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Article name | Fine Art in Culture of Buryatia of the Second Half of the 1940s and the 1950s |
Authors | Sanzhieva E.G. Candidate of History, elena_sanzhieva@mail.ru |
Bibliographic description | Sanzhieva E. G. Fine Art in Culture of Buryatia of the Second Half of the 1940s and the 1950s // Humanitarian Vector. 2018. Vol. 13, No. 4. PP. 166–170. DOI: 10.21209/1996-7853-2018-13-4-166-170. |
Section | ORIENTAL STUDIES |
UDK | 930.85(571.540+73/76 (571.54) |
DOI | 10.21209/1996-7853-2018-13-4-166-170 |
Article type | |
Annotation | The article considers the development of fine, decorative and applied art in Buryatia in the second half of the 1940s-1950s. In recent years, a number of works by historians, art historians, cultural scientists have appeared, which allowed us to reveal this topic from the standpoint of an interdisciplinary approach. In addition, the past jubilee exhibitions of artists and sculptors made it possible to introduce new facts from their activities into scientific circulation. The fine arts of the national republic in the postwar and the 1950s dynamically developed and reflected the spiritual content of the Soviet era with the pressing tasks and problems of society as a whole and the individual characteristics of an individual. During the period under review, the process of formation of Buryat Soviet culture as a culture of the nation on its own socialist basis (its formation occurred in the previous period) was under way. In the time of the “thaw” period, there were more favorable conditions for creativity which was multifaceted and productive. Professional fine art by the end of the 1950s reached the level of maturity and became an integral part of the national culture, one of the factors of its further development, and at present, works of fine art have acquired documentary, information and historical value. |
Key words | history of culture, fine arts, development factors, Buryat-Mongolian ASSR, themes of war and labor, nation’s culture |
Article information | |
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Full article | Fine Art in Culture of Buryatia of the Second Half of the 1940s and the 1950s |
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