Museum of Arts of Uzbekistan
Location | 16, Amir Temur Avenue, Tashkent, Republic of Uzbekistan, 100060 |
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Type | Art museum, Uzbek art, Western art, Russian art |
Director | Fayziyeva Vasila |
Website |
www |
The Museum of Arts of Uzbekistan (Uzbek: Oʻzbekiston Davlat Sanʼat muzeyi) is the largest state art museum in Uzbekistan.[1][2] Its permanent collection contains more than several thousands works, divided among four curatorial departments. The museum was established in 1918 as a Museum of People University and renamed as a Central Arts Museum later. It was named as Tashkent Art Museum in 1924 and finally Museum of Arts of Uzbekistan in 1935.[3]
History
The museum was established in 1918 and was located in former palace of prince Nikolay Romanov till 1935. It was moved to People's House in 1935. In 1974, the People's House building was demolished replaced by a current one.[4]
Building
Three Soviet architects Abdulov, Nikiforov and Rosenblum designed the new building of museum in the form of a huge cube, with all sides separated into even metal squares, lined with aluminum sheets on the outside. The lower part of the building and the entrance are decorated with polished gray marble. The upper part is glazed with chrom-brugnatellite, smoothing the sunlight and setting indoor matte illumination.[5]
Collection
The initial collection of the museum consisted of a hundred works of art from prince Nikolay Romanov and other individuals private collections, nationalized in April 1918. Those were mostly paintings and drawings by Russian and Western European masters, sculptures, furniture and porcelain. Immediately after establishing the museum, it's collection was enlarged with works from the collection of the Turkestan local history museum. Some works were transferred from museum collections in Moscow and Leningrad - for example, in 1920–1924 the museum has received 116 works of Russian art from XVIII - XX centuries, among them portraits by Vladimir Borovikovsky, Tropinin, Karl Bryullov, Yaroshenko, Repin and many others. The museum also purchased about 250 paintings of pre-revolutionary artists who were active in Central Asia: Igor Kazakov, Nikolay Karazin, Sommer. From the second half of the 30th, the museum's collection was expanded mostly with works by Uzbekistan artists.[6]
In addition to its permanent collection, the museum holds exhibitions of Uzbek and international artists.[7]
Museum Collections are divided into four departments: National applied art of Uzbekistan, Fine arts of Uzbekistan, Russian and Western art, Far East art.[8]
Controversy
The chief curator of museum Mirfayz Usmonov was found selling artworks in black market for 15 years, replacing them with copies. He was caught in 2014, prosecuted and sentenced to 9 years in jail. Two other employees of museum were sentenced to eight years each.[9]
Gallery
- Andrei Belloli «Bather»
- Dmitry Levitsky «Portrait of A. Voronzova»
- Nikolay Karazin «Falcon hunt»
- David Teniers the Younger Monkey barbers. 1659.
- Vladimir Borovikovsky «Portrait of A. Volkonsky»
- Tropinin «Portrait of A. Obolensky»
- Yaroshenko «Expulsion»
- Cornelis Saftleven. Peasantry
References
- ↑ "Fine Arts Museum of Uzbekistan - Lonely Planet". lonelyplanet.com. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
- ↑ "EMBASSY OF THE REPUBLIC OF UZBEKISTAN TO THE UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND". uzbekembassy.org. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
- ↑ "» Государственный музей искусств Узбекистана в Ташкенте ожидает реконструкция.". museumstan.com. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
- ↑ "Museum of Fine Arts » Arts & Culture, Museums, Tashkent » VisitUzbekistan.travel". visituzbekistan.travel. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
- ↑ "The State Art Museum of Uzbekistan: description, photos, contacts". advantour.com. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
- ↑ "Художественный музей в Ташкенте и коллекция русского искусства | Письма о Ташкенте". mytashkent.uz. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
- ↑ "State Art Museum of Uzbekistan". stateartmuseum.uz. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
- ↑ "Государственный музей искусств Узбекистана". stateartmuseum.uz. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
- ↑ "Uzbek museum sold off artworks over 15 years and replaced them with copies". The Guardian. 12 December 2014. Retrieved 29 November 2015.
External links
- Museum of Arts of Uzbekistan website (English)
Coordinates: 41°18′10″N 69°16′40″E / 41.3028°N 69.2778°E