Yaroslavl cultural enlightenment. Yaroslavl College of Culture

Yaroslavl College of Culture   - public institution in the city of Yaroslavl.

Yaroslavl College of Culture (YAC)
Year of foundation 1960
Type of   public institution of secondary vocational education
Director   Semenko Sergey Alexandrovich
Students   333 (2009)
Teachers    60 + 28 + 39 (2009)
Doctors 0
Professors 0
Location   150048, Yaroslavl, st. Newton, 30a
Site yarcult.ru

Story

Yaroslavl College of Culture was founded in 1960 to train personnel of cultural institutions. Initially, it had a single club department. In 1966, the library department was opened, in 1968 - the correspondence department.

In different years, the school was taught by famous cultural and art workers in the city: L. D. Tsirkov, E. F. Rozhdestvensky, I. M. Esipov, S. S. Polinsky, T. P. Tretyakova, V. S. Balyabin and others.

Over 50 years of activity, the college graduated more than 7500 specialists in the field of culture and art.

Employees and students repeatedly became winners and diplomas of competitions at various levels.

Since its foundation, it has been housed in a building of the 1930s on Lenin Avenue in the central part of the city. In the late 2000s, she moved to a specially built building on Suzdalk in the southern part of the city.

In the 2010s, it was renamed to college.

Modernity

The school is the founder and organizer of the open regional festival-competition "Sound, speak heart of Russia" and the regional festival of art creativity of students of secondary vocational education of the Yaroslavl region "Student Spring".

  (G) (O) (I) 57.578987 , 39.863886
Yaroslavl School of Culture (YaUK)
Year of foundation
Director

Semenko Sergey Alexandrovich

Students

333 (2009)

Teachers

60 +28 +39 (2009)

Doctors
Professors
Location

Yaroslavl School of Culture - State institution of secondary vocational education in the city of Yaroslavl.

Story

Yaroslavl College of Culture was founded in 1960 to train personnel of cultural institutions. Initially, it had a single club department. In 1966, the library department was opened, in 1968 - the correspondence department.

In different years, the school was taught by famous cultural and art workers in the city: L. D. Tsirkov, E. F. Rozhdestvensky, I. M. Esipov, S. S. Polinsky, T. P. Tretyakova, V. S. Balyabin and others.

Over 50 years of activity, the college graduated more than 7500 specialists in the field of culture and art.

Employees and students repeatedly became winners and diplomas of competitions at various levels.

Since its foundation, it has been housed in a building of the 1930s on Lenin Avenue in the central part of the city. In the late 2000s, she moved to a specially built building on Suzdalk in the southern part of the city.

Modernity

The school is the founder and organizer of the open regional festival-competition "Sound, speak heart of Russia" and the regional festival of art creativity of students of secondary vocational education of the Yaroslavl region "Student Spring".

Sources

References

  • Yaroslavl School of Culture . Department of Culture of the Yaroslavl Region
  • Yaroslavl School of Culture . Russian education

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

The history of the college begins in 1960, when, on the basis of an order of the Ministry of Culture of the RSFSR and the decision of the Yaroslavl Oblast Executive Committee, the city opened the Yaroslavl Regional Cultural and Educational School. It was created at the request of the Office of Culture of the Executive Committee for the training of club and library institutions. The aim of the school was to prepare the organizers of cultural and educational work, with knowledge and skills in artistic leadership. Teachers, administration and students went to the goal, being one creative family, able to carry its cultural and creative position to the masses.

For 55 years, the school changed addresses and filled with new specialties.

Initially, it was located in the building of the Metropolitan Chambers (Volzhskaya embankment, house No. 1, an architectural monument).

The building with a suite of rooms, which had furnace heating, in the absence of water supply and sewage, was of little use for an educational institution, so it took a lot of strength and energy to provide the educational process and the life of the school.

In the 1960-1961 academic year, 90 high school graduates entered the school. Within the framework of the specialty “Cultural and educational work”, three specializations were opened: choral, theater and dance, and in 1964, specialization in orchestral disciplines.

In 1966, a new specialty appeared - "Librarianship." Education in this specialty was organized in the building of the former regional library on Sovetskaya Square, which was soon demolished, and the students were transferred to the Arsenal Tower.

The first graduation of young club work specialists took place in 1963, 63 people received diplomas. Among them were: A.P. Lysova (Belova), A.A. Fadeeva, N.I. Burbo and others, who later became teachers of the school.

In 1976, the school moved to the building of the former school No. 36 at the address: Lenin Avenue, 28-A. Here it was until 2007.

From the first years of its existence, the school was engaged in active concert, cultural and educational activities. It provided the Yaroslavl region with professional personnel in the cultural and leisure sphere.

A striking event in the life of the school was the creation of educational and creative teams. These are the Rossi folklore ensemble (1984), the Carousel dance ensemble (1989), the Gorenka folklore ensemble (1991), and the Big Band pop and jazz orchestra.

In 1991, a new specialization was opened at the school, “Design and Decorative and Applied Crafts,” which opened up prospects for training specialists in the field of decorative and applied art, organizers and leaders of children and youth creative groups. On the subject-cycle commission, local history work was carried out to revive the Yaroslavl painting on wood. Products with Yaroslavl painting were repeatedly exhibited at exhibitions of various levels.

In 2007, the school moved to a new building at the address: st. Newton d.30A. Here the modern history of our educational institution is being formed.

Since 2011, the Yaroslavl College of Culture has been carrying out educational activities in the following specialties:

  • 02/02/02 Social and cultural activities (by type);
  • 02/05/03 Library science;
  • 02/01/01 Folk art (by type);
  • 02/03/02 Musical variety art (by type);
  • 02/03/05 Solo and choral folk singing;
  • 02/53/08 Musical sound engineering skill;
  • 02/02/02 Arts and crafts and folk crafts (by type).

Over 55 years, the institution has graduated more than 9,000 graduates, including many talented leaders and well-known specialists in the field of culture and art. It:

  • Martynov Vyacheslav Aleksandrovich   (Honored Worker of Culture of the Russian Federation, Director of the Regional House of Folk Arts from 1972 to 2010);
  • Kokhanaya Olga Evgenievna   (Doctor of Cultural Studies, Ph.D., professor of journalism at the Institute of MASS MEDIA of Moscow State University of Culture and Arts, corresponding member of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences);
  • Kayurova Olga Vladimirovna (Head of the Department of Culture of the City Hall of Yaroslavl);
  • Sycheva Irina Vladimirovna   (head of the department of museums and libraries of the department of culture of the Yaroslavl region);
  • Kuznetsova Elena Albertovna   (Director of GAU YAO "Yaroslavl Regional Universal Scientific Library named after N. A. Nekrasov");
  • Osipov Valery Mikhailovich   (Director of GUK YAO "Regional House of Folk Art" since 2010);
  • Romakina Marina Vladimirovna   (Leading State TV and Radio Company “Yaroslavia” and correspondent);
  • Khaikin Eduard Arkadevich   (Honored Worker of Culture of the Russian Federation, head of the Volzhanka dance collective of the Dobrynin Palace of Culture);
  • Taraday Elena Dmitrievna   (candidate of cultural science, laureate of the regional prize named after E.M. Stompelev for achievements in the field of culture (1993, 2007),