"Music in Plastic" Automatic translate
с 25 Октября
по 13 ЯнваряКалужский музей изобразительных искусств
ул. Ленина, 103
Калуга
October 25 at 16-00 in the Kaluga Museum of Fine Arts (Lenin St., 103. second floor) will open the exhibition "Music in Plastic" from the private collection of collector Marina Nazarova.
“Music in Plastic” is a private collection of small plastic, revealing a comprehensive theme of music and musical art. Marina Nazarova is a professional musician and teacher, for her the planet "Music" is her favorite. This caused her interest in collecting porcelain figurines with musical instruments, which she collects around the world.
Marina Nazarova was born and received a classical music education in Tbilisi. After moving to Moscow in 1992, she continued performing practice in a number of Moscow symphony orchestras, and is engaged in teaching activities. Professional visual acuity and breadth of horizons are clearly manifested in her collection of small plastics.
The purpose of the collection of M.I. Nazarova is to fully represent the variety of musical instruments imprinted in porcelain, starting with samples of European plastic, southeast Asia and ending with Russian-Soviet porcelain, as one of the youngest that goes behind.
All the objects exhibited at the exhibition “Music in Plastic” give an approximate idea of real musical instruments. This is understandable. There is little natural similarity in them, since they are a metaphor. Like music captured in a precious material - porcelain, it becomes a metaphor for human life: its values, fragility, nobleness and beauty.
The exhibition runs until January 13, 2018.
- Igor Dryomin: "Island of Painting" by Karina Nazarova
- On the stage of the theater. Volkova passed the first performance of the Chekhov Moscow Art Theater from a joint project, designed for six months
- Karen Shakhnazarov: “Each viewer creates the film that he wants to see”
- The most interesting paintings in the world
- Expanding horizons with documentaries
- Exhibition of graduate works of students of the Kazan Art College. N.I. Feshina