Shmavon Mangasarov

Shmavon G. Mangasarov (1 August 1907 – 1992) was an Armenian artist who lived for many years in Azerbaijan. He was one of the founders and members of the Azerbaijan Society of Revolutionary Art Workers. He was also a member of the "USSR Union of Artists" and was named the "Honored Artist of Azerbaijan"

Exhibitions

During life

  • 1928 1st Exhibition of Young Artists Organizations of Azerbaijan in Baku
  • 1930 1st Exhibition of Azerbaijan Revolutionary Art Workers Association (AZORRIIS)
  • 1931 Exhibition of Artists of Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Armenia (Moscow)
  • 1932 The Soviet revolution art in Philadelphia[1]
  • 1940 Art Exhibition, a visit to the 20th anniversary of the establishment of Soviet power in Azerbaijan (Baku)
  • 1946 Exhibition of painters-veterans of the World War II in Baku
  • 1947 National Art Exhibition of Azerbaijani artists dedicated to the 30th anniversary of the Great October Socialist Revolution in Baku
  • 1949 Exhibition of new works of artists of the Republic in Baku
  • 1954 Republican Art Exhibition of 1954 in Baku
  • 1954 Exhibition of Artists of the Azerbaijan SSR and Armenian SSR (Moscow) Georgian SSR, Azerbaijan SSR И Armenian SSR (Москва)
  • 1955 Republican Art Exhibition of 1955 in Baku
  • 1957 Republican Art Exhibition dedicated to the 40th anniversary of the Great October Socialist Revolution in Baku

Posthumous

  • 2001 Artists of Azerbaijan on the Volga
  • 2006 Palette of friends. Artists of Transcaucasia in Saratov House of National Artist Lev Gorelik (Moscow Russian Academy of Arts)
  • 2009 Caucasus to visit us – from the collection of National Artist of Russia Lev G. Gorelik
  • 2012 Caucasian Dictionary: Land and People, Tsaritsyno Park Museum

Works in the collections

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gollark: Sounds interesting, can I haz link plooz?
gollark: `WeAreGoingToWriteOutExactlyWhatThisDoesInTheTypeNameForSomeReason`
gollark: It's not bad, it's just bad.
gollark: ```GoalsThese goals may change or be refined over time as I experiment with what is possible with the language. Embeddable - Similiar to Lua - it is meant to be included in another program which may use the virtual machine to extend its own functionality. Statically typed - The language uses a Hindley-Milner based type system with some extensions, allowing simple and general type inference. Tiny - By being tiny, the language is easy to learn and has a small implementation footprint. Strict - Strict languages are usually easier to reason about, especially considering that it is what most people are accustomed to. For cases where laziness is desired, an explict type is provided. Modular - The library is split into parser, typechecker, and virtual machine + compiler. Each of these components can be use independently of each other, allowing applications to pick and choose exactly what they need.```

References

  1. Soviet Life, Issues 1-6. Embassy of the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics in the USA. 1967. p. 19. Retrieved 29 March 2020.
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