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Painting `Knight at the Crossroads` by Viktor Vasnetsov, at the Mikhailovsky Palace of the State Russian Museum
The Voronezh Regional Art Museum named after I. N. Kramskoy is one of the largest cultural centers of Voronezh and the entire Chernozem region . The museum is located in a palace built in 1777-1779 in the Baroque style according to the design of the provincial architect N. N. Ievsky for the Voronezh governor, Lieutenant General I. A. Potapov . The building is an architectural monument of federal significance.
The museum collection contains over 22 thousand items. The museum presents a unique collection of works of Ancient Egypt, antiquity , Russian and Western European painting of the 18th-20th centuries, icons, graphics, decorative and applied arts, sculpture, paintings by famous fellow countrymen - I. N. Kramskoy , A. A. Buchkuri , E. A. Kiseleva , works by contemporary Voronezh artists. The museum has the largest exhibition hall in Voronezh, with an exhibition area of 1000 m².
The central exhibit is the sarcophagus of the royal scribe Nesipaherentahat (10th century BC).
The Ramose stele, ushabti figurines , amulets, miniature figurines of gods - a set of exhibits from Deir el-Medina.
The museum's antique collection includes about 500 monuments of art from Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome, the Northern Black Sea region of the 8th century BC - 2nd century AD, amphoras, aryballos , vases, there is an authentic ancient Greek marble female torso (5th century BC), a collection of ancient Roman small sculpture and marble sculpture (including the head of Antinous ).
Museum hall
Icon " Archangel Gabriel " of the Deesis tier .
Portrait of Paul I by A.P. Antropov, 1765
Portrait of E. S. Chertkova by an unknown artist of the late 18th century (one of the first evidence of artistic creativity in Voronezh).
"The Environs of Rome" and "Waterfall in Tivoli" by F. M. Matveyev (1810).
Sculptural portrait of Alexander I (1802) by F. I. Shubin .
Study of a portrait of Alexandra Feodorovna by Karl Bryullov .
Portrait of Princess Gagarina by P.N. Orlov (1847).
“Portrait of S. D. Nechaev” (1830) and “Portrait of N. P. Panina” (1855) by V. A. Tropinin ,
“View of Naples” by S. F. Shchedrin (1820).
"Preparations for the Wedding" by A. E. Karneev (1858), "The Failed Courtship" by V. N. Bovin , "Sea View" by I. K. Aivazovsky (1867), "The Dardanelles" by A. P. Bogolyubov (1873), winter landscapes by A. I. Meshchersky and Yu. Yu. Klever .
A typical example of genre easel sculpture is “Farewell” by E. A. Lanceray (1878), “How beautiful, how fresh are the roses” by V. A. Beklemishev (1890s), a reduced copy of “Christ before the people’s judgment” by M. M. Antokolsky (1870s).
The Museum's double-height ceremonial hall houses an exhibition of Russian art from the late 19th and early 20th centuries, including Seated Woman by V. E. Borisov-Musatov (1899), Evening of the Princely Hunt and Morning of the Princely Hunt by N. K. Roerich (1901), Province by B. M. Kustodiev (1906), Flowers by K. A. Korovin (1917), Province by M. V. Dobuzhinsky (1912), Reading the Decree by A. M. Vasnetsov (1918), as well as works by Voronezh artists A. A. Buchkuri (Wedding Train (1912), Fair (1916), Self-portrait (1941)), E. A. Kiseleva (Marusya (1913), Portrait of Her Son (1925)), P. D. Shmarova (portrait of I. A. Domogarova (1907)).
The hall of Russian art of the 20th century presents “The Departing Province” by K. F. Yuon (1920s), “The Storm is Coming” by G. G. Nissky (1959).
A copy of the altarpiece "Adoration of the Magi" by Gentile da Fabriano (1423), "Madonna with the Sleeping Child" by Andrea del Piccinelli (circa 1515). The art of Italy of the 17th-18th centuries is represented by works "Peasant Meal" by J. F. Chipper , paintings "Hermits by the River" and "Hermits under a Tree" by A. Magnasco . Also on display are "Breakfast" by Pieter Claesz (1648), "Self-Portrait" by Samuel van Hoeckstraeten (late 1640s), a landscape by Jacob van Ruisdael (second half of the 17th century), "Portrait of an Old Man" by Franz Lenbach (19th century), "Defense of the Banner" by Aristide Croisy, "Battle" by Jacques Courtois (Bourguignon) (17th century). The exhibition presents the only work in Russia by Michael Ostendorfer, “Christ” (16th century).
The Voronezh Museum of Fine Arts was founded in 1933. The museum collection was based on the collection of the art department of the Voronezh Regional Museum of Local History and the collection of the Museum of Antiquities and Fine Arts of Voronezh University, opened in 1918 on the basis of the Imperial Yuryev University evacuated to Voronezh. Mikhail Pavlovich Kroshitsky became the director of the new museum. The first rector of Voronezh University V. E. Regel and the director of the university museum E. R. Felsberg did a great deal of work on the establishment of the museum .
The collection of ancient Egyptian art kept in the museum is the oldest in Russia. It was collected in Egypt in 1815 by the Dorpat traveller and orientalist Otto Friedrich von Richter and became an object of scientific interest for many Russian orientalists – B. A. Turaev , E. S. Bogoslovsky , O. D. Berlev , S. I. Khodzhash , V. V. Solkin.
In the 1920s, some works of art from central museums were transferred to Voronezh; in addition, there were contributions from voluntary donors and from private nationalized collections; church property was transferred, etc.
During the Great Patriotic War, part of the museum collection was lost, in particular, the collection of ancient Russian art, icons from northern schools and Stroganov workshops, works by N. Goncharova , V. Kandinsky , P. Konchalovsky , A. V. Kuprin , M. Larionov , K. Malevich , I. Mashkov , A. Rodchenko , O. Rozanova , N. Sinezubov and a collection of paintings from the 1920s and 1930s. However, most of the exhibits were saved thanks to evacuation to Omsk . In the post-war period, the lost collections were restored, with the artist Leonid Afanasyev taking part in the restoration .
In 2015, under the scientific supervision of the famous Russian Egyptologist V. V. Solkin, a new exhibition of Ancient Egyptian art was created in the museum, dedicated to the 200th anniversary of the collection of antiquities of Otto Friedrich von Richter, which is kept in the museum.
The Voronezh Regional Art Museum named after I. N. Kramskoy is one of the largest cultural centers of Voronezh and the entire Chernozem region . The museum is located in a palace built in 1777-1779 in the Baroque style according to the design of the provincial architect N. N. Ievsky for the Voronezh governor, Lieutenant General I. A. Potapov . The building is an architectural monument of federal significance.
The museum collection contains over 22 thousand items. The museum presents a unique collection of works of Ancient Egypt, antiquity , Russian and Western European painting of the 18th-20th centuries, icons, graphics, decorative and applied arts, sculpture, paintings by famous fellow countrymen - I. N. Kramskoy , A. A. Buchkuri , E. A. Kiseleva , works by contemporary Voronezh artists. The museum has the largest exhibition hall in Voronezh, with an exhibition area of 1000 m².
The central exhibit is the sarcophagus of the royal scribe Nesipaherentahat (10th century BC).
The Ramose stele, ushabti figurines , amulets, miniature figurines of gods - a set of exhibits from Deir el-Medina.
The museum's antique collection includes about 500 monuments of art from Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome, the Northern Black Sea region of the 8th century BC - 2nd century AD, amphoras, aryballos , vases, there is an authentic ancient Greek marble female torso (5th century BC), a collection of ancient Roman small sculpture and marble sculpture (including the head of Antinous ).
Museum hall
Icon " Archangel Gabriel " of the Deesis tier .
Portrait of Paul I by A.P. Antropov, 1765
Portrait of E. S. Chertkova by an unknown artist of the late 18th century (one of the first evidence of artistic creativity in Voronezh).
"The Environs of Rome" and "Waterfall in Tivoli" by F. M. Matveyev (1810).
Sculptural portrait of Alexander I (1802) by F. I. Shubin .
Study of a portrait of Alexandra Feodorovna by Karl Bryullov .
Portrait of Princess Gagarina by P.N. Orlov (1847).
“Portrait of S. D. Nechaev” (1830) and “Portrait of N. P. Panina” (1855) by V. A. Tropinin ,
“View of Naples” by S. F. Shchedrin (1820).
"Preparations for the Wedding" by A. E. Karneev (1858), "The Failed Courtship" by V. N. Bovin , "Sea View" by I. K. Aivazovsky (1867), "The Dardanelles" by A. P. Bogolyubov (1873), winter landscapes by A. I. Meshchersky and Yu. Yu. Klever .
A typical example of genre easel sculpture is “Farewell” by E. A. Lanceray (1878), “How beautiful, how fresh are the roses” by V. A. Beklemishev (1890s), a reduced copy of “Christ before the people’s judgment” by M. M. Antokolsky (1870s).
The Museum's double-height ceremonial hall houses an exhibition of Russian art from the late 19th and early 20th centuries, including Seated Woman by V. E. Borisov-Musatov (1899), Evening of the Princely Hunt and Morning of the Princely Hunt by N. K. Roerich (1901), Province by B. M. Kustodiev (1906), Flowers by K. A. Korovin (1917), Province by M. V. Dobuzhinsky (1912), Reading the Decree by A. M. Vasnetsov (1918), as well as works by Voronezh artists A. A. Buchkuri (Wedding Train (1912), Fair (1916), Self-portrait (1941)), E. A. Kiseleva (Marusya (1913), Portrait of Her Son (1925)), P. D. Shmarova (portrait of I. A. Domogarova (1907)).
The hall of Russian art of the 20th century presents “The Departing Province” by K. F. Yuon (1920s), “The Storm is Coming” by G. G. Nissky (1959).
A copy of the altarpiece "Adoration of the Magi" by Gentile da Fabriano (1423), "Madonna with the Sleeping Child" by Andrea del Piccinelli (circa 1515). The art of Italy of the 17th-18th centuries is represented by works "Peasant Meal" by J. F. Chipper , paintings "Hermits by the River" and "Hermits under a Tree" by A. Magnasco . Also on display are "Breakfast" by Pieter Claesz (1648), "Self-Portrait" by Samuel van Hoeckstraeten (late 1640s), a landscape by Jacob van Ruisdael (second half of the 17th century), "Portrait of an Old Man" by Franz Lenbach (19th century), "Defense of the Banner" by Aristide Croisy, "Battle" by Jacques Courtois (Bourguignon) (17th century). The exhibition presents the only work in Russia by Michael Ostendorfer, “Christ” (16th century).
The Voronezh Museum of Fine Arts was founded in 1933. The museum collection was based on the collection of the art department of the Voronezh Regional Museum of Local History and the collection of the Museum of Antiquities and Fine Arts of Voronezh University, opened in 1918 on the basis of the Imperial Yuryev University evacuated to Voronezh. Mikhail Pavlovich Kroshitsky became the director of the new museum. The first rector of Voronezh University V. E. Regel and the director of the university museum E. R. Felsberg did a great deal of work on the establishment of the museum .
The collection of ancient Egyptian art kept in the museum is the oldest in Russia. It was collected in Egypt in 1815 by the Dorpat traveller and orientalist Otto Friedrich von Richter and became an object of scientific interest for many Russian orientalists – B. A. Turaev , E. S. Bogoslovsky , O. D. Berlev , S. I. Khodzhash , V. V. Solkin.
In the 1920s, some works of art from central museums were transferred to Voronezh; in addition, there were contributions from voluntary donors and from private nationalized collections; church property was transferred, etc.
During the Great Patriotic War, part of the museum collection was lost, in particular, the collection of ancient Russian art, icons from northern schools and Stroganov workshops, works by N. Goncharova , V. Kandinsky , P. Konchalovsky , A. V. Kuprin , M. Larionov , K. Malevich , I. Mashkov , A. Rodchenko , O. Rozanova , N. Sinezubov and a collection of paintings from the 1920s and 1930s. However, most of the exhibits were saved thanks to evacuation to Omsk . In the post-war period, the lost collections were restored, with the artist Leonid Afanasyev taking part in the restoration .
In 2015, under the scientific supervision of the famous Russian Egyptologist V. V. Solkin, a new exhibition of Ancient Egyptian art was created in the museum, dedicated to the 200th anniversary of the collection of antiquities of Otto Friedrich von Richter, which is kept in the museum.
The interior was designed by some of the most celebrated Russian artists of those days — including Viktor Vasnetsov, Mikhail Nesterov and Mikhail Wrubel. The walls and ceilings inside the Church are completely covered in intricately detailed mosaics — the main pictures being biblical scenes or figures.
The Voronezh Regional Art Museum named after I. N. Kramskoy is one of the largest cultural centers of Voronezh and the entire Chernozem region . The museum is located in a palace built in 1777-1779 in the Baroque style according to the design of the provincial architect N. N. Ievsky for the Voronezh governor, Lieutenant General I. A. Potapov . The building is an architectural monument of federal significance.
The museum collection contains over 22 thousand items. The museum presents a unique collection of works of Ancient Egypt, antiquity , Russian and Western European painting of the 18th-20th centuries, icons, graphics, decorative and applied arts, sculpture, paintings by famous fellow countrymen - I. N. Kramskoy , A. A. Buchkuri , E. A. Kiseleva , works by contemporary Voronezh artists. The museum has the largest exhibition hall in Voronezh, with an exhibition area of 1000 m².
The central exhibit is the sarcophagus of the royal scribe Nesipaherentahat (10th century BC).
The Ramose stele, ushabti figurines , amulets, miniature figurines of gods - a set of exhibits from Deir el-Medina.
The museum's antique collection includes about 500 monuments of art from Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome, the Northern Black Sea region of the 8th century BC - 2nd century AD, amphoras, aryballos , vases, there is an authentic ancient Greek marble female torso (5th century BC), a collection of ancient Roman small sculpture and marble sculpture (including the head of Antinous ).
Museum hall
Icon " Archangel Gabriel " of the Deesis tier .
Portrait of Paul I by A.P. Antropov, 1765
Portrait of E. S. Chertkova by an unknown artist of the late 18th century (one of the first evidence of artistic creativity in Voronezh).
"The Environs of Rome" and "Waterfall in Tivoli" by F. M. Matveyev (1810).
Sculptural portrait of Alexander I (1802) by F. I. Shubin .
Study of a portrait of Alexandra Feodorovna by Karl Bryullov .
Portrait of Princess Gagarina by P.N. Orlov (1847).
“Portrait of S. D. Nechaev” (1830) and “Portrait of N. P. Panina” (1855) by V. A. Tropinin ,
“View of Naples” by S. F. Shchedrin (1820).
"Preparations for the Wedding" by A. E. Karneev (1858), "The Failed Courtship" by V. N. Bovin , "Sea View" by I. K. Aivazovsky (1867), "The Dardanelles" by A. P. Bogolyubov (1873), winter landscapes by A. I. Meshchersky and Yu. Yu. Klever .
A typical example of genre easel sculpture is “Farewell” by E. A. Lanceray (1878), “How beautiful, how fresh are the roses” by V. A. Beklemishev (1890s), a reduced copy of “Christ before the people’s judgment” by M. M. Antokolsky (1870s).
The Museum's double-height ceremonial hall houses an exhibition of Russian art from the late 19th and early 20th centuries, including Seated Woman by V. E. Borisov-Musatov (1899), Evening of the Princely Hunt and Morning of the Princely Hunt by N. K. Roerich (1901), Province by B. M. Kustodiev (1906), Flowers by K. A. Korovin (1917), Province by M. V. Dobuzhinsky (1912), Reading the Decree by A. M. Vasnetsov (1918), as well as works by Voronezh artists A. A. Buchkuri (Wedding Train (1912), Fair (1916), Self-portrait (1941)), E. A. Kiseleva (Marusya (1913), Portrait of Her Son (1925)), P. D. Shmarova (portrait of I. A. Domogarova (1907)).
The hall of Russian art of the 20th century presents “The Departing Province” by K. F. Yuon (1920s), “The Storm is Coming” by G. G. Nissky (1959).
A copy of the altarpiece "Adoration of the Magi" by Gentile da Fabriano (1423), "Madonna with the Sleeping Child" by Andrea del Piccinelli (circa 1515). The art of Italy of the 17th-18th centuries is represented by works "Peasant Meal" by J. F. Chipper , paintings "Hermits by the River" and "Hermits under a Tree" by A. Magnasco . Also on display are "Breakfast" by Pieter Claesz (1648), "Self-Portrait" by Samuel van Hoeckstraeten (late 1640s), a landscape by Jacob van Ruisdael (second half of the 17th century), "Portrait of an Old Man" by Franz Lenbach (19th century), "Defense of the Banner" by Aristide Croisy, "Battle" by Jacques Courtois (Bourguignon) (17th century). The exhibition presents the only work in Russia by Michael Ostendorfer, “Christ” (16th century).
The Voronezh Museum of Fine Arts was founded in 1933. The museum collection was based on the collection of the art department of the Voronezh Regional Museum of Local History and the collection of the Museum of Antiquities and Fine Arts of Voronezh University, opened in 1918 on the basis of the Imperial Yuryev University evacuated to Voronezh. Mikhail Pavlovich Kroshitsky became the director of the new museum. The first rector of Voronezh University V. E. Regel and the director of the university museum E. R. Felsberg did a great deal of work on the establishment of the museum .
The collection of ancient Egyptian art kept in the museum is the oldest in Russia. It was collected in Egypt in 1815 by the Dorpat traveller and orientalist Otto Friedrich von Richter and became an object of scientific interest for many Russian orientalists – B. A. Turaev , E. S. Bogoslovsky , O. D. Berlev , S. I. Khodzhash , V. V. Solkin.
In the 1920s, some works of art from central museums were transferred to Voronezh; in addition, there were contributions from voluntary donors and from private nationalized collections; church property was transferred, etc.
During the Great Patriotic War, part of the museum collection was lost, in particular, the collection of ancient Russian art, icons from northern schools and Stroganov workshops, works by N. Goncharova , V. Kandinsky , P. Konchalovsky , A. V. Kuprin , M. Larionov , K. Malevich , I. Mashkov , A. Rodchenko , O. Rozanova , N. Sinezubov and a collection of paintings from the 1920s and 1930s. However, most of the exhibits were saved thanks to evacuation to Omsk . In the post-war period, the lost collections were restored, with the artist Leonid Afanasyev taking part in the restoration .
In 2015, under the scientific supervision of the famous Russian Egyptologist V. V. Solkin, a new exhibition of Ancient Egyptian art was created in the museum, dedicated to the 200th anniversary of the collection of antiquities of Otto Friedrich von Richter, which is kept in the museum.
The Voronezh Regional Art Museum named after I. N. Kramskoy is one of the largest cultural centers of Voronezh and the entire Chernozem region . The museum is located in a palace built in 1777-1779 in the Baroque style according to the design of the provincial architect N. N. Ievsky for the Voronezh governor, Lieutenant General I. A. Potapov . The building is an architectural monument of federal significance.
The museum collection contains over 22 thousand items. The museum presents a unique collection of works of Ancient Egypt, antiquity , Russian and Western European painting of the 18th-20th centuries, icons, graphics, decorative and applied arts, sculpture, paintings by famous fellow countrymen - I. N. Kramskoy , A. A. Buchkuri , E. A. Kiseleva , works by contemporary Voronezh artists. The museum has the largest exhibition hall in Voronezh, with an exhibition area of 1000 m².
The central exhibit is the sarcophagus of the royal scribe Nesipaherentahat (10th century BC).
The Ramose stele, ushabti figurines , amulets, miniature figurines of gods - a set of exhibits from Deir el-Medina.
The museum's antique collection includes about 500 monuments of art from Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome, the Northern Black Sea region of the 8th century BC - 2nd century AD, amphoras, aryballos , vases, there is an authentic ancient Greek marble female torso (5th century BC), a collection of ancient Roman small sculpture and marble sculpture (including the head of Antinous ).
Museum hall
Icon " Archangel Gabriel " of the Deesis tier .
Portrait of Paul I by A.P. Antropov, 1765
Portrait of E. S. Chertkova by an unknown artist of the late 18th century (one of the first evidence of artistic creativity in Voronezh).
"The Environs of Rome" and "Waterfall in Tivoli" by F. M. Matveyev (1810).
Sculptural portrait of Alexander I (1802) by F. I. Shubin .
Study of a portrait of Alexandra Feodorovna by Karl Bryullov .
Portrait of Princess Gagarina by P.N. Orlov (1847).
“Portrait of S. D. Nechaev” (1830) and “Portrait of N. P. Panina” (1855) by V. A. Tropinin ,
“View of Naples” by S. F. Shchedrin (1820).
"Preparations for the Wedding" by A. E. Karneev (1858), "The Failed Courtship" by V. N. Bovin , "Sea View" by I. K. Aivazovsky (1867), "The Dardanelles" by A. P. Bogolyubov (1873), winter landscapes by A. I. Meshchersky and Yu. Yu. Klever .
A typical example of genre easel sculpture is “Farewell” by E. A. Lanceray (1878), “How beautiful, how fresh are the roses” by V. A. Beklemishev (1890s), a reduced copy of “Christ before the people’s judgment” by M. M. Antokolsky (1870s).
The Museum's double-height ceremonial hall houses an exhibition of Russian art from the late 19th and early 20th centuries, including Seated Woman by V. E. Borisov-Musatov (1899), Evening of the Princely Hunt and Morning of the Princely Hunt by N. K. Roerich (1901), Province by B. M. Kustodiev (1906), Flowers by K. A. Korovin (1917), Province by M. V. Dobuzhinsky (1912), Reading the Decree by A. M. Vasnetsov (1918), as well as works by Voronezh artists A. A. Buchkuri (Wedding Train (1912), Fair (1916), Self-portrait (1941)), E. A. Kiseleva (Marusya (1913), Portrait of Her Son (1925)), P. D. Shmarova (portrait of I. A. Domogarova (1907)).
The hall of Russian art of the 20th century presents “The Departing Province” by K. F. Yuon (1920s), “The Storm is Coming” by G. G. Nissky (1959).
A copy of the altarpiece "Adoration of the Magi" by Gentile da Fabriano (1423), "Madonna with the Sleeping Child" by Andrea del Piccinelli (circa 1515). The art of Italy of the 17th-18th centuries is represented by works "Peasant Meal" by J. F. Chipper , paintings "Hermits by the River" and "Hermits under a Tree" by A. Magnasco . Also on display are "Breakfast" by Pieter Claesz (1648), "Self-Portrait" by Samuel van Hoeckstraeten (late 1640s), a landscape by Jacob van Ruisdael (second half of the 17th century), "Portrait of an Old Man" by Franz Lenbach (19th century), "Defense of the Banner" by Aristide Croisy, "Battle" by Jacques Courtois (Bourguignon) (17th century). The exhibition presents the only work in Russia by Michael Ostendorfer, “Christ” (16th century).
The Voronezh Museum of Fine Arts was founded in 1933. The museum collection was based on the collection of the art department of the Voronezh Regional Museum of Local History and the collection of the Museum of Antiquities and Fine Arts of Voronezh University, opened in 1918 on the basis of the Imperial Yuryev University evacuated to Voronezh. Mikhail Pavlovich Kroshitsky became the director of the new museum. The first rector of Voronezh University V. E. Regel and the director of the university museum E. R. Felsberg did a great deal of work on the establishment of the museum .
The collection of ancient Egyptian art kept in the museum is the oldest in Russia. It was collected in Egypt in 1815 by the Dorpat traveller and orientalist Otto Friedrich von Richter and became an object of scientific interest for many Russian orientalists – B. A. Turaev , E. S. Bogoslovsky , O. D. Berlev , S. I. Khodzhash , V. V. Solkin.
In the 1920s, some works of art from central museums were transferred to Voronezh; in addition, there were contributions from voluntary donors and from private nationalized collections; church property was transferred, etc.
During the Great Patriotic War, part of the museum collection was lost, in particular, the collection of ancient Russian art, icons from northern schools and Stroganov workshops, works by N. Goncharova , V. Kandinsky , P. Konchalovsky , A. V. Kuprin , M. Larionov , K. Malevich , I. Mashkov , A. Rodchenko , O. Rozanova , N. Sinezubov and a collection of paintings from the 1920s and 1930s. However, most of the exhibits were saved thanks to evacuation to Omsk . In the post-war period, the lost collections were restored, with the artist Leonid Afanasyev taking part in the restoration .
In 2015, under the scientific supervision of the famous Russian Egyptologist V. V. Solkin, a new exhibition of Ancient Egyptian art was created in the museum, dedicated to the 200th anniversary of the collection of antiquities of Otto Friedrich von Richter, which is kept in the museum.
The interior was designed by some of the most celebrated Russian artists of those days — including Viktor Vasnetsov, Mikhail Nesterov and Mikhail Wrubel. The walls and ceilings inside the Church are completely covered in intricately detailed mosaics — the main pictures being biblical scenes or figures.
This marvelous Russian-style church was built on the spot where Emperor Alexander II was assassinated in March 1881. After assuming power in 1855 in the wake of Russia's disastrous defeat in the Crimean war against Britain, France and Turkey, Alexander II initiated a number of reforms. In 1861 he freed the Russian serfs (peasants, who were almost enslaved to their owners) from their ties to their masters and undertook a rigorous program of military, judicial and urban reforms, never before attempted in Russia. However, during the second half of his reign Alexander II grew wary of the dangers of his system of reforms, having only barely survived a series of attempts on his life, including an explosion in the Winter Palace and the derailment of a train. Alexander II was finally assassinated in 1881 by a group of revolutionaries, who threw a bomb at his royal carriage.
The decision was taken to build a church on the spot where the Emperor was mortally wounded. The church was built between 1883 and 1907 and was officially called the Resurrection of Christ Church (a.k.a. The Church of Our Savior on Spilled Blood ). The construction of the church was almost entirely funded by the Imperial family and thousands of private donators. Both the interior and exterior of the church is decorated with incredibly detailed mosaics, designed and created by the most prominent Russian artists of the day (V.M. Vasnetsov, M.V. Nesterov and M.A. Vrubel). Interestingly, despite the church's very obviously Russian aspect, its principle architect, A. Parland, was not even Russian by birth.
The church was closed for services in the 1930s, when the Bolsheviks went on an offensive against religion and destroyed churches all over the country. It remained closed and under restoration for over 30 years and was finally re-opened in 1997 in all its dazzling former glory. The view of the church from Nevsky Prospekt is absolutely breathtaking.
NOTE: Translations of the church's name vary between guidebooks and include The Church of the Savior on Blood, The Resurrection Church and The Church of the Resurrection of Christ.
Location: Naberezhnaia Kanala Griboedova. Reopened in late August 1997 after almost 30 years of restoration.
Source: www.saint-petersburg.com/virtual-tour/church-of-savior.asp
This marvelous Russian-style church was built on the spot where Emperor Alexander II was assassinated in March 1881. After assuming power in 1855 in the wake of Russia's disastrous defeat in the Crimean war against Britain, France and Turkey, Alexander II initiated a number of reforms. In 1861 he freed the Russian serfs (peasants, who were almost enslaved to their owners) from their ties to their masters and undertook a rigorous program of military, judicial and urban reforms, never before attempted in Russia. However, during the second half of his reign Alexander II grew wary of the dangers of his system of reforms, having only barely survived a series of attempts on his life, including an explosion in the Winter Palace and the derailment of a train. Alexander II was finally assassinated in 1881 by a group of revolutionaries, who threw a bomb at his royal carriage.
The decision was taken to build a church on the spot where the Emperor was mortally wounded. The church was built between 1883 and 1907 and was officially called the Resurrection of Christ Church (a.k.a. The Church of Our Savior on Spilled Blood ). The construction of the church was almost entirely funded by the Imperial family and thousands of private donators. Both the interior and exterior of the church is decorated with incredibly detailed mosaics, designed and created by the most prominent Russian artists of the day (V.M. Vasnetsov, M.V. Nesterov and M.A. Vrubel). Interestingly, despite the church's very obviously Russian aspect, its principle architect, A. Parland, was not even Russian by birth.
The church was closed for services in the 1930s, when the Bolsheviks went on an offensive against religion and destroyed churches all over the country. It remained closed and under restoration for over 30 years and was finally re-opened in 1997 in all its dazzling former glory. The view of the church from Nevsky Prospekt is absolutely breathtaking.
NOTE: Translations of the church's name vary between guidebooks and include The Church of the Savior on Blood, The Resurrection Church and The Church of the Resurrection of Christ.
Location: Naberezhnaia Kanala Griboedova. Reopened in late August 1997 after almost 30 years of restoration.
Source: www.saint-petersburg.com/virtual-tour/church-of-savior.asp
Ivan Tsarévitch chevauchant le loup gris (1889, Galerie Tretiakov, Moscou) de Viktor Mikhaïlovitch Vasnetsov (1848-1926)
The Voronezh Regional Art Museum named after I. N. Kramskoy is one of the largest cultural centers of Voronezh and the entire Chernozem region . The museum is located in a palace built in 1777-1779 in the Baroque style according to the design of the provincial architect N. N. Ievsky for the Voronezh governor, Lieutenant General I. A. Potapov . The building is an architectural monument of federal significance.
The museum collection contains over 22 thousand items. The museum presents a unique collection of works of Ancient Egypt, antiquity , Russian and Western European painting of the 18th-20th centuries, icons, graphics, decorative and applied arts, sculpture, paintings by famous fellow countrymen - I. N. Kramskoy , A. A. Buchkuri , E. A. Kiseleva , works by contemporary Voronezh artists. The museum has the largest exhibition hall in Voronezh, with an exhibition area of 1000 m².
The central exhibit is the sarcophagus of the royal scribe Nesipaherentahat (10th century BC).
The Ramose stele, ushabti figurines , amulets, miniature figurines of gods - a set of exhibits from Deir el-Medina.
The museum's antique collection includes about 500 monuments of art from Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome, the Northern Black Sea region of the 8th century BC - 2nd century AD, amphoras, aryballos , vases, there is an authentic ancient Greek marble female torso (5th century BC), a collection of ancient Roman small sculpture and marble sculpture (including the head of Antinous ).
Museum hall
Icon " Archangel Gabriel " of the Deesis tier .
Portrait of Paul I by A.P. Antropov, 1765
Portrait of E. S. Chertkova by an unknown artist of the late 18th century (one of the first evidence of artistic creativity in Voronezh).
"The Environs of Rome" and "Waterfall in Tivoli" by F. M. Matveyev (1810).
Sculptural portrait of Alexander I (1802) by F. I. Shubin .
Study of a portrait of Alexandra Feodorovna by Karl Bryullov .
Portrait of Princess Gagarina by P.N. Orlov (1847).
“Portrait of S. D. Nechaev” (1830) and “Portrait of N. P. Panina” (1855) by V. A. Tropinin ,
“View of Naples” by S. F. Shchedrin (1820).
"Preparations for the Wedding" by A. E. Karneev (1858), "The Failed Courtship" by V. N. Bovin , "Sea View" by I. K. Aivazovsky (1867), "The Dardanelles" by A. P. Bogolyubov (1873), winter landscapes by A. I. Meshchersky and Yu. Yu. Klever .
A typical example of genre easel sculpture is “Farewell” by E. A. Lanceray (1878), “How beautiful, how fresh are the roses” by V. A. Beklemishev (1890s), a reduced copy of “Christ before the people’s judgment” by M. M. Antokolsky (1870s).
The Museum's double-height ceremonial hall houses an exhibition of Russian art from the late 19th and early 20th centuries, including Seated Woman by V. E. Borisov-Musatov (1899), Evening of the Princely Hunt and Morning of the Princely Hunt by N. K. Roerich (1901), Province by B. M. Kustodiev (1906), Flowers by K. A. Korovin (1917), Province by M. V. Dobuzhinsky (1912), Reading the Decree by A. M. Vasnetsov (1918), as well as works by Voronezh artists A. A. Buchkuri (Wedding Train (1912), Fair (1916), Self-portrait (1941)), E. A. Kiseleva (Marusya (1913), Portrait of Her Son (1925)), P. D. Shmarova (portrait of I. A. Domogarova (1907)).
The hall of Russian art of the 20th century presents “The Departing Province” by K. F. Yuon (1920s), “The Storm is Coming” by G. G. Nissky (1959).
A copy of the altarpiece "Adoration of the Magi" by Gentile da Fabriano (1423), "Madonna with the Sleeping Child" by Andrea del Piccinelli (circa 1515). The art of Italy of the 17th-18th centuries is represented by works "Peasant Meal" by J. F. Chipper , paintings "Hermits by the River" and "Hermits under a Tree" by A. Magnasco . Also on display are "Breakfast" by Pieter Claesz (1648), "Self-Portrait" by Samuel van Hoeckstraeten (late 1640s), a landscape by Jacob van Ruisdael (second half of the 17th century), "Portrait of an Old Man" by Franz Lenbach (19th century), "Defense of the Banner" by Aristide Croisy, "Battle" by Jacques Courtois (Bourguignon) (17th century). The exhibition presents the only work in Russia by Michael Ostendorfer, “Christ” (16th century).
The Voronezh Museum of Fine Arts was founded in 1933. The museum collection was based on the collection of the art department of the Voronezh Regional Museum of Local History and the collection of the Museum of Antiquities and Fine Arts of Voronezh University, opened in 1918 on the basis of the Imperial Yuryev University evacuated to Voronezh. Mikhail Pavlovich Kroshitsky became the director of the new museum. The first rector of Voronezh University V. E. Regel and the director of the university museum E. R. Felsberg did a great deal of work on the establishment of the museum .
The collection of ancient Egyptian art kept in the museum is the oldest in Russia. It was collected in Egypt in 1815 by the Dorpat traveller and orientalist Otto Friedrich von Richter and became an object of scientific interest for many Russian orientalists – B. A. Turaev , E. S. Bogoslovsky , O. D. Berlev , S. I. Khodzhash , V. V. Solkin.
In the 1920s, some works of art from central museums were transferred to Voronezh; in addition, there were contributions from voluntary donors and from private nationalized collections; church property was transferred, etc.
During the Great Patriotic War, part of the museum collection was lost, in particular, the collection of ancient Russian art, icons from northern schools and Stroganov workshops, works by N. Goncharova , V. Kandinsky , P. Konchalovsky , A. V. Kuprin , M. Larionov , K. Malevich , I. Mashkov , A. Rodchenko , O. Rozanova , N. Sinezubov and a collection of paintings from the 1920s and 1930s. However, most of the exhibits were saved thanks to evacuation to Omsk . In the post-war period, the lost collections were restored, with the artist Leonid Afanasyev taking part in the restoration .
In 2015, under the scientific supervision of the famous Russian Egyptologist V. V. Solkin, a new exhibition of Ancient Egyptian art was created in the museum, dedicated to the 200th anniversary of the collection of antiquities of Otto Friedrich von Richter, which is kept in the museum.
This marvelous Russian-style church was built on the spot where Emperor Alexander II was assassinated in March 1881. After assuming power in 1855 in the wake of Russia's disastrous defeat in the Crimean war against Britain, France and Turkey, Alexander II initiated a number of reforms. In 1861 he freed the Russian serfs (peasants, who were almost enslaved to their owners) from their ties to their masters and undertook a rigorous program of military, judicial and urban reforms, never before attempted in Russia. However, during the second half of his reign Alexander II grew wary of the dangers of his system of reforms, having only barely survived a series of attempts on his life, including an explosion in the Winter Palace and the derailment of a train. Alexander II was finally assassinated in 1881 by a group of revolutionaries, who threw a bomb at his royal carriage.
The decision was taken to build a church on the spot where the Emperor was mortally wounded. The church was built between 1883 and 1907 and was officially called the Resurrection of Christ Church (a.k.a. The Church of Our Savior on Spilled Blood ). The construction of the church was almost entirely funded by the Imperial family and thousands of private donators. Both the interior and exterior of the church is decorated with incredibly detailed mosaics, designed and created by the most prominent Russian artists of the day (V.M. Vasnetsov, M.V. Nesterov and M.A. Vrubel). Interestingly, despite the church's very obviously Russian aspect, its principle architect, A. Parland, was not even Russian by birth.
The church was closed for services in the 1930s, when the Bolsheviks went on an offensive against religion and destroyed churches all over the country. It remained closed and under restoration for over 30 years and was finally re-opened in 1997 in all its dazzling former glory. The view of the church from Nevsky Prospekt is absolutely breathtaking.
NOTE: Translations of the church's name vary between guidebooks and include The Church of the Savior on Blood, The Resurrection Church and The Church of the Resurrection of Christ.
Location: Naberezhnaia Kanala Griboedova. Reopened in late August 1997 after almost 30 years of restoration.
Source: www.saint-petersburg.com/virtual-tour/church-of-savior.asp
This marvelous Russian-style church was built on the spot where Emperor Alexander II was assassinated in March 1881. After assuming power in 1855 in the wake of Russia's disastrous defeat in the Crimean war against Britain, France and Turkey, Alexander II initiated a number of reforms. In 1861 he freed the Russian serfs (peasants, who were almost enslaved to their owners) from their ties to their masters and undertook a rigorous program of military, judicial and urban reforms, never before attempted in Russia. However, during the second half of his reign Alexander II grew wary of the dangers of his system of reforms, having only barely survived a series of attempts on his life, including an explosion in the Winter Palace and the derailment of a train. Alexander II was finally assassinated in 1881 by a group of revolutionaries, who threw a bomb at his royal carriage.
The decision was taken to build a church on the spot where the Emperor was mortally wounded. The church was built between 1883 and 1907 and was officially called the Resurrection of Christ Church (a.k.a. The Church of Our Savior on Spilled Blood ). The construction of the church was almost entirely funded by the Imperial family and thousands of private donators. Both the interior and exterior of the church is decorated with incredibly detailed mosaics, designed and created by the most prominent Russian artists of the day (V.M. Vasnetsov, M.V. Nesterov and M.A. Vrubel). Interestingly, despite the church's very obviously Russian aspect, its principle architect, A. Parland, was not even Russian by birth.
The church was closed for services in the 1930s, when the Bolsheviks went on an offensive against religion and destroyed churches all over the country. It remained closed and under restoration for over 30 years and was finally re-opened in 1997 in all its dazzling former glory. The view of the church from Nevsky Prospekt is absolutely breathtaking.
NOTE: Translations of the church's name vary between guidebooks and include The Church of the Savior on Blood, The Resurrection Church and The Church of the Resurrection of Christ.
Location: Naberezhnaia Kanala Griboedova. Reopened in late August 1997 after almost 30 years of restoration.
Source: www.saint-petersburg.com/virtual-tour/church-of-savior.asp