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Family and death
At the time of his death, Ryzhy's reputation had burgeoned and he was starting to receive recognition as one of the premier poets of his generation. He was awarded the Anti-Booker Prize and accepted an invitation to the Rotterdam Poetry Festival. Ryzhy took his own life by hanging on May 7,2001, at the age of 26. His suicide, seen by many skeptics as a desperate plea for recognition and fame (the kind of which has been popular in Russia since Sergei Esenin's suicide in a St. Petersburg hotel in 1925), was a sad consequence of his bipolar disorder and substance abuse. Shortly afterwards, he was posthumously awarded the Northern Palmyra, one of the most highly sought-after prizes in Russian poetry, for his collection Opravdaniye zhizni ("A Reason to Live").
His only son, Artem (born 19 January 1993) died of a cardiac arrest in September 2020, at the age of 27.
Legacy
Since his death in 2001, his poetry has been lauded and added to the canon of Russian poets. Many of his poems and collections have been added to the volumes of essential literature in the last several years, and he has gained huge popularity for his verse, which is at times vulgar and swaggering, at times formally masterful and reminiscent of Russia's Silver Age. Through his short, poignant lyrics he crafted a persona of post-Soviet delinquency and despair. His own depression and addiction to alcohol figure prominently. He was from the intelligentsia class, and had an impressive education in geology and nuclear geophysics and published many scientific papers.
Curiously, his reputation has been slow to grow outside of Russia. Following his death, a few translations have appeared in English, Italian, German, Dutch and Spanish.
Aliona van der Horst made the documentary Boris Ryzhy in 2009, and has received several awards including the Best Feature Documentary at the Edinburgh International Film Festival 2009.
Belarusian post-punk band Molchat Doma adapted the lyrics for their 2018 song Судно ("Vessel"), from Ryzhy's poem Эмалированное судно ("Enameled Vessel").
Notes
Also transliterated as Ryzhii or Ryzhiy
References
Pain and Beauty. Poet Boris Ryzhy:: Literature:: Culture & Arts:: Russia-InfoCentre
"Music alone: on the poetry of Boris Ryzhy". World Literature Today. 1 January 2005. Retrieved 15 July 2008.
https://www.calvertjournal.com/articles/show/13395/aliona-van-der-horst-poet-boris-ryzhy-documentary-film. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
"Умер единственный сын уральского поэта Бориса Рыжего". E1. 30 December 2020. Retrieved 20 October 2021.
Zhang, Cat (25 June 2020). "How Belarusian Post-Punks Molchat Doma Became a TikTok Meme". Pitchfork. Retrieved 4 December 2020.