“Forest Song” (by Mykola Biryuchinsky)

"Forest Song" is a sculpture by Petro Antip, co-authored with Mykola Biryuchinsky, based on the play of the same name by Lesya Ukrainka. The writer's work celebrates the harmony and drama of the relationship between man and nature, the clash of the spiritual and the material, and the power of love that "does not die."

The composition of the sculpture recreates a key episode: Mavka, a forest nymph and the personification of beauty, wakes up from her winter sleep after hearing the boy Lukash playing the flute. A feeling arises between them, full of tenderness and light.

The figures of Mavka and Lukash are distinguished by their subtle plasticity and precision of gestures, which convey the inner state of the characters. The elegance of the silhouettes creates the feeling of a living scene, where nature and the human heart merge in a single rhythm.

As in the finale of the work, here the belief in eternal love sounds: "No! I am alive! I will live forever! I have something in my heart that does not die."

The sculpture not only illustrates a literary plot, but also appears as an independent artistic image, in which the image of blooming spring and purity of feelings comes to life.

“Лісова пісня” (с/в Микола Бірючинський) – Зображення 9
Petro Antip
An artist of large scale and deep meaning