Ekspresyon Sa Pagpapahayag NG Pananaw

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LESSON 4:

UZBEKISTAN,
KASAKHSTAN,
AND
TAJIKISTAN
 Uzbekistan ceramics
hold a prominent place
among the numerous
forms of popular applied
art. Applied arts in
ancient Kazakhstan were
part of life's daily routine.
 Clothing, utility
tools, yurts and
horses' saddles were
always decorated
using nomadic
patterns and design.
 Kazakhstan's visual arts
are relatively young. In
ancient times, nomads
used to draw on rocks.
Today, these
can be found
throughout Kazakhstan.
 Fine art in Kazakhstan
varies in style, direction
and genre. The most
captivating work by
Kazakhstan artists in
different periods can be
seen in museums across
the country.
 Tajiks have been making fabrics,
utensils, musical instruments,
carpets, furnitures, jewelleries and
many other things for many
centuries. The art of decorative
carving is very important for local
residents. Carving is mostly present
in architectural monuments,
household structures and objects,
musical instruments and souvenirs.
 When islam came, Tajiks
gradually changed to Arabian
inscriptions using images of
people and animals while some
carvers prefer “vegatative,”
geomentrical patterns. In
architecture ornaments in the
form of lotus, tulips, and other
flowers are more common.
LESSON 5:
TURKMENISTAN
AND KYRGYSTAN
 The traditional arts
include felt
manufacture, jewelry
making, woodwork,
ceramics, and
silverwork.
 The most unique and
beautiful carpets in the world
are produced by Turkmenistan.
These vary in shape and
purpose. Carpets weaving is an
ancient art, and each tribe
developed its own dictinctive
pattern.
 Turkmen carpets have been
traditionally woven out of
wool, cotton, and silk by
women, using horizontal
looms. The method of
weaving has been
modernized, but the beauty
and quality of the fabrics
remain.
Sample Of Turkmenistan Keteni
 Turkmenistan is also the
source of keteni, a homespun
silk that is used for the
beautuful dresses worn by
Turkmen women on special
occasions. The embroidery
uses different patterns that are
as unique as a family seal.
Sample of Keteni cloth
 Keteni Cloth is an object of one of
this wonderful traditions of the
Turkmen people.
 Kyrgyz women produce a wide range
of textiles, mostly from the felt of
their sheep, Nowadays,ancient
patterns are adapted to the tourist
and export market, but it is still a
living tradition and that all yurts and
most houses contain hand-made
carpets or rugs called shirdaks.
 Large elaborately wall
hangings called tush kyiz
are traditionally made in
Kyrgyzstan and kazakshtan,
By elder women to
commemorate the marriage
of a son or daughter.
 Colors and design are chosen to
symbolize Kyrgyz traditions and rural
life. Flowers, plants, animals, stylized,
horns, national design, and emblems
of Kyrgyz life are often found in these
ornate and colorful embroideries.
 FLAT cushions illustrated above
called xxx are usually made in
shadow-pairs. These are seen on
every chair, padding the seat.

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