| 1913 |
Born November 11 in Lublin, Poland. His father, Samuil Lembersky, was a mathematician, and his mother, Haia Perla (Luba), a practicing musician who studied with Franz Liszt. |
| 1914–18 |
World War I |
| 1917 |
October Socialist Revolution |
| 1918-22 |
Russian Civil War |
| 1921-28 |
Lembersky attends public school in Berdichev; develops interest in art, theater design and mathematics. |
| 1928-29 |
Moves to Kiev to study art at the Jewish Arts and Trades School, formerly called Kulturliga, in Kiev. |
| 1930-33 |
Artist and designer for the Kiev Jewish theater and in Berdichev. Teaches art in public schools. |
| 1932-33 |
Collectivization and The Great Famine in the Ukraine |
| 1933-35 |
Attends the Kiev State Art Institute (the studio of painter Pavel Volokidin). |
| 1935-41 |
Studies at the Leningrad Academy of Art, studio of Boris Ioganson. Meets Ludmila (Lucia) Keiserman (1915–1994), his future wife. Tours the Urals in 1938. |
| 1941 |
Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union, June 22, 1941 |
| 1942-44 |
Evacuated to Sverdlovsk (now Ekaterinburg) |
| 1944 |
Returns to Leningrad. |
| 1944-45 |
Begins Execution. Babi Yar series. |
| 1945-54 |
Completes the last painting in the series Execution. Babi Yar (1952). |
| 1946-47 |
Teaches at the Art College (now Roerikh Art College) and privately in his studio in Leningrad. |
| 1955 |
Completes triptych Leaders and Children for Anichkov Palace (the Palace of Pioneers). |
| 1956-57 |
Creates Novgorod, Pskov and First News: Revolution 1917 series. |
| 1958 |
Returns to Nizhny Tagil to create Nizhny Tagil series. |
| 1959-64 |
Creates Miners, Railway Pointer, and Ladoga series. |
| 1960 |
A two-person exhibition, with sculptor Moisey (Mikhail) Vayman at the exhibition gallery of the Leningrad Union of Soviet Artists, LOSSKh. |
| 1962 |
Repression of the arts after Manezh exhibition in Moscow. |
| 1963 |
Vladimir Serov inspects Lembersky's studio and presses for his expulsion from LOSSKh. |
| 1964-66 |
Creates Dzintari series (current location of these works unknown). |
| 1969 |
Lembersky's work is published at Sovetish Heimland (1969 and 1972). |
| 1970 |
Dies December 2 at his home in Leningrad. LOSKh organizes a brief exhibition of his work. |
| 1971-72 |
Sovetish Heimland includes his work at the ten-year anniversary exhibit of paintings with Jewish themes, along with Robert Falk, Aleksandr Gluskin, among others. |
| 1980 |
Lembersky's widow emigrates, with his oeuvre, to the U.S. |
даты жизни
**RUSSIAN TRANSLATION*


