A documentary on Ukrainian traditional crafts and folk decorative arts, “Golden Hands” was directed by Sergei Paradjanov on commission from the Kyiv Television Studio. Potters, woodcarvers, embroiderers, painters, and other folk artisans present their work through a combination of documentary footage and specially staged dramatic scenes.
The screenplay was written by Ivan Korniienko, a prominent Ukrainian film and art historian and the author of “Folk Talents” (1959), a pioneering book that brought together accessible literary portraits of folk artists including Ivan Honchar, Kateryna Bilokur, Vasyl Svyda, Tetiana Pata, Petro Verna, and many others. The ideological framework of the Socialist Realist text carried over into the film. The hardships endured by Ukrainian culture in the pre-revolutionary era are contrasted with the “free development of Ukrainian folk art—socialist in content and national in form.”
Parajanov later regarded Golden Hands as one of his artistic failures. In his 1966 essay “Perpetual Motion”, published in “Iskusstvo Kino” magazine (“The Art of Cinema”), he reflected:
“I vividly remember the material from which “Golden Hands” and “Dumka” were made: folk woodcarving, embroidery, repoussé metalwork, the ancient songs of Ukraine. I wanted to convey the world of those songs in all of its original enchantment. I wanted to capture the people’s vision without the museum makeup—to return those astonishing embroideries, reliefs, and ceramic tiles to their creative origins and fuse them into a single spiritual act. I failed because I was trying to uncover a dead world, one not animated by human presence. Yet folklore itself offers dozens, even hundreds, of remarkable solutions.”
Nevertheless, “Golden Hands” and “Dumka” already outlined the artistic path that would eventually lead Paradjanov to his first major successes and the distinctive cinematic language for which he became renowned.
The film was scanned by the Dovzhenko Centre Film Laboratory in 2024.