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It collected examples of contemporary Bulgarian art. The department grew into the State Art Gallery in 1934 and was moved to a separate building. Among its exhibits were works by Bulgarian National Revival artists, foreign art and works of first-generation Bulgarian painters from after the Liberation of Bulgaria in 1878.
Christo Javacheff (1935–2020) – installation art; Radi Nedelchev (born 1938) – naive/folk art; Georgi Janakiev (1941–2018) – graffics/painting; Ivan Minekov (born 1947) – sculpture; Atanas Hranov (born 1961) – painting, sculpture; Alexander Telalim (born 1966) – painting, watercolor; Nadezhda Kouteva – painting
It currently has about 2700 members – artists and critics from all generations – drawn from the many fields of the representational arts. The mission of the UBA is to protect the interests of its members and to promote Bulgarian visual culture at home and abroad. Any artist or critic with proven professional contributions may be admitted ...
A large portion of the donations were made through the "13 Centuries of Bulgarian Statehood" fund, established by Lyudmila Zhivkova in the 1980s. Since May 2015, collections of the National Gallery for Foreign Art are exhibited together with the 19th and 20th century collections of the National Art Gallery. For this purpose, the building on ...
Bulgarian art (6 C, 13 P) A. ... Arts organizations based in Bulgaria (4 C, 2 P) P. Performing arts in Bulgaria (4 C) W. Works by Bulgarian people (12 C)
Bulgarian art historians (4 P) P. Photography in Bulgaria (1 C) S. Sculptures in Bulgaria (2 C, 2 P) V. Video games developed in Bulgaria (44 P) Pages in category ...
Following is an alphabetical list of Bulgarian painters This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources .
The museum, a branch of the national art gallery, [6] has a display of socialist regime of 45 years (1944–89) period of art symbols and other artifacts and archives with statues in the park. [2] The museum covers an area of 7,500 square metres (81,000 sq ft) in the Sofia suburb known as "Red Star".