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The Russian museum
The Russian museum of St.Petersburg
boasts of the world-famous collection of Russian art
and has a status of a national art gallery. It houses
more than 300,000 items, including numerous samples of old
Russian art and handicrafts, painting and sculpture,
tens of thousands of drawings, water-colors and engraving,
and finally, priceless works of decorative and applied art.
Its collection of paintings (about 9,000 pieces) boasts of
magnificent canvases by the most prominent Russian
artists, reflecting the history of Russian art
from XII century to present day.
The Russian museum occupies 2
buildings: Michael's (Mikhailovsky) palace
where major art collection is displayed, and Benois wing
that displays Russian art of the turn of XX century.
The Russian museum amassed its first
items in the end of XIX century when in 1898 it opened its
doors for public. Exhibits came from the Hermitage museum,
Academy of Fine Arts, royal palaces and private collections.
During the first ten years of existence the Russian
museum collection almost doubled in size.
After the October Revolution thousands of
nationalized items from the former palaces of nobility,
mansions and country estates enlarged the museum collection.
With years, the department of Soviet art
became one of the largest in the Russian Museum.
Visitors can see first post-revolutionary paintings
depicting heroic reality of that period, the new way of life
and changes in the country. Russian Civil war events are
also represented in the canvases. The idea of building
socialism is reflected in the portraits of active, creative
and strong Soviet men and women.
Soviet art did not stop developing
during World War II. On the opposite, the war gave birth to
powerful paintings full of patriotism and emotional force.
The department of Contemporary Art
opened in the Russian museum in 1980-s. It displays
new unconventional forms: video and photography art.
New items that had been banned during the
Soviet time, joined the Russian museum collection
after Perestroika. It now boasts of the works by Mark Chagal,
Vasily Kandinsky, Kazimir Malevich.
The wealth and diversity of the Russian
museum collection will unveil to visitors the country's
cultural heritage and sum up all the artistic achievements
of the past centuries.
Open: daily - 10am - 5pm
(Mondays and preholidays - till 4pm), ticket office closing
an hour before.
Closed: Tuesdays
Tourists' Remarks
"While the Hermitage had a
gigantic and excellent European art collection, the Russian
Museum had mostly Russian paintings and personally, it was
great to get a 'flavour' of Russian art too. There were many
paintings about wars and a huge load of portraits."
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"The Russian Museum is also a key place in
St. Petersburg. It is often overlooked by people, in
favour of the Hermitage, but it is still essential visiting.
The central location is Mikhailovsky Palace, yet another
impressive colourful well-architectured building. The
garden area is also spectacular viewing. But here's a
tip: view it all at night - it's very romantic!"
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"The collection at the Russian Museum spans
the history of Russian art, from stunning medieval icons to
breathtaking 19th-century realist canvases to socialist
realist art and beyond. The only disappointment is the first
floor of the Benois Wing of applied art, which is heavy on
tacky, modern crafts."
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"With a maze of beautifully
decorated rooms, the main Mikhailovsky Palace is a delight
for art-lovers, whatever their favoured genre. Widely
acclaimed for containing the most outstanding collection of
icons from ancient Rus, the Museum’s Benois has an
especially strong display of work from the turn of the
twentieth century."
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