Education
She then continued her education at the Moscow Kalinin School of industrial art, which she graduated in 1949.
She then continued her education at the Moscow Kalinin School of industrial art, which she graduated in 1949.
She was also an Honored Artist of Dagestan. Tamara Musakhanova managed to finish several art schools in different cities. She worked sculptures, paintings, and crafts in ceramics and faience before continuing her art education in Alma-Ata.
Since 1990, Tamara Musakhanova lived in Israel in Haifa, where she actively participated in the following exhibitions: a group exhibition of repatriates "Omanut ole" (1994), a group show in the gallery "Tsafon" (1998), a solo exhibit in Haifa (1998), an exhibition of artists from the Caucasus in Netanya (1999), artists of the Caucasus in Merkaz ha-music Tel Aviv-Jaffa (2000), et cetera
In an interview with Israeli journalist Hana Rafail, Tamara Musakhanova said:
"…My last solo exhibition was held in Moscow in 1990, it was held for a month. The Tretyakov Gallery and the Russian Art Fund acquired for themselves the best of my work.
And the year before that, in 1989, I received a mandate invitation to participate in the World Jewish Congress in Moscow.."
The husband of Tamara Musakhanova, Abram Fridberg was an "Honored Artist of Russia." died in Israel. Tamara Musakhanova and Abram Fridberg had two children, Michael Fridberg and Love Mataeva.
A brother of Tamara Musakhanova, Albert Nahamievych Musakhanov, held a doctorate degree in agricultural science and lived in the suburbs of Moscow.
Sister Asya Nahamievna Musakhanova, graduated from the University in the Faculty of Philology, she worked at the Makhachkala Pedagogical Institute. Tamara Musakhanova died in 2014. She is buried in the city of Haifa, Israel.
Member of Union of Artists in the former Soviet Union and in Israel.