Evgeniy Aleksandrovich Burmakin is a Moscow artist, "Honored Artist of the Russian Federation", a member of the Creative Union of Artists of Russia and the International Federation of Artists. In the space of art in Russia and abroad, his work is well known, thanks to his active participation in artistic life. Personal exhibitions of the artist were held in the state exhibition halls "Tushino" ("Names in Art"), "Nagornaya Gallery", "Creativity", as well as in the exhibition space of the Moscow City Hall and the Federation Council. Evidence of international cooperation are personal exhibitions in the exhibition spaces of Malaysia, 2005 (Kuala Lumpur), Malta, 2005 (Valetta), Luxembourg, 2006, Morocco 2007-2008. (Rabat, Casablanca), Syria, 2009 (Damascus). The artist actively cooperates with the Russian center of science and culture in Lebanon, Greece, Jordan, where at the opening of the latter the artist demonstrated the depth and sophistication of Russian landscapes. In addition, Evgeny Burmakin participated in international exhibitions in the Art-Manezh, in the Central House of Artists (International Art Salon). Also, his works were repeatedly presented in expositions in Germany - "II International Festival of Arts" in Magdeburg (2002) and in France - "Moskovia - Normandia" (Porubay, Volon, Cherburg).
Evgeny Burmakin was born in 1951 in Moscow. A naturally talented artist creates his own ideal world, out of time, out of human fuss. The picturesque manner of Yevgeny Burmakin reflects the traditions of the Russian landscape of the second half of the 19th century, continuing the picturesque "lines" of I. Shishkin and V. Polenov. The artist's technique synthesizes the use of a palette knife and oil, thanks to which it is possible to convey the rhythms and forms of nature so vividly. Thanks to the play of light and shadow, the author achieves a subtle harmony of color relationships ("Forest Taiga", "Autumn Palette", "First Hoarfrost", "Silence", etc.). Foggy haze envelops his landscapes and gives them a romantic halo. The main goal of Yevgeny Burmakin's work is the subjective vision and emotional transmission of various states of nature.