In 1935 she competed at the Second All-union competition of musician-performers, held in
Leningrad, and divided the first prize with Maria Goralova. After that she gave numerous concerts all over the Soviet Union – often together with her husband –, and became a well-known and popular artist. In 1942 during
World War II, the Bolshoi artists were evacuated to
Kuybyshev where she met and made friends with
Dmitri Shostakovich. She had not stop playing, but meanwhile worked in the hospital as well, caring for the wounded from the battles around Stalingrad. In 1943, she returned to Moscow and resumed her busy harpist life. In 1955 she was awarded the title of
Honorable Polar Explorer when she organized an artistic tour to the station North Pole-4 to introduce their art to the workers of the polar stations and the locals. She had been teaching at the Moscow Conservatory from 1943; she served there as Professor of harp from 1958. Among her students were E. A. Moskovitina, Natalija Sameyeva, Olga Ortenberg and other famous harpists. At least 30 of her pupils won first prize at competitions and festivals in the
USSR and worldwide. In 1946 two of her former students from the
Ippolitov-Ivanov Music School, S. Maikov and A. Kaplyuk, - with Dulova's expert assistance -, created the first Russian harp. In 1964 she had been a founding member of the All-Union Harp Society. In 1997 she was the chairperson of jury at the I. Moscow International Harp Competition. After World War II, she was not allowed to leave the country; but later she traveled all over the world, gave numerous concerts overseas and judged at international competitions. On several occasions, she participated in arranging seminars on harp playing for master-classes at
Hartford University (USA) with
Aristid von Würtzler. From the 1960s, Dulova-schools or Russian-schools were formed in the
Netherlands, Spain, Germany, Hungary,
Bulgaria, China, United States,
Brazil,
Venezuela and elsewhere; the students could acquire her special harp technique there. She visited these schools regularly and established master classes, too. Since then Russian harp playing style has been well known everywhere. From the Hungarian harpists
Melinda Felletár and
Anna Lelkes were her students in Moscow. Vera Dulova's repertoire consisted of three hundred pieces; and she herself wrote many transcriptions and studies for harp. She was the author of the book “The art of harp playing” (Moscow 1973). She had had numerous Soviet and foreign contemporary composer friends, e.g.
Alexander Mosolov,
Sergei Vasilenko,
Lev Knipper, Jevgenia Golubeva,
Paul Hindemith,
Heitor Villa-Lobos,
Benjamin Britten and
André Jolivet. Shostakovich was an intimate and very close friend of hers. She became People's Artist of the
RSFSR in 1966 and received the
State Prize of the USSR in 1973. Dulova died in
Moscow. ==Notes==