the active use of collage. At a time when artistic material was scarce, collage became for him not only a technical tool but also a conceptual gesture. He combined fragments of printed images, newspapers, and book illustrations with his own painting layer, creating a new reality on paper. It was in such works that the artist most clearly showed himself as a thinker of the image, who not only depicts but also assembles a new form of vision.
Despite the fact that his name remained in the shadow of official art for a long time, Sokolov had a significant influence on a generation of younger artists, primarily due to his consistency, loyalty to his own vision, and uncompromising approach. His work echoes the practices of European modernism, particularly German Expressionism, but is deeply rooted in the Ukrainian cultural context.
His art is not just a reaction to the times, but a foresight of new forms of sensibility that have already emerged in the post-Soviet period. Today, when Ukrainian culture is actively rethinking its own lost and marginalized narratives, Sokolov's figure is returning with renewed vigor and relevance.
The exhibition is open to the public from June 13 to July 18, Monday through Friday from 12:00 to 19:00.
Opening hours:
June 13 - July 18, 2025
12:00 - 19:00
Sunday is a day off
Admission is free
Address: Kyiv, 4 Leonid Pervomaisky str.
GOLDENS auction house
+38 050 462 95 32
[email protected]
www.gs-art.com
Full description Collapse the description
From June 13 to July 18, Goldens auction house presents a retrospective exhibition “Oleg Sokolov. The Universe on Paper”, which broadly presents the artist's work. The exposition includes more than 50 graphic works of the 1950s-1980s and offers a unique opportunity to immerse yourself in the artistic world formed at the intersection of Soviet reality, personal poetics and inner freedom.
Oleh Sokolov is one of the key figures of Ukrainian unofficial art, whose works are characterized by bold metaphor, experiments with form and color, and a hidden critique of social clichés. He is an almost mythological figure in the history of Ukrainian art. His work is a combination of deep intellectuality, philosophical sensitivity, and visual freedom. Working under the constraints of Soviet cultural policy, he was one of the artists who consciously avoided opportunism and chose the path of internal autonomy.
Sokolov was a part of the unofficial artistic environment, but he never belonged to radical avant-garde groups. His language is complex, metaphorical, and emotionally intense. In the 1950s and 1960s, he worked with abstractions and monotypes, and in the 1970s and 1980s, he created paintings that balanced between figuration and symbolism.
One of the characteristic features of Sokolov's creative style (especially in the 1970s and 1980s) was the active use of collage. At a time when artistic material was scarce, collage became for him not only a technical tool but also a conceptual gesture. He combined fragments of printed images, newspapers, and book illustrations with his own painting layer, creating a new reality on paper. It was in such works that the artist most clearly showed himself as a thinker of the image, who not only depicts but also assembles a new form of vision.
Despite the fact that his name remained in the shadow of official art for a long time, Sokolov had a significant influence on a generation of younger artists, primarily due to his consistency, loyalty to his own vision, and uncompromising approach. His work echoes the practices of European modernism, particularly German Expressionism, but is deeply rooted in the Ukrainian cultural context.
His art is not just a reaction to the times, but a foresight of new forms of sensibility that have already emerged in the post-Soviet period. Today, when Ukrainian culture is actively rethinking its own lost and marginalized narratives, Sokolov's figure is returning with renewed vigor and relevance.
The exhibition is open to the public from June 13 to July 18, Monday through Friday from 12:00 to 19:00.
Opening hours:
June 13 - July 18, 2025
12:00 - 19:00
Sunday is a day off
Admission is free
Address: Kyiv, 4 Leonid Pervomaisky str.
GOLDENS auction house
+38 050 462 95 32
[email protected]
www.gs-art.com
Full description Collapse the description
Curators

Mykhailo Vasylenko
Director of the auction house «Goldens», art expert, curator

Julia Chernysh
Specialist of the "Goldens" auction house, art critic, curator

Kateryna Shcherbakova
Specialist of the "Goldens" auction house, art critic, curator
Curators

Mykhailo Vasylenko
Director of the auction house «Goldens», art expert, curator

Julia Chernysh
Specialist of the "Goldens" auction house, art critic, curator

Kateryna Shcherbakova
Specialist of the "Goldens" auction house, art critic, curator
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Lot 12
Oleg Sokolov (1919-1990)
"I am going to the landscapes", 1973
paper, felt-tip pen, 44 x 30,5 cm
Lot 16
Oleg Sokolov (1919-1990)
"There is no distance from the mind", 1976
paper, mixed media, 28 x 41 cm
Lot 19
Oleg Sokolov (1919-1990)
"Without the Possibility of Ever Reaching", 1976
paper, mixed media, 32 x 44 cm
Lot 20
Oleg Sokolov (1919-1990)
"What is given to a woman to tire us", 1977
paper, mixed media, 32 x 43,5 cm
Lot 21
Oleg Sokolov (1919-1990)
"Above the Differences of Reached Heights", 1977
paper, mixed media, 23,5 x 42,5 cm
Lot 22
Oleg Sokolov (1919-1990)
"The World, Taken by War in Arms", 1978
paper, mixed media, 29 x 41 cm
Lot 23
Oleg Sokolov (1919-1990)
"Attempt at Structural Analysis of Cervantes 'Don Quixote'", 1978
paper, mixed media, 47 x 39,5 cm
Lot 28
Oleg Sokolov (1919-1990)
"Philosophy of Counter-Revolution, Pure Conscience of Color", 1979-1985
paper, mixed media, 20 x 30 cm
Lot 29
Oleg Sokolov (1919-1990)
"Philosophy of Revolution", 1979-1985
paper, mixed media, 29,5 x 20,5 cm
Lot 33
Oleg Sokolov (1919-1990)
"Panel at the Crossroads of Fate", 1980
paper, mixed media, 30 x 42 cm
Lot 35
Oleg Sokolov (1919-1990)
"For Every Smart Person, a Fool", 1980
paper, mixed media, 34 x 30 cm
Lot 37
Oleg Sokolov (1919-1990)
"The Nature of Symmetry of Asymmetry", 1982
paper, mixed media, 44 x 30,5 cm
Lot 43
Oleg Sokolov (1919-1990)
"Slavic Origins of Philosophy", 1984
paper, mixed media, 44 x 31,5 cm
Lot 44
Oleg Sokolov (1919-1990)
"The Irrational is the Hypnosis of Death", 1984
paper, mixed media, 39 x 31 cm
Lot 46
Oleg Sokolov (1919-1990)
"You Let the Red Rooster Out into Other People's Yards", 1985
paper, mixed media, 30 x 21 cm
Lot 47
Oleg Sokolov (1919-1990)
"Above the Equinox of Unconnected Sides", 1984
paper, mixed media, 36 x 40 cm
Lot 52
Oleg Sokolov (1919-1990)
"Old fields do not allow new ones to work"
paper, mixed media, 33,5 x 40,5 cm
Lot 56
Oleg Sokolov (1919-1990)
"Another Interpretation of the Emerald Tablet", 1987
paper, mixed media, 40 x 35 cm