DAC FOUNDATION | Gift of the family of Sally LeBron Holland
c.1957 | TSC-2021.AW.0001 | Watercolor on Paper, 10.25 x 14 inches
This piece was painted at the Coosa County Dixie Art Colony revival.
DAC Foundation, Prattville, Alabama
DAC FOUNDATION | Gift of the family of Sally LeBron Holland
c.1957 | TSC-2021.AW.0001 | Watercolor on Paper, 10.25 x 14 inches
This piece was painted at the Coosa County Dixie Art Colony revival.
DAC Foundation, Prattville, Alabama
In an article dated November 20, 1951, published in The Birmingham News, Tayna is quoted: "After 14 months in Germany, a friend told me that Vladimir had come to Germany. One day when tensions were high, the Germans brought a band of musicians to play for factory workers—music for hungry, displaced persons but no food. Due to tension brought on by invading Russians and Americans, no one noticed when I joined the musicians. We pressed on—always toward the American Army. On the march, I made contact with Vladimir. He told the Germans I was a dancer—sick from lack of food. I managed to stay with them until we gained passage to America. AMERICA is a wonderful country." The couple immigrated to the United States on November 7, 1949.
According to Tanya, musical talent saved their lives. They arrived in New York City via Amberg, Germany, and made their first home in the United States Birmingham, Alabama, where Vladimir joined the symphony. They both became U.S. citizens in 1956. The couple later moved to Kansas City, Missouri, where Tanya studied art at the Kansas City Art Institute. She later worked as an artist for Emery Bird Thayer, a local department store. Her husband Vladimir secured a position as a violinist with the Kansas City Symphony. After the closing of Emery Bird Thayer, she joined Macy's advertising staff, where she worked as an artist for many years.
In addition to being an accomplished watercolor artist, she was also a highly accomplished pianist. Tanya's husband, Vladimir, passed away in 1981. They had one child that died shortly after birth. Tanya passed away in Kansas City on October 1, 2002, at the age of 80. Christenko participated in the Coosa County Dixie Art Colony revival in 1957, 1958, and 1959.
Sources: The Birmingham News, The Shreveport Times, The Montgomery Advertiser, The Kansas City Starr, Dixie Art Colony Foundation Archives, Ancestry.com, Newspapers.com
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