Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.
To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to upgrade your browser.
Mongolian art, nomadic art, conceptual Mongolian art and leather art by an artists from Ulaan Baator, TURBAT BATTULGA, Head of Mongolian Association for Leather art, and member of Association for Development of Mongolian Leather Art.
The nomadic culture and art of the Mongol Empire was influenced by a diverse range of traditions and religions from various regions. Throughout their history, nomadic cultures have always maintained extensive connections with foreign civilizations.
Space and Culture, India, ACCB, 2018
The article considers the role of Central Asian traditions in the formation and development of Mongolian fine arts. The authors reveal the significance of various factors for the formation of the original stylistics, which manifested itself in the methods, techniques and pictorial means typical of Mongolian art. The article defines the role of Indian artistic traditions in the development of Mongolian fine arts. The authors claim that Mongolian religious painting on scrolls is a bright artistic phenomenon based on the strict canon developed in India and inherited by many cultures of Asia. The means of artistic depiction, iconography, a system of proportions, borrowed and modified by the Mongols, had been developed in the cradle of Indian civilisation. The purpose of the article is to study the features of Mongolian fine arts on the basis of ethnic traditions, as well as to consider this phenomenon using the example of traditional and contemporary painting. Multiculturalism conditioned by the polyethnic nature of the region played an important role in the history of Mongolian culture. The renewal of ethnocultural experience is related to the artistic traditions brought from India, Tibet and China, but in Mongolian art, there is no predominance of any forms of other cultures. Hence, the art is original and has its unique features. As a result of the combination of the ornamental pictorial technique of nomadic cultures with the painting techniques of sedentary peoples, an artistic style based on the Buddhist canon, supplemented by original ethnocultural elements, was formed. In the process of mastering and developing the artistic experience based on the traditions of planar painting, icon painting, arts and crafts, folklore, a new art direction "Mongol Zurag" appeared in the 20th century. The creative method of modern masters proves that while working in various trends, genres, techniques, individual manners, they preserve and develop national traditions in painting. Consequently, the preservation of the artistic-aesthetic heritage of the ethnos has a positive effect on fine arts and the vitality of culture in general.
Modern Paintings of Mongolia, 2002
Mongolian Art exhibition at Fukuoka Asian art museum in Japan, 2002
From: Bahn, Paul, Natalie Franklin and Matthias Strecker, eds. Rock Art Studies: News of the World IV. Oxford: Oxbow Books, 2012.
South Asian Studies, 2018
African Journal of Public Affairs, 2024
Eksplorasi, 2012
Danish Journal of Archaeology, 2022
Journal of Chinese History, 2022
Canadian Medical Association Journal, 2007
Innovations: Technology and Techniques in Cardiothoracic and Vascular Surgery, 2016
Philippine social science journal (University of Negros Occidental-Recoletos- Online)/Philippine social science journal (University of Negros Occidental-Recoletos-Print), 2024
Bulletin of University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine Cluj-Napoca. Veterinary Medicine, 2008
Polymer Composites, 2014
Las Leyes de Platón: intersecciones entre filosofía, religión y poética antiguas y su recepción , 2024