Ufa State Institute of Arts

Zagir Ismagilov Ufa State Institute of Arts (Bashkir: Заһир Исмәғилев исемендәге Өфө дәүләт сәнғәт институты) is one of the leading academic institutions of higher education of Russia. At the same time it is a unique educational institution of Bashkortostan, graduating professionals in the field of music, theatre and art.

Zagir Ismagilov Ufa State Institute of Arts
Main building of Ufa State Institute of Arts
Former name
branch of the Gnesins State Musical-Pedagogical Institute

(1950–1968)
Ufa Institute of Arts
(1968-2003)
Ufa State Acfdemy of Arts
(2003-2015)
Zagir Ismagilov Ufa State Institute of Arts

(since 2015)
TypePublic
Location, ,
Campus
Websiteen.ufaart.ru

Ufa State Institute of Arts comprises four faculties and 21 departments, where teachers train students for 33 specialties. Training students is carried out by full-time and part-time programs on both free and commercial basis.[1]

History

The Institute was opened in 1968 as a branch of the Gnesins State Musical-Pedagogical Institute (now is the Gnessin State Musical College). Today it has the status of a state institution of the Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation.[2]

Notable alumni

  • Ildar Abdrazakov
  • Askar Abdrazakov, soloist of the Mariinsky Theater (St. Petersburg)
  • Aigul Akhmetshina , soloist of the Royal Opera Covent Garden (London)
  • Alfiya Karimova, the leading soloist of the Astana Opera (Kazakhstan)
gollark: As a Go developer, you have surely encountered at some point something using the `container` package, containing things like `container/ring` (ring buffers), `container/list` (doubly linked list), and `container/heap` (heaps, somehow). You may also have noticed that use of these APIs requires `interface{}`uous type casting. As a Go developer you almost certainly do not care about the boilerplate, but know that this makes your code mildly slower, which you ARE to care about.
gollark: High demand for generics by programmers around the world is clear, due to the development of languages like Rust, which has highly generic generics, and is supported by Mozilla, a company. As people desire generics, the market *is* to provide them.
gollark: Hmm.
gollark: Interesting!
gollark: In languages such as Haskell, generics are extremely natural. `data Beeoid a b = Beeoid a | Metabeeoid (Beeoid b a) a | Hyperbeeoid a b a b` trivially defines a simple generic data type. It is only in the uncoolest of languages that this simplicity has been stripped away, with generic support artificially limited to a small subset of types, generally just arrays and similar structures. Thus, reject no generics, return to generalized, simple and good generics.

References

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