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  1. Dec 12, 2018 · Rest in peace... On December 6, my friend Nikolay Vasilievitch Kuzmin (1963-2018) died. He was an excellent analyst, a chess composer and a strong practical player. Despite the modest title (Candidate Master), being the heir to the Soviet school, he has repeatedly defended young NM, FM, and even IM. His favorite tactic...

  2. Nikolai Kuzmin studied in the art college of Pavlovo-on-Oka (close to Nizhny Novgorod), then at the Stroganov Moscow State University of Arts and Industry (also called Stroganovka). As a painter, he travelled widely, worked and had exhibitions across Russia, Croatia and the western European countries of Denmark, England, France and Germany.

  3. Nikolai Vasilievich Kuzmin (Russian: Николай Васильевич Кузьмин; born 1938) is a Russian painter. After studying in the Art College of Pavlovo-na-Oke , close to his home village Talynskoye, he entered the Stroganov Moscow State University of Arts and Industry [1] and became an alumni in 1970.

  4. Nikolai Nikolayevich Kuzmin (Russian: Николай Николаевич Кузьмин; 3 April 1883 – 8 February 1938) was a Soviet political and military leader. He was the political commissar of the Baltic Fleet during the time of the Russian Civil War.

  5. The painter Nikolai Vasilevich Kuzmin tells about his origins - his childhood in the Nizhniy Novogorod region - how he became an artist - his studies in the Stroganov Academy of Fine Arts in Moscow - and what painting means to him.

  6. A student of the Construction Engineering department of the Siberian Technological Institute, Nikolay Kuzmin was a member of the OSA constructivist group, one of the founders of SIBSTRIN (Siberian Construction Institute) and part of the Novosibirsk architectural school/movement.

  7. Actor: Amphibian Man. Nikolay Kuzmin was born on 25 February 1917 in Bokovo, Yaroslavl Governorate, Russian Empire [now Myshkin Raion, Yaroslavl Oblast, Russia]. He was an actor, known for Amphibian Man (1961), Kazhdyy desyatyy (1984) and Blokada: Luzhskiy rubezh, Pulkovskiy meredian (1974).