The Hlukhiv Children’s School of Arts as a component of the formation of professional music education in the Sumy Region in the Twentieth Century

UDC 37.036.5

Anna Myronenko

PI “Hlukhiv School of Arts named after Maхіm Berezovsky”, Hlukhiv.
ORCID ID 0000-0002-3978-2463

DOI: https://doi.org/10.37627/2311-9489-24-2023-2.117-124

Keywords: Hlukhiv, Hlukhiv gymnasiums, Hlukhiv singing school, Dmytro Kashuba, art education, music school.

Abstract.

The article is devoted to highlighting the process of formation of the artistic and educational component of the cultural paradigm of the Hlukhiv region of our time. The stages of the formation of professional musical education and the activities of its main carrier — the Hlukhiv Children’s Music School — have been studied. An excursion into the history of the creation of the Hlukhiv Children’s Music School was made and the prerequisites for its emergence were highlighted. As part of their analysis, the period of the educational process within the framework of estate culture and the gymnasium phase of Hlukhiv’s education is covered. The main material and technical problems that accompanied the process of establishment of the institution are highlighted. The main forms of music-making in the institution, the artistic network of the region, subject-specialist directions and the role of its educational activities are analyzed. The personal contributions of school leaders to the development of musical education are studied, and the statistics of musical education coverage of children of Hlukhiv Region are given. A parallel was drawn between the main tasks of the school and the professional direction of the teachers. The periodization of the formation of the Hlukhiv Children’s Music School has been developed.

Authors Biography.

Anna Myronenko, graduate student of the Department of History of Ukrainian Music and Musical Folklore, P.I. Tchaikovsky National Music Academy of Ukraine, Kyiv; director of the PI “Hlukhiv School of Arts named after Maхіm Berezovsky”, Hlukhiv.

annamironenko2611@gmail.com

References:

Gerasimova-Persidska, N. O. (1978). Choral concert in Ukraine in the XVII–XVIII centuries. Kyiv: Musical Ukraine. (In Ukrainian)

Ivanov, V. (1997). Singing education in Ukraine. Kyiv: Musical Ukraine. (In Ukrainian)

Kashuba, D. (1988, May 1). Achievements and prospects. Narodna Tribuna, 183, 1. (In Ukrainian)

Kornii, L., & Syuta, B. (2011). History of Ukrainian musical culture. Kyiv.

[Letters from Yu. O. Shaporin’s compatriots in the city of Hlukhiv]. (1957). Fund (f. 2642, op. 1, file 493. pp. 5–6). Moscow: RDALM. (In Russian)

Levit, S.I. (1964). Y.A. Shaporin. Moscow: Nauka. 397 p. (In Russian)

Magar, M. (1992, May 1). Honored Worker of Culture D. T. Kashuba. Narodna Tribuna, 70, 1–2. (In Ukrainian)

Maiburova, K. (1971). Hlukhiv school of the middle of the 18th century and role in the development of musical professionalism in Ukraine and Russia. Ukrainian musicology, 6, 126–136. (In Ukrainian)

Male gymnasium. Dedicated to Glukhiv gymnasiums. (No date). Glukhiv gymnasiums. Retrieved from http://www.glukhov-gymnasien.com/mujskayagymnasien (In Russian)

Nazarova, V. (2021). Cultural life and entertainment in Hlukhiv in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Soborny Maidan, 2, 5. (In Russian)

Protocol No. 1. (1.08.1959). Protocol book, “Hlukhiv School of Arts named after Maksym Berezovsky”. Hlukhiv. (In Russian)

Protocol No. 3. (1959, September 20). Protocol book, “Hlukhiv School of Arts named after Maksym Berezovsky”. Hlukhiv. (In Russian)

Report on educational-methodical and cultural-educational work for 1998–1999. (No date). PI “Hlukhiv School of Arts named after Maksym Berezovsky” (5 sheets). Hlukhiv. (In Ukrainian)

[Reporting note from the Hlukhiv district leader of the nobility V. P. Kochubey [to Pobedonostsev Kostyantyn Petrovych]. Attachment: biography of the composer Dmytro Stepanovich Bortyanskyi. Typewritten]. (1900, March 18). Fund XIII (Office of the Chief Prosecutor of the Holy Synod (1721–1917). Collection of archival documents 1677– 1901), unit. coll. 4850–4851, MI NLU Vernadskyi. Kyiv. (In Russian)

Smolensky, M.V. (2022). Interview. (In Ukrainian)

Vasyuta, O. P. (1995). Ensembles of singers from Chernihiv-Siver region for the court singing chapel in the 18th – the first half of the 19th century. Severyansky Chronicle, 3, 63–72. (In Ukrainian)

Vasyuta, O. P. (1998). Musical life of Chernihiv region in the 18th and 19th centuries. (Dissertation of candidate of art history). Kyiv State University of Culture and Arts. Kyiv. (In Ukrainian)

Vasyuta, O. P. (2003). Pages of music education of Chernihiv region. Chernihiv: Chernihiv. RUSL named after V.G. Korolenko. (In Ukrainian)

Yefimenko, P. S. (1883). School of training singers appointed to the court. Kyivskaya Starina, 6. (In Russian)

PDF (English).

Published: 2023

Vol 24 No 2 (2023).

Section: UKRAINIAN CULTURE.