Kyrgyzstan Contemporary art
Sabyrbek Mambetsadykovich Akylbekov (Russian: Сабырбек Мамбетсадыкович Акылбеков) was a Soviet Kyrgyz artist of the mid-twentieth century. He is known as one of the first professional Kyrgyz painters in the USSR.
Sabyrbek Akylbekov became famous for his lyrical emotional landscapes. He made a significant contribution to the development of Kyrgyz fine arts through his creative, pedagogical and public activities. His works have been exhibited at many levels, including republican, all-Union and international exhibitions.
The master's works can be found in the Kyrgyz National Museum of Fine Arts named after G. Aitiev, the State Tretyakov Gallery and in museums of the CIS countries.
Vitaly Feodosyevich Chernobrisov (Russian: Виталий Феодосьевич Чернобрисов) was a Soviet and Belarusian artist of the last third of the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. He is known as a painter, sculptor, teacher and public figure.
Vitaly Chernobrisov was an active member of the Leningrad artistic underground of the 1960s and 1970s and is considered a "patriarch" of the Belarusian avant-garde and an adherent of "intuitive" writing.
Theodor Theodorovich Herzen (Russian: Теодор Теодорович Герцен) was a Soviet and Kyrgyz artist of the second half of the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries of German origin. He is known as a painter, graphic artist, muralist, who was honored with the title of People's Artist of Kyrgyzstan.
Theodor Herzen worked in monumental and decorative art, easel painting and book graphics. One of Herzen's outstanding works was a monumental cycle of illustrations to the Kyrgyz epic "Manas", including more than two hundred linocuts. In this project, he combined his extensive experience of working on Kyrgyz themes with his deep knowledge of the ethnicity, history and spiritual traditions of the Kyrgyz people. Herzen collected extensive ethnographic material and created many sketches of costumes and scenes from Kyrgyz life for this cycle of illustrations.
Fyodor Mikhailovich Stukoshin (Russian: Фёдор Михайлович Стукошин) was a Russian Soviet artist of the mid-twentieth century. He is known as a painter, teacher, and one of the founders of professional Kyrgyz fine arts.
Fyodor Stukoshin began his career in the Omsk theater, where he was engaged in the design of performances. In 1940 he moved to Frunze, where from 1952 until the end of his life he taught painting at the Frunze Art School, which was one of the ten best art educational institutions of the USSR. He made a great contribution to the development and formation of fine arts of Kyrgyzstan, educated a whole pleiad of painters.
The master left a creative legacy in all genres of painting, the total register of his works counts more than three and a half thousand works.