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TO THE SOUND OF A DOMBRA TO THE SOUND OF A DOMBRA Russian OR search current auctions Auction History Result 4d0220 TO THE SOUND OF A DOMBRA Russian 17x30 1944 Dlugach art of Russian musicians! Date Sold 5/3/2020Sold For: Login or Register to see sold price. An Original Vintage Theatrical Folded Russian Movie Poster (measures 17 1/4" x 30 1/4" [44 x 77 cm]) (Learn More) To the Sound of a Dombra (literal translation of the Russian title), the 1944 Adolf Minkin & Semyon Tymoshenko Russian music documentary featuring musicians and artists performing with a dombra (a long-necked musical string instrument). Some of the artists included Kulyash Baiseitova, Dina Nurpeisova, and Yevgeny Brusilovsky. If anyone knows more about this movie, please e-mail us and we will post it here. Artist: Dlugach Important Added Info: Note that we have never before auctioned this poster, which is a "country of origin" poster for this Russian movie! It is one of a remarkable collection of 35 Russian posters we are currently offering (a very few are from non-Russian countries that were once somewhat part of Russia). These are among the most rare Russian posters there are, from the early 1920s through 1946. Not only have we only auctioned one of the 19 before (the other 18 we have NEVER auctioned), but in all our years of auctioning, we have only auctioned a couple of dozen Russian posters from the 1920s, and a slightly larger amount from the 1930s, and a slightly larger amount from between 1940 and 1946! Nineteen of these posters are from movies, and there are also circus posters, war posters, and others. The one common denominator to all these posters is that they have really interesting images, always completely different from those of non-Russian posters for the same movies or subjects. Just like posters from Europe, posters from Russia from World War II and before are extremely rare, surely because of the lack of paper during World War II, which caused them to recycle almost all old paper, but Russian posters are even more rare, because so few posters made it out of Russia after World War II, due to the Cold War. This is a wonderful opportunity to obtain these incredibly rare and striking Russian posters, and many of them might not be offered again for sale or at auction for many years! Also note that this poster was folded at one time but has been laying flat for a long time and will be sent rolled in a tube. Condition: very good. The poster has some creases and tiny tears along portions of some edges and a few light creases along portions of some folds. It is otherwise in pretty nice condition and it displays well! Learn More about condition grades
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