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Portrait of Tsar Alexis Mikhailovich
- Before 1671 (?)/ After 1676 (?)
- Canvas, oil. 126 х 95
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3988
Alexis I Mikhailovich (March 19, 1629 – January 29, 1676)
Tsar, member of the Romanov dynasty, father of Peter the Great. Son of Mikhail Fedorovich and Eudoxia Streshneva. He assumed the throne on July 14, 1645, and was crowned on September 28, 1645. During his reign the Zemsky Sobor (Assembly of the Land) passed the Law Code of 1649; the Customs (1653) and New Trade (1667) Regulations were adopted; and Ukraine came under Russian rule (1654), which led to the signing of the Truce of Andrusovo between Russia and Poland (1667). On January 16, 1648 Alexis married Maria Ilyinichna Miloslavskaya (April 1, 1624 – March 3, 1669), together they had 13 children. On January 22, 1671 he entered into a second marriage with Natalia Naryshkina (August 22, 1651 – January 25, 1694), and had three children with her: Peter (May 30, 1672 – January 28, 1725), Natalia (August 22, 1673 – June 18, 1716), and Feodora (September 4, 1674 – November 28, 1678).
This portrait engraved by Cornelis Meyssens (1646–?) can be found among illustrations of the book Historia di Leopoldo Cesare (History of Leopold Caesar, Vienna, 1670); that is where its traditional dating comes from. However, an inscription made on the portrait “reigned and ruled” (in Latin, in the past tense) suggests that the portrait was made after the tsar’s death. The artist’s alterations and technical characteristics do not contradict the fact that the work was painted in the end of the 17th century.
Portrait of Prince Anikita Repnin
- Late 1690s
- Canvas, oil. 181 х 128
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3947
Anikita Repnin (1668 – July 3, 1726). Middle son of Ivan Repnin (1615– 1697) who was a boyar close to the tsar and a house steward of Tsar Alexis Mikhailovich, and Ivan’s wife Yevdokia Nikiforovna Pleshcheyeva (? – April 8, 1695). Russian Field Marshal General (1725). From his early years Anikita was close to Peter the Great and took part in the creation of the emperor’s Toy Army. In 1685 he became Lieutenant and within two years he was promoted to Colonel. Repnin participated in the Azov campaigns of 1695–1696. In 1696 he commanded a frigate. In 1699 he became Major General. In the beginning of the Northern War he commanded a division. Following the order of Peter the Great he reconstituted Russian forces withdrawing from Narva after they were defeated in 1700. He took part in the Siege of Nöteborg (1702) and Narva (1704). During the Battle of Poltava (1709) he commanded the centre of the Russian troops. During the years 1709–1710 he commanded the siege and the seizure of Riga. During the years 1712–1713 and 1715–1716 he commanded troops in Pomerania. In 1719 he was appointed Governor General of Livonia, and at the same time he acted as President of the Military College from 1724–1725. After the death of Peter the Great, he supported the enthronement of Catherine I, but shortly afterwards Alexander Menshikov sent him away to Riga.
From the second half of the 19th century to the early 21st century almost all scholars believed the person depicted here to be Ivan Borisovich Repnin; however, this traditional view was recently reconsidered. In 2014 a new version was accepted by the Attribution Council of the Russian Museum.
Portrait of Prince Andrei the Elder Repnin
- After 27 January 1699
- Canvas, oil. 194 х 109
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3945
Portrait of Prince Andrei the Younger Repnin
- School of the Armoury Chamber
- After 27 January 1699
- Canvas, oil. 195 x 149
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3946
Andrei the Younger Repnin (? – January 27, 1699)Youngest son of Ivan Repnin (1615– 1697). His father Ivan was a house steward of Tsar Alexis Mikhailovich, and a boyar close to the tsar; his mother was Yevdokia Nikiforovna Pleshcheyeva (? – April 8, 1695). Andrei, together with his brother Anikita, accompanied Peter the Great during his dramatic overnight ride to the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius on the night of August 7-8, 1689. In approximately 1689 Andrei married Tatiana Alexeyevna, daughter of Alexei Rzhevsky; who was an okolnichy (a senior court rank) and the military commander of Samara during the years 1689–1690. Andrei was among some 39 stolniks (cupbearers) and the same number of soldiers in February 1697 who were sent to Italy to study maritime affairs.
From the second half of the 19th century to the early 21st century scholars believed the person depicted here to be Alexander Borisovich Repnin; however, this traditional view was recently reconsidered. In 2014 a new version was accepted by the Attribution Council of the Russian Museum. Based on the clothing depicted the portrait was dated from the 1680s to 1690s. It appears that it was Anikita Ivanovich that outlived both of his brothers who ordered the painting.
Portrait of Field Marshal Boris Sheremetev
- After 1710
- Canvas, oil. 308 х 346
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5798
Boris Sheremetev (April 25, 1652 – February 17, 1719). Statesman, commander and diplomat. In 1682 he was made Boyar. He took part in the first Azov campaign. He was a close associate of Peter the Great and fought in all the most important battles of the Northen War (Dorpat, Narva, and Riga). He became Field Marshal General in 1701 and was the first Russian count (1706). At the battle of Poltava he commanded the centre of the Russian Army. Peter the Great called Sheremetev his “Turenne” and valued him greatly for his selflessness.
In 1905 the painting was kept in the Sheremetev Palace and exhibited within the Tauride Exhibition as work of Ivan Argunov. Later the portrait was attributed to Schurmann, even though some scholars have doubted the existence of this artist. An inscription recently read on the portrait; “Karl Schurmann pictorducalis curl […]” suggests that during the siege of Riga in 1710, Karl Schurmann was painter to Frederick William, the Duke of Courland, and the future husband of Anna Ioannovna.
Portrait of Pyotr Tolstoy
- Late 1710s – 1720s
- Canvas, oil. 77 х 62,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4903
Pyotr Andreyevich Tolstoy (1645 – February 17, 1729). Count (1724), statesman and diplomat. Son of Okolnichy Andrei Tolstoy and Solomonida Miloslavskaya (a distant relative of Tsaritsa Maria Ilyinichna Miloslavskaya). Took part in the Streltsy Uprising (1682), but after the uprising was successfully squashed, he switched sides and defected to Peter the Great. During the years 1701–1714 he was ambassador in Constantinople. He was appointed senator (1714) and president of the College of Commerce. In 1717 he convinced Tsarevich Alexis; who was hiding in Naples, to return to Russia, which made him one of the closest confidants of Peter the Great. In 1718 he was awarded the Order of St. Andrew the Apostle the First-Called. Tolstoy was in charge of the Secret Chancellery. In 1727 he was sentenced to death for conspiracy, but instead was sent to live in the Solovetsky Monastery.
The painting was dated based on the Order of St. Andrew the Apostle the First-Called that Tolstoy received in February 1718, for his contribution to the return of Tsarevich Alexis Petrovich to Russia. The portrait was first attributed to Georg Gsell in a guidebook published by the Russian Museum. Several scholars rightfully compared the painting with a mirror portrait from the Moscow Tolstoy Museum, signed and dated by Johann Gottfried Tannauer (1719). Research conducted confirmed the existence of technical similarities between the portrait from the Russian Museum and the work from the Tolstoy Museum in Moscow.
Portrait of Tsarevna Anna Petrovna and Tsarevna Elizabeth Petrovna
- 1717
- Canvas, oil. 76 х 97
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4904
Louis Caravaque’s painting is dated according to the official inventory of the artist’s works that he completed in November 1723. The entry for 1717 reads: “At the command of the Most Serene Prince, two portraits of Their Imperial Highnesses, Tsarevna Anna Petrovna and Tsarevna Elizabeth Petrovna, were painted on a single canvas.” The portrait is also mentioned in Jacob Schtelin’s Notes: “Louis Caravaque ... painted the Imperial Princesses Anna and Elizabeth in their youth.”
Anna Petrovna (February 7, 1708 – May 15, 1728)
Tsarevna, daughter of Peter the Great and Catherine Alexeyevna, awarded the title of Tsesarevna on December 23, 1721. On May 21, 1725 she married Duke Charles Frederick of Holstein-Gottorp (April 30, 1700 – June 18, 1739). She had a son, Peter (February 21, 1728 – July 2, 1762), future Emperor Peter III, who would succeed to the throne after Elizabeth Petrovna (1741 – 1761).
Elizabeth Petrovna (December 18, 1709 – December 25, 1761)
Tsarevna, daughter of Peter the Great and Catherine Alexeyevna, awarded the title of Tsesarevna on December 23, 1721. Became Empress on November 25, 1741. Crowned on 25 April, 1742.
Портрет Петра I
- Canvas, oil. Диам. 55 (круг)
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4906
Peter I on His Death Bed
- Early 1725
- Canvas, oil. 82 x 60,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4907
The painting of Nikitin may be perceived as a requiem for the "father of the fatherland." Immediately after the death of Peter I Nikitin was invited to embody the dead emperor. The portrait introduces the tsar, dressed in a white shirt, covered up to his chest with the yellowish draped fabric with a blue ermine mantle. The image of Peter I is full of majestic solemnity.
The portrait reflects deep and sincere sorrow: for Nikitin Peter I was not only the emperor, but the close and familiar person whose death was a personal loss for the artist. Master traced every wrinkle, every fold, every strand of hair, as if he felt his responsibility towards future generations.
Death has already distorted the face of Peter. But looking at the picture of the dead emperor, one can understand the greatness of his lifetime. In 1762 by order of Empress Catherine the portrait was transferred from the old wooden Winter Palace on Nevsky Prospekt near the Police Bridge to the Imperial Academy of Arts.
I.N. Nikitin, J.G. Tannauer, Andrei Matveyev were considered to be the authors of the portrait. Modern researchers state that this is the indisputable work of I.N. Nikitin. This fact is proven by the technological analysis of the portrait.
Peter I Alexeyevich [Peter the Great (May 30 [June 9], 1672 – January 28 [February 8], 1725) was the last ruler to formally take the title Tsar (starting from April 27, 1682) and the first to take the title Emperor of All Russia (starting from October 22, 1721). He was a member of the Romanov dynasty.
Peter was the fourteenth child of Tsar Alexis Mikhailovich; his father's first child with Natalia Naryshkina. He was baptised by Protopope Andrei Savinov on June 29, the Feast of Saints Peter and Paul, in the Chudov Monastery (according to other sources, in the Church of St. Gregory of Neocaesarea, Moscow) and given the name Peter. After his father’s death in 1676, Peter’s half-brother and godfather, Tsar Theodore Alexeyevich, became his guardian. Upon his death, Peter was proclaimed Tsar on April 27 (May, 7), 1682. This triggered the Streltsy Uprising, which resulted in the deaths of many Naryshkin supporters and the coronation of Ivan and Peter on June 25. Tsarevna Sophia became regent. Peter stayed with his mother, Natalia Naryshkina, in the village of Preobrazhenskoye, where he formed the first two new order regiments, Preobrazhensky and Semenovsky, and organised meetings of the “Drunken Synod of Fools and Jesters.” Foreigners Franz Lefort and Patrick Gordon became his closest associates. On January 27, 1689, Peter married Eudoxia Lopukhina. They had three sons: Alexis (February18, 1690 – June 26, 1718), Alexander (October 3, 1691 – May 14, 1692), and Paul (1693–1693). During August of 1689, confrontations between Peter and Sophia began to sharply intensify. Fearing assassination, Peter fled to the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius on the night of August 7-8, accompanied by a small retinue. On August 8 both Tsaritsas, Natalia and Eudoxia joined him followed by the “Toy Army” and the artillery. Peter issued several decrees, demanding that existing regiments based in Moscow obey him as their rightful ruler. Sophia, recognizing her defeat, subsequently was confined to the Novodevichy Convent; while Peter’s elder brother, Tsar Ivan, effectively ceased intervening in affairs of the state.
The Capture of the Ottoman Fortress of Azov (July 19, 1696) in two Azov campaigns (1695–1696) became Peter’s first serious victory. Russia gained access to the Black sea. In 1697–1798 Peter the Great travelled to Europe for the first time as a member of the Grand Embassy. He visited Riga, Königsberg, Brandenburg, Holland, England, and Austria; he also planned to visit Venice and meet the Pope. He studied shipbuilding and military science in Holland and in England; the Grand Embassy recruited several hundreds of specialists to work in Russia. In July 1698 news about a new Streltsy Uprising in Moscow interrupted the mission. When the Tsar arrived in Moscow on August 25, investigation and interrogations took place resulting in almost simultaneous execution of 800 Streltsy. Tsarevna Sophia was made to take the veil under the name of Susanna. Eudoxia Lopukhina, whom Peter never loved, shared her fate: she was sent the Intercession Convent of Suzdal. And transformations began. On August 26, 1698 Peter issued his famous decrees on Western dress, shaving beards and moustaches, and Old Believers’ clothing. In 1700 the New Year was moved to January 1. After his coming back from the Grand Embassy, the Tsar began preparations for war with Sweden to gain access to the Baltic Sea. In 1699 Denmark, Saxony and the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth joined Peter’s Northern Union against Charles XII, King of Sweden. The Northern War started with a failure: on November 19 (30), 1700 Peter’s army was defeated at Narva. In autumn 1702 Peter renewed the war. He seized the fortress of Noteburg (that he renamed Schlisselburg) on the Baltic seashore, and in spring 1703 he took the fortress of Nyenschantz at the mouth of the Neva river. On May 10 (21), 1703 Peter (who was then Captain in the Bombardier Company of the Life-Guards Preobrazhensky Regiment) received the Order of St. Andrew the Apostle the First-Called, which he had established himself, for brave capture of two Swedish vessels. On May 16 (27), 1703 he founded St. Petersburg, and placed a Russian naval base, the fortress of Kronslot (later Kronstadt) on the island of Kotlin.
In 1703 he met Catherine, née Marta Skowrońska, widow of the dragoon Johan Cruse, who was captured as a war trophy during the seizure of the Swedish fortress of Marienburg. Peter officially married Catherine on February 19, 1712 after the Pruth River Campaign. Together they had several children: Catherine (December 28, 1706 – July 27, 1708), Anna (February 7, 1708 – May 15, 1728), Elizabeth (December 18, 1709 – December 25, 1761), Natalia (March 3, 1713 – May 27, 1715), Margarita (September 3, 1714 – July 27, 1715), Peter (October 29, 1715 – April 25, 1719), Paul (January 2, 1717 – January 3, 1717), Natalia (August 20, 1718 – March 4,1725).
In 1706 Charles XII, King of Sweden started a new campaign. Expecting to get support against Russia from the Little Russia hetman Ivan Mazepa, Charles XII sent troops to the Ukraine. In response, Peter personally commanded the cavalry corps of Alexander Menshikov at the Battle of Lesnaya, which took place on September 28 (October 9) and resulted in the crushing defeat of Lewenhaupt corps that were about to join the army of Charles XII coming from Livonia. Peter would later celebrate the anniversary of this battle as the decisive turning point in the Northern War. On June 27 (July 8), 1709 the army of Charles XII was completely defeated at the Battle of Poltava. During the years 1714–1720 the Russian army achieved more land and sea victories in the Baltic area. On August 30 (September 10), 1721 Russia and Sweden concluded the Treaty of Nystad, which ended the 21-year-long war. Russia gained access to the Baltic sea and annexed Ingria, Estonia, Finland, and part of Karelia. On October 22 Peter was accorded the title of Emperor of All Russia, Great Father of the Fatherland.
During the reign of Peter the Great Kamchatka was annexed by Russia. His most significant foreign policy undertaking after the Northern War was the Persian campaign of 1722–1724 resulting in annexation of the Western and the Southern coast of the Caspian sea including the towns of Derbent and Baku, and the provinces of Gilan, Mazandaran, and Astarabad. On February 5 (16), 1722 Peter issued a decree on succession to the throne (which was annulled by Paul I 75 years later) abolishing the old rules of succession of direct descendants in the male line, and stating that the reigning monarch could nominate his own successor. On May 7, 1724 Peter crowned Catherine as empress-consort and made her his co-ruler, but later suspected her of adultery. He failed to nominate his own successor before his death.
Peter the Great died after terrible suffering (according to the official information – of pneumonia) early in the morning of January 28 (February 8), 1725 in the Winter Palace by the Winter Canal. After his death the Senate proclaimed his wife, Catherine, his successor. On January 28 (February 8), 1725 she became Empress of Russia under the name of Catherine I.
Portrait of Catherine I with a Little Negro Boy
- Before December 1725 (?)
- Canvas, oil. 264 x 200
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5487
Catherine Alexeyevna (née Marta Skowrońska (April 15, 1684 – May 6, 1727). Second spouse of Peter the Great (became his wife on February 19, 1712). On May 7, 1724 Peter crowned her as empress-consort and made her his co-ruler. On January, 1725 she became Empress of Russia.
Catherine is depicted with a ribbon and a star of the Order of St. Andrew the Apostle the First-Called. Originally the portrait was smaller (190 x 133), the architecture and the landscape around the subject were painted later. Traditionally the portrait was dated 1725–1726 based on the engraving by Alexei Zubov. A document dated December 22, 1725 reads: “At the command of His Majesty [...] painter Ivan Adolsky received” one hundred rubles for painting these two portraits of Empress Catherine I: this one and the one housed in the State Museum-Preserve Tsarskoye Selo; the paintings are slightly different.
Portrait of Peter II
- Second half of the 1720s
- Canvas, oil. 71 х 59 (овал)
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-11
Peter II was the son of Tsarevich Alexis Petrovich and Princess Charlotte Christine Sophie of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, and the grandson of Emperor Peter the Great. He was himself Emperor from 1727. He was under the guardianship of the Supreme Privy Council, which was led by Peter the Great’s former favourite, his Supreme Highness Prince Alexander Menshikov. After Menshikov’s arrest in 1727 power in the Supreme Privy Council was usurped by the Dolgorukys, princes from an old boyar family. The system that existed before Peter the Great began to be restored and the court moved from St Petersburg to Moscow. The boyar aristocracy was strengthened and the army and navy fell into decline. Peter II had no inclination either to deal with matters of state or to study, and spent his time in games and entertainment. He died of smallpox in January 1730 and was buried in the Archangel Cathedral in the Moscow Kremlin.
Portrait of Baron Sergei Stroganov, Youngest Son of the Salt manufacturer Grigory Stroganov and his Wife Maria
- 1726
- Canvas, oil. 87 х 65 (овал, вписанный в прямоугольник)
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4908
Sergei Stroganov (August 20, 1707 – September 30, 1756). Youngest son of Grigory Stroganov, a prominent person and salt manufacturer, and his second wife Maria Yakovlevna, née Novosiltseva. Baron (from 1722), actual gentleman-in-waiting, Lieutenant General. Owner of a palace located on Nevsky Prospect, St Petersburg designed by Francesco Bartolomeo Rastrelli. Collector and founder of the Stroganov Art Gallery. In 1735 he married Sofia Kirillovna Naryshkina. His son, Alexander Stroganov, would become president of the Imperial Academy of Arts.
The work was first attributed to Ivan Nikitin in 1804 and there is no question of his authorship. This is one of the few works of the artist that was signed and dated. Researchers note that the technique of the portrait is very good, and it has been preserved better than other works, which makes the individual manner of the artist more apparent. A similar style is visible on his portraits of Prasovia Ioannovna and Anna Petrovna.
Portrait of Peter II
- 1728
- Canvas, oil. 80 х 64,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5334
Peter II (1715–1730) was the son of Tsarevich Alexei Petrovich and Yevdokia (née Princess Charlotte Christine Sophie of Brunswick-Lüneburg), who died shortly after his birth; and the grandson of Peter I. He ascended to the throne on 7 May 1727, after the death of Catherine I. The young Emperor was constantly under the influence of others, becoming an instrument in the hands of various palace factions: first Menshikov, who, in order to increase his influence, wanted Peter I to marry his daughter Maria; then Dolgorukovs, who decided to marry him to the older daughter of Alexei Dolgorukov, Princess Ekaterina. On 30 November 1728, they got engaged, but he had contracted smallpox and died the day he proposed marriage. Upon his death, the male line of the Romanovs ended. He is depicted in ermine robes with the chain of the Order of St Andrew.
Portrait of a Boy in Hunting Attire
- End of 1720 - beginning of 1730
- Canvas, oil. 135 x 89
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж−5327
Self-Portrait with Wife
- 1729 (?). After 1727 (?)
- Canvas, oil. 75,5 x 90,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4913
Andrei Matveyev (1702, (?) – 1739, St Petersburg). Painter, portrait artist, and icon painter, who created allegorical, and decorative and monumental compositions. In 1716, at the request of Peter the Great, he was then sent to study painting in Holland. From September 1717 to September 1723, he studied under Arnold Boonen in Amsterdam, and from December 1723 to May (?) 1727 – in the Antwerp Academy of Fine Arts under (?) Sperwer. In August 1727, he came back to Petersburg and began his work in the Chancellery of Construction. In 1731, Matveyev attained the rank of Master and became the head of the Painting Brigade of the Chancellery of Construction. He participated in creating murals for the Peter and Paul Cathedral, as well as tsarist residences in Petersburg, he also painted icons for the Church of The Holy Righteous Simeon and Anna The Prophetess.
Irina Matveyeva (1712/14–1740s). Daughter of the blacksmith Stepan Antropov. In 1729 (or 1728) she married the artist Andrey Matveyev. She later entered into a second marriage with the merchant Turgenev.
The portrait is thought to have been painted in 1729, the year the artist got married. Some researchers believed that the woman depicted is much older than the artist’s wife (who was only 16 years old when the portrait was painted), and that the people depicted are Princess Anna Leopoldovna and her husband Duke Anthony Ulrich of Brunswick. Modern technical analysis established that the woman’s face was “aged” by alterations introduced after the work was completed.
Equestrian Portrait of the Empress Elizabeth Petrovna with Retinue
- 1744–1755
- Canvas, oil. 50,5 x 66
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5374
Portrait of Grand Duke Peter Fyodorovich and Grand Duchess Catherine Alexeyevna
- 1745 (?)
- Canvas, oil. 129 х 100
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5341
Peter Feodorovich (1728–1762) was the son of Tsarevna Anna Petrovna and Duke Charles Frederick of Holstein-Gottorp; he was also the grandson of two implacable enemies, Emperor Peter the Great of Russia and King Charles XII of Sweden. He became heir to the Russian throne in 1742 and was Emperor from 25 December 1761 to 28 June 1762, but was never crowned. He imitated Peter the Great in intending to carry out a number of reforms. The Manifesto on the Freedom of the Nobility, the abolition of the Office for Secret Investigation and the secularisation of church lands formed the basis of the legislative measures subsequently taken by Catherine the Great. The view of traditional historiography is that he was ignorant and feeble-minded. He was overthrown by a palace coup instigated by his own wife, the future Catherine the Great, and was soon killed.
Empress Catherine II (the Great; 1729–1796), née Sophie Friederike Auguste von Anhalt-Zerbst-Dornburg, was born in the Prussian city of Stettin. In 1744, she arrived in Russia as the bride of Grand Duke Peter Feodorovich, the future Emperor Peter III. That same year, she converted to Russian Orthodoxy and took the name Catherine Alexeyevna. She married Peter Feodorovich in August 1745. In 1754 she gave birth to an heir, the future Emperor Paul I. The relationship with her husband did not work out, and he planned to have her sent to a convent. In the summer of 1762 she led a conspiracy of Peter’s guards and overthrew him, becoming Empress. In the first years of her reign she adhered to a policy of “enlightened absolutism”, but after the peasant rebellion led by Emelyan Pugachev (1773–1775) and the French Revolution (1789), she was forced to toughen her regime. She led victorious campaigns against Turkey (1768–1774; 1787–1792) and Sweden (1788–1790). During her reign, the Crimea (1783), the Northern Baltic Sea, the Baltic states, the eastern part of Poland, and the Aleutian Islands became part of Russia. Russian settlements were established in Alaska, and Eastern Georgia was taken under the protection of Russia. Russia’s prestige in Europe increased greatly.
Peter Fyodorovich is depicted in an official uniform of the Life Guard Dragoons Regiment of the Holstein Army with the Order of St. Andrews (the ribbon and the star). Catherine Alexeyevna is depicted with the Grand cross of the Order of Saint Catherine (the ribbon, the cross and the star). The stylistic elements and the lack of archival documents about the creation of this double portrait raise doubts about the authorship of the painter. The wedding of Peter Fyodorovich and Catherine Alexeyevna took place in August 1745. It is very likely that this double portrait was painted during that year as a portrait of the engaged couple. Their child, future Emperor Paul I was born on 20th of September (1st of October) 1754.
Portrait of Ivan Shuvalov
- Canvas, oil. 71,5 x 56,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-9281
Ivan Shuvalov (1727–1797) was an adjutant general. As he became the favourite of Empress Elizaveta Petrovna in 1749, he had a great influence on Russian foreign and domestic affairs. He was the curator of the Moscow University and the Academy of Art. He took Mikhail Lomonosov under his wing and was acquainted with Voltaire and Helvétius. After the accession of Catherine the Great to the throne, he lived abroad until 1777. After his return to Russia, he became Grand Chamberlain. The painting depicts Shuvalov in uniform with the Orders of St. Anna and the White Eagle. This painting is one of Rokotov’s early works.
Portrait of Ivan Shuvalov
- Between 1755 and 1757
- Canvas, oil. 217 x 157
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3924
Ivan Shuvalov (1727–1797) was a privy councillor, Great Chamberlain and lieutenant general. He was a favourite of Empress Elizaveta Petrovna. He was the founder and the first curator of the University of Moscow (1755), the first president of the Imperial Academy of Arts, which was also founded as his project, and was a patron of the arts. He contributed to the development of the arts and sciences in Russia. From 1763 through 1777, he travelled around Western Europe. He was acquainted with Diderot and Voltaire. He is depicted with the Order of the White Eagle (ribbon and star; 1754). The portrait was painted by artist prior into entering into a contract for admission into the service at the Imperial Academy of Art as an “example of his work and abilities”.
Portrait of the Grand Duke Peter Fyodorovich
- Canvas, oil. 114 x 90
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4938
Portrait of Sylvester Kulyabka
- Archbishop of St Petersburg and Schlüsselburg
- 1760
- Canvas, oil. 102 x 77,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4916
The portrait is one of a series of portraits of archimandrites of the St Alexander Nevsky Monastery in St Petersburg painted by Alexei Antropov in the 1760s and 1770s.
Sylvester (Semyon) Kulyabka (1701 or 1704–1761) was rector of Kiev Religious Academy (1740), Archbishop of St Petersburg and Schlüsselburg and Archimandrite of the St Alexander Nevsky Monastery (from 1750). The subject is depicted in the vestments of an archbishop, with a crosier and a panagia. On the background is the Kulyabka family coat of arms.
Портрет И. И. Шувалова
- 1760
- Canvas, oil. 85 х 70,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4965
Автопортрет
- 1761
- Canvas, oil. 48 х 40
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5450
Портрет великого князя Павла Петровича в детстве
- Canvas, oil. 58,5 х 47,5 (овал, вписанный в прямоугольник)
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4939
Portrait of Catherine II
- Iconographic type of Pietro Antonio Rotari
- Canvas, oil. 245 × 176
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-14
Coronation Portrait of Catherine II
- Between 1763 and 1766
- Canvas, oil. 244 х 178
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5808
Portrait of Adjutant General Count Grigory Orlov
- After 1763
- Canvas, oil. 98,5 x 77
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5367
Battle of Poltava
- Tapestry
- Wool, silk, weaving. 317 х 408
- The State Russian Museum
- Тк-1032
The tapestry "Battle of Poltava" is one of the most significant and famous works of St. Petersburg Tapestry Manufactory, which was founded in 1716 on the initiative of Peter the Great. Battle paintings appeared to be a new genre in Russian art, brought to life by the brilliant victories of the Russian army in the Great Northern War. The victory at Poltava was often embodied in all kinds of art, including in weaving. "The Battle of Poltava" is one of the most significant and most famous works of the St. Petersburg Tapestry Manufactory.
In the centre of the tapestry is the equestrian portrait of Peter I, a convincing monumental image of the commander. The figure of the emperor on the rampant bay horse is spectacularly depicted against the background of the battle. The artist and the makers of the tapestry managed to find the necessary degree of generalization and achieve the monumentality necessary for this kind of work, creating an expressive artistic image through the means of carpet making.
Initially, the tapestry was surrounded by a wide frame with the images of the coats of arms of Russian towns. It is difficult to say, when and under what circumstances the tapestry lost this spectacular frame. Until 1863 the St. Petersburg furniture manufacturer Karl Tur owned the carpet. Then until 1912 the carpet decorated the rooms of the Petrovsky palace on Petrovsky island.
The fragments of the frame are currently kept in the State Russian Museum and the Historical Museum in Moscow.
The tapestry is an example of the most interesting monumental Russian decorative art of the 18th century thanks to the mastery of its performance.
Portrait of Count Ivan Orlov, Retired Captain of the Preobrazhensky Life Guards
- Canvas, oil. 58,5 х 46,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4942
Ivan Grigoryevich Orlov (1733–1791) was the eldest of the Orlovs brothers. One of his brothers, Grigory, was Catherine the Great’s favourite. Taking the lead in many family affairs, Ivan always remained deliberately in the background . He took part in the murder of Peter III in Ropsha and won the title of Count. In 1766 he was chosen at the head of a Commission for the redaction a new Constitution. Once retired, he managed his brothers’ vast estates. Ivan Orlov was described as an intelligent, ingenious and energetic man. This portrait is notable for its elegant range of colours.
Екатерина II в образе Минервы
- Marble. 90 х 57 х 36
- The State Russian Museum
- Ск-2070
Портрет А. Ф. Кокоринова
- 1769
- Canvas, oil. 134 x 102
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4985
Портрет великого князя Павла Петровича в юности
- Canvas, oil. 84 x 67
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-29
Portrait of Vice-Admiral Samuel Greig
- Canvas, oil. 91,5 х 72,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4758
Портрет художника А. П. Антропова с сыном перед портретом жены
- 1776
- Canvas, oil. 84 х 70,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4929
Portrait of the Writer Alexander Khrapovitsky
- 1781
- Canvas, oil. 60,5 х 49
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4994
Khrapovitsky Aleksandr Vasilyevich (1749–1801) – a writer. He graduated from the Overland Gentry Corps, from a young age he was fond of literature. He was acquainted with M.V. Lomonosov. Khrapovitsky Aleksandr Vasilyevich was a friend of G.R. Derzhavin. From 1782 to 1793 he was the State Secretary of Catherine II. Since 1793 he was a senator. Mason. The author of the well-known "Memorandum Pads".
Khrapovitsky is depicted with the Order of St. Vladimir. He received the Order of St. Vladimir of the 3rd Class in 1783, and 2nd Class – in 1785.
Портрет Н. А. Львова, архитектора, художника и поэта
- 1780s
- Canvas, oil. 71 x 55,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5002
Portrait of Catherine II in Travelling Costume
- Canvas, oil. 70,5 x 56
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4963
Portrait of the Architect and Adjunct Rector of the Academy of Arts Georg Friedrich Felten
- Canvas, oil. 60 х 47
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3229
Портрет А. М. Протасовой
- 1789
- Canvas, oil. 72 x 58
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-6246
Portrait of the Serf Actor Ivan Yakimov Dressed as Cupid
- 1790
- Canvas, oil. 142 x 92
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3284
Ivan Yakimov (1780-1804) was a student of Count Sheremetyev and member of the ballet troupe of the Sheremetev serf theatre on the Kuskovo estate. Count Sheremetyev recalled: "Once a ballet was performed in my theatre where he [Yakimov] danced as cupid. The graces carried him in a basket with garlands of roses, and as they only expected to find roses in it, the unexpected appearance of this cupid enraptured the entire audience?". Play and Passion in Russian Fine Art. St-Petersburg. 1999. P. 22.
View of Palace Embankment from the Peter and Paul Fortress
- 1790s
- Canvas, oil. 72 x 107
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3292
This is a repeat version of a painting for which Fyodor Alexeyev was elected to the Imperial Academy of Arts – View of Palace Embankment from the Peter and Paul Fortress (1794, Tret. Gal.). On the left is the Peter and Paul Fortress with the Naryshkin Bastion. The Naryshkin Bastion was renamed the Catherine Bastion after the wife of Peter the Great (1725). The Summer Garden can be seen on the opposite bank of the River Neva. Palace Embankment begins on the right with the Marble Palace and the Betskoi and Saltykov houses.
Portrait of Brigadier Valerian Zubov
- 1791 (2?)
- Canvas, oil. 83 x 66
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5391
Портрет Екатерины II
- Marble. 63 х 35 х 35
- The State Russian Museum
- Ск-1392
Портрет генерал-фельдмаршала светлейшего князя Г. А. Потемкина-Таврического
- Marble. 63 х 41 х 35
- The State Russian Museum
- Ск-300
Portrait of Natalia Suvorova
- 1795
- Canvas, oil. 72 x 56.5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4556
Natalia Alexandrovna Suvorova (1775–1844), Countess, only daughter of Field Marshall Alexander Suvorov who affectionately called her “Suvorochka”. She was a lady-in-waiting to Catherine II (from 1791). From 1795 she was the wife of Senior-equerry Count Nikolai Zubov (1763–1805), the elder brother of one of the Empress’s favourites. In 1801 her husband took an active part in a plot to kill Emperor Paul I. Natalia Alexandrovna moved to Moscow and lived separately from her husband and once widowed, she dedicated herself to bring up her six children. According to legend, Natalia Alexandrovna did not manage to escape when the French army reached Moscow in 1812 and she and her carriage were detained. However, learning that before them stood the daughter of the great Suvorov, the French let her and her children escape through their lines giving them full military honours.
Portrait of Grand Duchess Alexandra Pavlovna
- 1790s
- Canvas, oil. 60 х 47,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3973
Alexandra Pavlovna, Grand Duchess (1783-1801) — daughter of Emperor Paul I and his wife Maria Feodorovna. A favorite of her father, educated and talented, she inherited artistic inclinations from her mother — she drew, sculpted from wax, and was engaged in translations from French. In 1799 she married Archduke Joseph of Austria, Palatine of Hungary.
The girl is shown in a festive brocade dushegreya and a silk blouse with lace. Catherine the Great, writing to her long-time correspondent Baron von Grimm in February 1796, raptly described a court masquerade ball where her granddaughters “danced a Russian dance to Russian music, which aroused everybody's delight… All of them … were dressed in splendid costumes”.
Portrait of Skobeyeva, Wife of the Smolensk Landlord D. Skobeyev
- The second half of the 1790s
- Canvas, oil. 72 х 57
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5018
At the end of the eighteenth century Borovykovsky created a series of portraits (mostly female) and established in portrait painting a so-called new type of man, "not composed, but discovered only by him " (portraits of V.I.Arseneva, M.I.Lopuhina, N.A.Naryshkina , M.A.Orlova-Denisova, and etc.). In the portrait of Skobeeva (name and patronymic are unknown), as in most others, the artist has used his compositional scheme: “half-figure” model with distinctive portrait features is depicted with arms crossed in a light dress on the background of a landscape.
Open energetic face with large features expresses determination and courage. This impression is supported by the facts from biography of the heroine of the portrait. Skobeeva was the daughter of the Kronstadt sailor. She was a pupil and mistress of D.P. Troshchinsky, the State Secretary of Catherine II. There is a version that in an effort to confront her ambiguous position, the girl ran from a guardian and married a poor Smolensk landowner D. Skobeev.
Perhaps as a sign of approval of the union the spouses decided to have a portrait painted by the most fashionable portrait painter of those times. The head of the family ordered the artist two portraits of his wife: in the bosom of nature (the portrait) and the image of inaccessible Diana (Skobeeva as Diana. The end of the 1790s. The State Historical Museum. An embodiment of the portrait of smaller).
Portrait of Emperor Paul I
- 1797
- Canvas, oil. 251 х 179
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4699
Portrait of Anna Protasova, Maid of Honour of the Bedchamber to Catherine II
- Canvas, oil. 61 x 50,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5448
Portrait of Emperor Paul I
- 1798-1801
- Canvas, oil. 152 х 109
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3207
Emperor Paul I (1754–1801) was the only son of Emperor Peter III and Empress Catherine the Great. In 1762 he was named heir to the throne and given the title of Tsesarevich. He received an excellent education and believed in the romantic ideals of enlightened absolutism, but was critical of the policies of Catherine the Great. He spent decades waiting for the power that his mother had usurped. He became emperor in 1796. His efforts were intended to be to the state’s benefit, but he often acted against common sense. At his coronation in Moscow in 1797 he promulgated the Establishment of the Imperial Family which laid down that accession to the throne should be by primogeniture in the male line. He reformed local government. He restricted the rights of the nobility and allowed corporal punishment to be used on them. Military reforms affected not only uniforms and equipment, but also training and the tactics of officers and soldiers, with an emphasis on the Prussian military school. In an effort to protect Russia from revolutionary ideas, he banned the import of books from France and tightened censorship. In 1798, he took on the title of Grand Master of the Knights of St John of Jerusalem, of Rhodes and of Malta (Hospitaller), and took it under his patronage. He was killed by conspirators in St Michael’s Castle during the night of 11–12 March 1801, but according to the official version he died of an apoplectic fit (a stroke).
Emperor Paul I is depicted in the robes of the Grand Master of the Hospitaller Order of Saint John of Jerusalem, of Rhodes and of Malta. He is wearing the black mantle of the Order with a white eight-pointed Maltese cross, and a golden dalmatic under the mantle. A black stole with embroidered scenes of Christ’s sufferings hangs from his shoulder. He is wearing the Maltese crown on his head and the golden chain of the Grand Master of the Hospitaller Order around his neck. On his chest is the blue ribbon of St Andrew and a crimson sash. The Grand Master’s regalia stand on a nearby table.
Portrait of Marfa Arbenieva
- 1798
- Canvas, oil. 78,4 x 58,2
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5012
Marfa Ivanovna Arbenieva (1741–1804): Daughter of Ivan Kozlov and wife of I. I. Arebniev. Aunt of the poet Ivan Kozlov. Played hostess to the poet Gavriil Derzhavin, Count Alexander Stroganov and the playwright Jacob Knyazhnin.
Portrait of Prince Alexander Kurakin
- 1799
- Canvas, oil. 178 x 137
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5013
Prince Alexander Kurakin is depicted in the mantel of St Andrew, worn above a dalmatic of St John of Jerusalem, with the chain and star of St Andrew and the cross of St John of Jerusalem. Prince Alexander Borisovich Kurakin (1752–1818): Russian statesman, diplomat. Fellow pupil and close friend of the future Tsar Paul. Studied at Leipzig University. Gentleman of the bedchamber and procurator-general of the Senate (1778). Vice chancellor (1796), dismissed (1798), reinstated (1801). President of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (1801), member of the State Council (1802). Helped to negotiate the Treaty of Tilsit with Napoleon (1807). Visited Vienna with a Russian diplomatic mission. Russian ambassador in Paris (1809–12). Buried in the parish church of St Mary Magdalene in Pavlovsk, where the inscription on his gravestone To the Friend of My Husband was written by Empress Marie Fyodorovna.
Portrait of the Director of the Artillery School Lieutenant General Alexei Korsakov
- 1799
- Canvas, oil. 70 x 57
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3228
Portrait of Mikhail Trakhimovsky, Military Councillor and Godfather of Nikolai Gogol
- 1802
- Canvas, oil. 67 х 58
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5025
Портрет архитектора А. Д. Захарова
- Canvas, oil. 59 х 54
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5029
Portrait of Emperor Alexander I
- Canvas, oil. 73,5 x 58,3
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3230
Catherine II Promenading in the Tsarskoye Selo Park (With the Obelisk to Count Pyotr Rumyantsev's Victories in the Background)
- Late 1800s — early 1810s
- Canvas, oil. 99 х 68
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5008
Empress Catherine II (the Great; 1729–1796), née Sophie Friederike Auguste von Anhalt-Zerbst-Dornburg, was born in the Prussian city of Stettin. In 1744, she arrived in Russia as the bride of Grand Duke Peter Feodorovich, the future Emperor Peter III. That same year, she converted to Russian Orthodoxy and took the name Catherine Alexeyevna. She married Peter Feodorovich in August 1745. In 1754 she gave birth to an heir, the future Emperor Paul I. The relationship with her husband did not work out, and he planned to have her sent to a convent. In the summer of 1762 she led a conspiracy of Peter’s guards and overthrew him, becoming Empress. In the first years of her reign she adhered to a policy of “enlightened absolutism”, but after the peasant rebellion led by Emelyan Pugachev (1773–1775) and the French Revolution (1789), she was forced to toughen her regime. She led victorious campaigns against Turkey (1768–1774; 1787–1792) and Sweden (1788–1790). During her reign, the Crimea (1783), the Northern Baltic Sea, the Baltic states, the eastern part of Poland, and the Aleutian Islands became part of Russia. Russian settlements were established in Alaska, and Eastern Georgia was taken under the protection of Russia. Russia’s prestige in Europe increased greatly.
Borovikovsky did not have the possibility to paint a portrait from life, and when he painted Empress Catherine II, it was the lady in waiting of the Empress, Maria Perekusikhina, who posed. The first version of this portrait (with the Chesme Column in the background) was made in 1794 and is displayed at the Tretyakov Gallery. This portrait was then engraved by Nikolai Utkin in 1827.
Portrait of Alexei Tomilov
- 1808
- Canvas, oil. 68 х 55,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5131
Alexei Romanovich Tomilov (1779-1848) was an artillery officer by education and a commander during the building of a fortress in Kronstadt (1799). He left the service in 1808. Alexei Romanovich was a collector and an art amateur, one of the founders and a committee member of the Artists Support Society (since 1820) and a honored free member of the Imperial Academy of Sciences (1833).
View of the Kazan Cathedral in St Petersburg
- After 1810
- Canvas, oil. 71 х 112,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5049
The Kazan Cathedral in St Petersburg is one of the most important churches in the Orthodox world. It houses one of the two most venerated duplications of the Our Lady of Kazan icon, the patroness of the imperial house and the protector of the Russian land. The cathedral, built from 1801–1811 from a design by Andrei Voronikhin, was intended to emphasise the political aspirations of the Russian Empire. The majestic colonnade of the cathedral, spreading out toward Nevsky Prospect, is reminiscent of St Peter’s Basilica in Rome. This is the influence of both the romantic interest in Catholicism and the mission of Russia in the greater Christian world. In the solemn rhythm of the forms of the orders of Classical architecture, undoubtedly, there is a kind of heroic sensibility. And it is no wonder that after Napoleon’s expulsion from Russia, Kazan Cathedral became a war memorial, where in 1813 the ashes of Field Marshal Mikhail Kutuzov were laid to rest, and trophies of the Patriotic War of 1812 were housed: flags, banners, and keys to forts and cities.
Fyodor Alexeyev depicts Andrei Voronikhin’s Kazan Cathedral and the original layout of the adjoining square. The wooden obelisk crowned with a cross stood in the centre of the square until 1826. Ivan Martos’s plaster figures of St Gabriel the Archangel and St Michael the Archangel stand at the ends of the colonnade. Pendant statues of Field Marshal Mikhail Kutuzov and Field Marshal Michael Barclay de Tolly were opened outside the Kazan Cathedral in 1837.
The landscapes of Fyodor Alexeyev are created with accurate views of the city, which capture its emotional picturesqueness. In front of the Cathedral of Our Lady Kazan there is an obelisk erected in honour of the sanctification of the building. The painter drew not only the capital’s greatness, but he also depicted its everyday life. The simple street life surrounds the edifice: kiosks and stalls, laundresses washing the clothes in the canal, boats going under the bridge, on which bystanders walk. The figures of people are clustered in an intricate genre.
View onto the Admiralty and Palace Embankment from the First Cadet Corps
- Canvas, oil. 138 x 178
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5813
The paintings of Fyodor Yakovlevich draw the attention to themselves, not only because he recreates on canvas the views of St. Petersburg with such accuracy, but because he gives them an emotional and artistic dimension. His works became the interesting subject to study when it came to the history and architectural changes in the city’s appearance.
In the foreground, there is an upper terrace of the First Cadet Corps, which was founded in 1732 and placed in the former Palace of the Governor-General of St. Petersburg, His Serene Highness Prince Menshikov. On the opposite bank, there is the Admiralty, rebuilt by Andrei Zakharov after a fire in 1806. Behind the canal, which encircles the Admiralty, the Palace Embankment appears on the left.
Автопортрет (?)
- Canvas, oil. 68 х 57
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5035
Портрет архитектора К. И. Росси (1775-1849)
- Canvas, oil. 109,5 х 91
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5041
Портрет художника Д. Г. Левицкого (1735-1822)
- 1812
- Canvas, oil. 132 х 107
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3275
Портрет А. О. Орловского
- 1815
- Canvas, oil. 70 x 56
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4604
Portrait of Archbishop Mikhail (Mathew Desnitsky)
- 1816
- Canvas, oil. 111 x 85
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3158
Крестьянские дети в поле (Мальчик с двумя девочками)
- Canvas, oil. 38,5 х 30
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5164
Portrait of the Military Officer and Statesman Count Alexei Arakcheyev
- 1823
- Canvas, oil. 88 x 61
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-6349
Alexei Andreyevich Arakcheyev (1769–1834) was a Count. He studied at the Artillery Cadet Corps and in 1787 was made an officer. He was a favourite of the Grand Duke Paul Pavlovich. In 1796 he became major general, Commandant of St Petersburg.
He was made Baron (5 April 1797), Knight of the Order of St Alexander Nevsky (1797), and then Count (5 May 1799). His fall into disgrace took place from 1799 to 1808. Under the reign of Alexander I he became minister and Inspector General of all Infantry and Artillery. In the last decade of his rule Alexander I exerted unlimited influence over every area of Imperial rule. He was the author of the project (making plans, drawings, estimates) for military settlements, and the first barracks which were built on his estate in Gruzino served as a pattern for the building of similar barracks and other structures. From 1819 he was the head of military settlements. Following the accession of Nicholas I he retired and lived in the Gruzino estate, where he was buried in the Cathedral of St Andrew. He appears here in uniform against the background of the barracks of the military settlement in Gruzino. On his epaulettes is the monogram of Alexander I. On the neck ribbon of the Order of St Andrew is a silver medal “In Memory of the Patriotic War of 1812” and a medallion he was granted with a miniature portrait of Alexander I. On his chest is the Order of St Alexander Nevsky (star).
Portrait of the Engraver Nikolai Utkin
- 1824
- Canvas, oil. 122 х 88,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5224
Sleeping Shepherd Boy
- Between 1823 and 1826
- Wood, oil. 27,5 x 36,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5157
The landscape background to this picture is a view onto the River Vorozhba from the windows of Alexei Venetsianov’s house in Safonkovo in Tver Province. The painting was first exhibited at the Society for the Encouragement of Artists in 1826. The heartfelt interpretation of this portrait of a peasant boy is typical of the Russian school of painting. Rejecting any attempts at ethnographic accuracy, it is both concrete and poetically uplifting. The device of tearing the foreground away from the background conjures up the sensation of the endless breadth and depth of the landscape. The subtle transitions of light and colour create an almost tangible feeling of the passage of life — slow in the summer heat, yet inexorable and endlessly diverse. Full of calm and tranquillity, Venetsianov’s painting introduces us to the private world of the Russian village, where the appearance of a stranger is an important event.
Игра в шашки
- 1824
- Canvas, oil. 107 x 134
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3831
Portrait of Alexandra Tomilova in Childhood with a Doll in her Hand
- 1825
- Canvas, oil. 62.5 x 50.5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-6281
Alexandra Tomilova (1815- 1878) was the daughter of Alexei Tomilov and later wife of adjutant general Schwarz. Warnek knew Tomilov well and frequently visited him at his country estate in Uspenskoe. Tomilov himself was an exceptional individual and patron of artists. Among Warnek's best works are the portraits of Tomilov's three children two sons and a daughter - which make up a series, at the centre of which is the portrait of Alexandra Tomilova, one of the daughters. The adolescent girl is pictured wearing a white dress and sitting solemnly with a doll in her hands. She has a dreamy and meaningful look and pose. This, however, is no "small adult" as found in the portraits of the eighteenth century, but very much a product of the new Romantic era. Play and Passion in Russian Fine Art. St-Petersburg. 1999. P. 24..
Portrait of the Writer and Musician Princess Zinaida Alexandrovna Volkonskaya, née Princess Beloselskaya-Belozerskaya (1879–1862), Dressed as Tancred (from the Opera by G. Rossini)
- Not before 1820
- Canvas, oil. 188 x 130
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3409
Zinaida Alexandrovna Volkonskaya, née princess Beloselskaya-Belozerskaya (1789–1862), Wife of the Master of the Hunt Prince Nikita Volkonsky — writer, musician, member of the Society of Lovers of Literature and the Society of Lovers of History and Antiquities. Since 1824 lived in Moscow; her house was a meeting place for famous scientists and writers. In 1829 she moved to Rome, where she converted to Catholicism and after her death was beatified (beata). A lithographic portrait of Z. A. Volkonskaya as Joan of Arc (the variant of the painting from the Russian Museum collection) was sent by the princess to A. S. Pushkin in 1826, indicating that it was made d'après Bruni (after Bruni). It got to the State Russian Museum in 1926 from the office of the Department of Preservation and Registration of Objects of Art and Antiquities (Leningrad).
In the portrait of Z. A. Volkonskaya is personified the image of a knight from the poem "Jerusalem Delivered" (1575) by the famous Italian poet of the 16th century Torquato Tasso, which combines heroism and faith, love and disposition to heroic deeds, longing and determination. There is no representationalism required for ceremonial portraits. Romantic nature of a theatricalized character is obvious: half-fantastic costume, armour and helmet, wild rocky landscape, a shade of contemplative loneliness and longing. Volkonskaya is depicted as if dreaming, immersed in her own thoughts. The state of the model is maintained by exquisite colour: all the colours seem to twinkle, flash and retreat into the shade. She wears the costume of Tancred, the main character of the eponymous opera by G. Rossini, which was staged in the princess’s salon in Rome.
Portrait of the Archbishop and Writer Giuseppe Capecelatro
- Canvas, oil. 65 x 52,5 (овал)
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5101
Vincenzo Brioschi. Portrait of the St Petersburg Postal Director Konstantin Bulgakov
- 1830
- Canvas, oil. 85 х 72
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3473
Konstantin Yakovlevich Bulgakov (1782–1835) was the younger son of the diplomat Yakov Bulgakov, and in 1797 he was appointed to the College of Foreign Affairs. Under Alexander I he was attached as a supernumerary to the mission to Vienna, and was then put at the disposal of the Commander-in-Chief of the Transdanubian Army, Nikolai Kamensky. He became an actual state councillor in 1814, postal director for Moscow in 1816, and was transferred to the same position in St Petersburg in 1819.
Under his direction communications by stage-coach were set up, as well as a permanent urban postal system in St Petersburg. In 1822 he concluded a postal convention with Prussia and Austria that speeded up the delivery of letters from abroad. He was appointed privy councillor in 1826 and director of the Department of Posts in 1831. He was well known for his generous philanthropic work, his love of literature and art and for organising numerous charitable evenings; he was friends with many figures in the arts and with contemporaries who were collectors (in particular Alexei Tomilov). He was the author of a correspondence that has become a chronicle of Russian life at the start of the 19th century.
Portrait of Empress Alexandra Fyodorovna and her Daughter, Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna, Horse Riding in the Peterhof Park
- Modello for an unpainted portrait
- 1837
- Canvas, oil. 89 x 70,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3375
Portrait of Alexander Stupin with Pupils
- 1838
- Canvas, oil. 120 x 167
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5253
Alexander Vasilyevich Stupin (1776–1861) was an artist. He began studying with the artist Lopytin in Arzamas in 1787, and then worked as the pupil of a number of masters. He became an independent artist in September 1797, accepting commissions and taking in pupils. As he was thinking of setting up a school in Arzamas, he travelled to St Petersburg where he studied in the Imperial Academy of Art from 1800 to 1802, paying special attention to methods of teaching. In 1801 he received the silver medal of the second rank and on graduation a certificate as Artist of the 14th class. On his return home he began organising the Arzamas School of Painting and opened it in 1805. The Imperial Academy of Art took Stupin’s school under its patronage in 1809, and the artist himself received the title of Academician. The portrait was painted as an academic exercise “To reproduce in natural size a group of four or five people, knee-length, showing Academician Stupin surrounded by pupils and examining the work of one of them”. Alexeyev received the title of Academician for the picture in 1839.
Зал Училища правоведения с группой учителей и воспитанников
- 1840
- Canvas, oil. 86 x 126
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5196
Portrait of Ulyana Smirnova, née Spiridonova
- 1837–1844
- Canvas, oil. 90 x 71,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5100
Портрет А. П. Брюллова
- Canvas, oil. 123,5 х 97,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5440
Portrait of the Art Lover and Patron the Most Serene Princess Maria Volkonskaya, née Kikina, Wife of the Steward of the Household the Most Serene Prince Dmitry Volkonsky
- Canvas, oil. 103 x85 (овал)
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5095
Portrait of the Writer Varvara Lizogub
- 1847
- Canvas, oil. 82,5 x 68
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5227
The writer and representative of the intellectual elite is depicted by the artist as if she were participating in some kind of masquerade. She is dressed in an Eastern costume and in a headdress that resembles a Russian kokoshnik. Lizogub, Varvara Ippolitovna (née Petrovskaya; dates unknown) was the wife of the colonel Vasily Ivanovich Lizogub (1801–1870). Lizogub was the author of the Zuleika narrative poem, published in August 1845, and of poetry published in the magazine Moskvityanin (1841, No. 7).
Portrait of Infantry General Yakov Rostovtsev, his Wife Vera Rostovtseva, nee Emin, Sons Nikolai Rostovtsev and Mikhail Rostovtsev and Daughter Alexandra Rostovtseva
- Unfinished
- 1850 — 1854
- Canvas, oil. 90 x 69
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-6272
Портрет А. П. Ге с детьми
- 1861–1866
- Canvas, oil. 137 х 98
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-10117
Портрет графа Н. Н. Муравьева-Амурского
- 1864
- Canvas, oil. 105,2 х 84,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-6255
Портрет И. С.Тургенева
- 1872
- Canvas, oil. 102 х 80
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4090
Portrait of Vladimir Stasov
- 1883
- Canvas, oil. 74 x 60
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4043
Stasov, Vladimir Vasilyevich (1824–1906): Art and music critic, art historian.
Портрет Н. В. Стасовой
- 1884
- Canvas, oil. 90,5 х 72,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4036
Portrait of the Astronomer Wilhelm Von Struve
- Canvas, oil. 135,5 х 102
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2991
Ivan Kramskoi was a portraitist, author of thematic paintings, art critic and thought leader of an entire generation of Russian artists. He was the head of the Peredvizhniki Society (The Wanderers, the society of Russian Realist artists). He saw the mission of the artist in the civic consciousness, in the service of the people’s interest. He is the author of many portraits of Russian scientists and cultural figures.
Otto Wilhelm von Struve (1819-1905) was a Russian astronomer and academician. He was the head of the Pulkovo Observatory for more than 25 years. He is depicted in the attic story of the Pulkovo Observatory tower and is concentrated on himself.
Christ and the Disciples Entering the Garden of Gethsemane
- 1889
- Canvas, oil. 142 x 192
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4145
Nikolai Ge painted mostly Gospel subjects in the final years of his career in art. His cycle of works dedicated to the life of Jesus Christ is one of the finest achievements of both his own life and the Russian Realist painting of the 1880s and early 1890s. Work on Christ and the Disciples Entering the Garden of Gethsemane coincided with a period of close contacts with Leo Tolstoy, who greatly influenced the artist’s own ethical viewpoints. Like Tolstoy, Ge presents himself and the viewer with a moral dilemma in this work. The unusual colour scheme is deliberately intended to bring out the emotional aspects of the theme the figures of Christ and the disciples are immersed in darkness and virtually indiscernible.
Golden Autumn. Slobodka
- 1889
- Canvas, oil. 43 x 67,2
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4271
The motif of Russian autumn is often encountered throughout the career of Isaac Levitan, a master of the lyrical landscape. The traditional gathering of autumn leaves, the special transparency of the air and the feeling of sorrow at the passage of summer found a lively response in the artist’s soul. Animating the world of nature with subtle emotions, Levitan creates a mood landscape, expressing the beauty of nature with the help of rich and complex paintwork. Growing among the peasant allotments divided by a narrow, stooping hedge, the young birch tree shows off its still magnificent foliage. This is the most active patch of paint in the entire canvas, uniting the slightly muffled tones of the rest of the colour orchestra. Mikhail Nesterov wrote that Levitan managed to convey the “modest and innermost concealed in each Russian landscape — its soul and charm.” Golden Autumn. Slobodka was shown at the Sezession exhibition of 1898.
Portrait of Elena Likhacheva
- Canvas, oil. 103 х 71,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4147
The compositional solution of the portrait of the writer and social activist Elena Likhacheva (1836-1904) is not typical of Ge’s portrait work. Likhacheva is shown in the study at a table. Her small figure in a black dress seems to be lost, surrounded by various objects. Likhacheva's eyes gaze intently at the viewer, showing intellect and spiritual depth.
Even in his younger years, Ge was convinced that "the artist must convey the image of his dear compatriots", doing that not for himself, but "for society." He felt like this while painting the portraits of Alexander Herzen, Nikolai Nekrasov, Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin, and later Leo Tolstoy. The civic-mindedness was a typical feature of the Peredvizhniki’s portraits.
Паперть Саввино-Сторожевского монастыря в Звенигороде
- Paper, gouache. 49,7 х 64,9
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-8433
Портрет П. А. Костычева
- 1892
- Canvas, oil. 89,5 х 67,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4153
Self-Portrait
- 1893
- Cardboard, oil. 34 х 21
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2119
The early 1890s were an important period in the establishment of Léon Bakst’s cre¬ative personality. He became acquainted with Alexander Benois in March 1890, was introduced to the circle of artists that later constituted the nucleus of the World of Art, experienced the first tastes of success at the exhibitions of the Society of Russian Watercolourists and embarked on his first trip to Europe, visiting Germany, Belgium, France and Spain in summer 1891. The artist was influenced by classical European art. Bakst depicts himself trying on a beret and a smock, the traditional attire of the maes¬tro artist, symbolising his induction into the role of professional server of the muses.
Запах
- 1894–1895
- Цветная акватинта. И., д.: 12,9 х 17,1; л.: 24,8 x 32,4
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-28643
Страх
- 1893–1894
- Цветная акватинта. И., д.: 29,3 х 19,9; л.: 38,1 x 28,7
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-28646
Демон
- 1894
- Гипс раскрашенный. 50 x 58 x 22
- The State Russian Museum
- Ск-565
Portrait of Alexander Verzhbilovich
- 1895
- Canvas, oil. 89 x 58
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4084
Verzhbilovich, Alexander Valerianovich (1850–1911): Cellist.
Seventeenth-Century Moscow Street on a Public Holiday
- 1895
- Canvas, oil. 204 x 390
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4355
The Russian way of life in the seventeenth century was the theme of many paintings by Andrei Ryabushkin in the second half of the 1890s. Recreating the historical setting, the artist accurately conveys the costumes and architecture of that period. Interpreting the subject as a vivid urban scene, Ryabushkin paints an internally dynamic image of a street after a downpour, transformed into a fast flowing river.
Вознесение Господне
- 1895
- paper mounted on cardboard, tempera, , lacquer. 51,7 х 39,4
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-40867
Портрет Александра Николаевича Бенуа
- 1895
- Canvas, сharcoal , , graphite pencil, watercolours, whiting. 38,2 x 28,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-46303
Портрет В. Ф. Нувеля
- 1895
- Cardboard, watercolours, gouache. 56,8 х 45
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-13488
Сошествие Христа во ад
- 1895
- paper mounted on cardboard, tempera, ink, , sauce, graphite pencil, lacquer. 51,2 х 40,4
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-40866
Троица. Явление Христа на пути в Эммаус. Поясной деисусный чин с Христом-Эммануилом, Богоматерью и Иоанном
- 1895
- paper mounted on cardboard, tempera, , graphite pencil, . И.: 19 х 34,7 (полукруг); 19 х 34,5 (полукруг); 7,1 х 13,8; л.: 53,7 x 39,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-40868
Portrait of Maria Tenisheva
- 1896
- Cardboard, watercolours. 35,5 х 27,9
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-7808
Tenisheva, Maria Klavdievna, Princess (1858–1928): Public figure, enamel artist, teacher, patron, collector.
Лежащий лев
- 1896
- etching, . И.: 13,8 х 11; д.: 15,9 х 12; л.: 28,8 х 20,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-28244
Портрет художника А. Н. Бенуа
- 1896
- Canvas, oil. 49 х 39
- The State Russian Museum
- ЖБ-616
После дождя
- 1896
- Paper, watercolours. 35,8 x 73,2
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-8362
Princess of Dreams
- On the subject of Edmond Rostand’s play of the same name. Study-variant for the panel in the art section of the All-Russian Industrial and Art Exhibition in Nizhny Novgorod in 1896
- 1896
- Watercolours, gouache, graphite pencil. 27,1 x 68,4 (в свету)
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-14992
Morning
- 1897
- Canvas, oil. 261 x 447
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1834
Vrubel dreamed about combining art and life in his creative work and searched for a high monumental style and a special national form that was expressed in ornamental and rhythmic patterns characteristic for his works. His style was close to the stylistics of art nouveau that is known for its rapid transitions from statics to movement and from serenity to sudden agitation. The artistic features of art nouveau include flowing lines, oblong figures, expressive contours, and the use of floral motifs. Stems, leaves, and flowers of faded exotic plants intertwine and create a complicated pattern in which one can see female figures or fantastic beasts.
Art nouveau artist were keen on allegories, and this tendency is vivid in the Spring panel. The awakening nature is symbolized by four mermaids. A naked female figure emerges from the mystical entwinement of giant trees, dense grass and fantastic flowers. The woman looks at the light of dawn – the “Beam”, as the artist calls it. It is embodied by another woman’s figure with a strangely bent body. The woman longs from the grass to the sky. The third “Fairy” comes out of the grass and marsh wilds. She represents the awakening – her face is motionless, her big dark eyes have just opened and her first morning thoughts float in them as the remains of her night dreams. The forth figure in the right is depicted only fragmentarily – we see a woman’s face with the expression of fear and despair. When asked about the meaning of this figure, Vrubel answered: “It’s a fairy tale”. Four female figures amplify the general emotional tone of the landscape, its poetry and music. The images created by the artist have multiple meanings and may arise various emotions. The use of various shades of green gives the feeling of early morning freshness when the sun is about to rise above the horizon. This panel is a part of a decorative and monumental triptych called Times of Day that was created by Vrubel for the interior of S.T. Morozov’s house in Moscow (designed by the Moscow art nouveau architect F.O. Schechtel).
Афиша "Выставка русских и финляндских художников. 1898"
- 1897
- Chromolithography. И.: 80 х 66; л.: 101 х 68
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр.луб-2655
Версаль. Людовик XIV кормит рыб
- 1897
- Cardboard, gouache, watercolours, chalk, graphite pencil, charcoal pencil. 47,7 x 62,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-5126
Версаль. Прогулка короля
- 1897
- Paper, watercolours, gouache, graphite pencil. 21,4 x 46 (в свету)
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-5131
Версаль. У Курция (Вид на дворец со стороны Швейцарского озера)
- 1897
- Paper, watercolours, gouache, graphite pencil, charcoal pencil. 48,8 х 63,6
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-5132
Иллюстрация к книге Е. В. Балобановой «Легенды о старинных замках Бретани». Кипарис
- 1897
- Cardboard, ink, nib, watercolours. 28,2 x 18,9
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-33801
Иллюстрация к книге Е. В. Балобановой «Легенды о старинных замках Бретани». Сросшиеся деревья
- 1897
- Cardboard, ink, nib, graphite pencil. 28 х 18,8
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-33803
Иллюстрация к книге Е. В. Балобановой «Легенды о старинных замках Бретани». Царица бурь
- 1897
- Paper, ink, nib, watercolours. 28,2 х 18,9
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-33802
На лугах Кавказа (Кавказская сцена)
- 1897
- paper mounted on cardboard, watercolours, whiting. 40 x 30
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-13428
Ручей
- Canvas, oil. 70 х 89
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4334
Autumn. Fog
- 1898
- Paper, watercolours. 48 х 60
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-13398
Magic
- 1898–1902
- gouache, watercolours, , graphite pencil. 49,5 х 34,1
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-3253
Konstantin Somov began work on Magic during his first trip to Paris, where he was invited by Alexander and Anna Benois. The French capital was at that time also home to Léon Bakst, Evgeny Lanceray and Anna Ostroumova-Lebedeva, later members of the World of Art. The city and its suburbs, its museums and antique shops, confirmed the young painter’s interest in the art of the “gallant” 18th century, which was shared by many World of Art members. Work on this gouache lasted for four years. The well planned composition is elegant, refined and balanced, though the image is somewhat aloof and affected. As Sergei Ernst, a famous critic of the late 19th and early 20th century, wrote: “It is thought that the art of Somov was born here, in this fantastic decoration, full of the fragrance of precious aromas. From here it was summoned to bewitch the world.”
Portrait of Alexander Benois
- Paper, watercolours, pastel. 64,5 х 100,3 (в свету)
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-26999
The name of Leon Bakst (1866-1924) is linked to the “World of Art” and “Saisons Russes” of Sergei Diaghilev. As a prominent book illustrator and theatrical designer, he reached major achievements in the art of painted portraits.
Benois, Alexander Nikolaevich (1870, St Petersburg - 1960, Paris) - graphic artist, painter, theatrical designer, art historian. Studied under brother Albert Benois, at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1887-1888) and at the Faculty of Law, St Petersburg University (1890-1894). Member of the World of Art (1899; founding member), Union of Russian Artists (1903) and the Salon d'Automne (1906). Contributed to the exhibitions of the Society of Russian Watercolourists (1891-1896), Sergei Makovsky Salon (1909), International Exhibitions in Munich (1898), Rome (1911), Malmo (1914) and the Exhibitions of Russian Art in Paris (1906, 1910) and Berlin (1906). Designed for the Mariinsky Theatre, Vera Komissarzhevskaya Theatre and the Starinny Theatre in St Petersburg, Moscow Arts Theatre, Sergei Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, Ida Rubinstein Ballet Company, Teatro Real de Madrid, Theatre des Champs Elysees and Theatre National de L'Opera in Paris. Curator of the Hermitage Picture Gallery (1918-1926). Member of the Commission for the Protection of Monuments of Art and Antiques. Edited the Art Treasures of Russia magazine (1901-1903). Emigrated to Paris (1926). He lived in France from 1926 and designed plays for the theatres of Paris and Milan. He wrote his memoirs.
Salzburg (От нашего специального корреспондента) / Русско-финляндская выставка в Зальцбурге
- Paper, watercolours, ink, nib. 24,2 x 42,2
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-35904
Self-Portrait with Sister
- 1898
- Canvas, tempera, oil. 143 x 177
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2032
Victor Borisov-Musatov’s works generally lack a developed subject. The master’s elegiac art is permeated with sorrowful reflections and notes of tranquillity. The artist deprives reality of concrete features, almost implying the existence of parallel worlds. In Self-Portrait with Sister, his sister is like the ghostly resident of an old, historical estate. The composition seems to have frozen in time, like a frame from a film reel, with the figures on the point of slipping away into the space beyond the clouds.
The elders converge
- 1898
- Canvas, oil. 40 х 71
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5504
«Корабельщики дивятся, на кораблике толпятся…»
- 1897–1898
- Paper, watercolours, . 16,4 х 11,8
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-1257
«Пушки с крепости палят…»
- 1897–1898
- Paper, watercolours, whiting, . 11,3 х 15,8
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-33961
Автопортрет
- 1898
- Paper, watercolours, . 46 x 32,6
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-6559
Баба-яга
- 1898
- Гипс раскрашенный. 31 х 33 х 32
- The State Russian Museum
- Ск-1424
Белый медведь
- 1898
- Статуя, гипс тонированный. 40,5 х 73 х 42
- The State Russian Museum
- Ск-487
Каракатица-осьминог с рыбой
- 1898
- Terracotta. 33 х 27 х 32
- The State Russian Museum
- Ск-1145
Кладбище зимой
- 1898
- Watercolours, gouache. 25 х 25,6
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-11124
Лебедь
- 1898
- Watercolours, gouache, . 34,4 х 27,8
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-11123
Октябрь
- 1898
- etching. И.: 34,3 х 51,4; д.: 35,8 х 53,6; л: 53,4 х 79,3
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-32098
Портрет художника А. П. Соколова
- 1898
- Canvas, oil. 100 х 81
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4374
Тишина
- Canvas, oil. 96 х 128
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4276
Portrait of Maxim Gorky
- 1899
- Canvas, oil. 75 x57
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-8471
Баба с лошадью
- 1899
- etching, . И.: 27 х 36; л.: 49,5 х 59,4
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-36458
Идиллия. Карикатура на М. К. Тенишеву и представителей «Мира искусств»
- Paper, ink, nib, watercolours, bronze. 27 x 42,7
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-46598
Корабли
- 1899
- Цветная литография. 11,7 х 27
- The State Russian Museum
- АФ-28889
Лужайка
- 1899
- Cardboard, pastel. 33 х 42
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2128
Морская царевна
- 1899–1900
- Майолика, цветная глазурь с металлическим отблеском, восстановительный обжиг. 60 x 30 x 24
- The State Russian Museum
- ФС-1478
Портрет А. П. Нурока
- 1899
- Lithography. И.: 31 х 21; л.: 35,5 х 27,3
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-41073
Портрет А. П. Остроумовой-Лебедевой
- 1899
- Lithography. И.: 22,8 х 23,8; л.: 24,2 х 31,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-39982
Портрет В. В. Матэ (в пальто и шляпе)
- 1899
- Офорт (в тоне сепии). И.: 19,7 х 13,3; л.: 31,9 х 24,4
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-28220
Портрет Д. В. Философова
- 1899
- Lithography. И.: 27,7 х 24,6; л.: 48,5 х 39,8
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-20394
Так сказал Заратустра (Поражение Стасовым сторонников нового направления в искусстве)
- 1899
- Paper, watercolours, , ink, nib. 31,4 x 48
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-8426
Sadko on the Shore of Lake Ilmen
- Majolica plate design on a subject from Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s Opera Sadko
- 1899
- Watercolours, , , graphite pencil. 51,8 х 65,9 (овал)
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-5413
Peter II and Princess Elizabeth Riding to Hounds
- 1900
- paper mounted on cardboard, tempera, gouache. 41 x 39
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4291
In the middle of the eighteenth century, the period of Rococo, the different forms of hunting which had been popular in Russia since ancient times acquired a ritual and spectacular character. The elegant Tsarist horsemen, inflamed by high-spirited conversation and the imminent hunt, ride purposefully past the half-destroyed village and the poverty stricken villagers, accompanied by a splendid cortege of courtiers. By juxtaposing two Russias, the aristocratic Russia, in step with Europe, and the peasant Russia, dark and denied all rights, Serov exposes the source of the insurmountable contradictions of Russian life. Play and Passion in Russian Fine Art. St-Petersburg. 1999. P. 304.
Designed to illustrate Nikolai Kutepov’s book Tsarist and Imperial Hunting, Valentin Serov’s work reflects the new understanding of history painting at the turn of the century. Serov and the other members of the World of Art preferred poetic images of daily life in the “golden age” of the eighteenth century to the more important historical events. The artist depicted historical themes in order to reflect on the fate of his country. He depicts a dashing cavalcade consisting of the fourteen year-old Tsar Peter II (1727–30) and Princess Elizabeth, daughter of Peter the Great, against a background of rickety huts and down-at-heel peasants. Dynamic, poignant and piquant, Peter II and Princess Elizabeth Riding to Hounds offers an excellent example of Serov’s painterly mastery. The rustic landscape in autumn makes an important contribution to the artistic image.
Portrait of Alexander III
- 1900
- Canvas, oil. 160 х 107
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2004
Alexander III (the Peacemaker; 1845–1894) was the second son of Emperor Alexander II and Maria Alexandrovna, née Princess Maria of Hesse and by Rhine of Darmstadt. Before the death of his older brother Nikolai (1865) he was not in line for the throne and was preparing for a military career. In 1866 he married the Danish princess Dagmar, daughter of King Christian IX, who was christened Maria Fyodorovna when she converted to the Russian Orthodox religion. He came to the throne in March 1881 after the tragic death of his father, who was killed by terrorists. He conducted a conservative domestic policy which revealed that his main intention, having reversed the positive results of the liberal reforms, was to stave off the beginning of a period of revolutionary chaos in Russia. There was an increase in censorship, new regulations were introduced in universities, there were restrictions on autonomy, and the position of land captain was established in rural districts, aimed at securing the pre-eminence of the gentry in the social hierarchy. National politics were characterised by an attempt to prioritise a cohesive internal trajectory for a polyethnic Russia in place of a plethora of ethnic Russians.
The stabilization of the political situation created the prerequisites for an impressive economic and cultural emergence. The budgetary deficit caused by the construction of the Trans-Siberian Railway was overcome, the military was rearmed, the Black Sea fleet was reinstated, and a network of Parish Church Schools and professional-technical schools was organised to meet the new needs of industrialisation. Russia’s foreign policy was notable for its peacefulness and ensured international security. Giving state and personal support to museums, he established cultural centers in both capitals and in the provinces and was a passionate collector of art. His collections laid the foundations for the Emperor Alexander III Russian Museum in St. Petersburg.
Мир искусства
- 1900
- Цинкография. 32,3 х 25
- The State Russian Museum
- АФ-33634
Пегас
- 1900
- Цинкография. И.: 7,7 х 7,4; л.: 13,5 х 18,6
- The State Russian Museum
- АФ-34457-а
Портрет детей С. С. Боткина
- Paper, watercolours, graphite pencil. 49,8 х 40,6
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-13439
Радость безмерная (Василий Васильевич Стасов, Илья Ефремович Репин, Михаил Васильевич Нестеров, Сергей Дягилев и другие)
- Paper, watercolours, gold. 26,6 x 42,9
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-11113
Idols
- 1901
- Cardboard, gouache. 49 х 56
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1961
Portrait of Anna Ostroumova
- 1901
- Canvas, oil. 87 x 63
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-6533
The works of Konstantin Somov, with their retrospective stylised design, delicate taste and cultural knowledge of the past, are characteristic of the World of Art movement. He studied at the Imperial Academy of Arts with Anna Ostroumova and kept a friendly relationship with her. They were both members of the association “World of Art”.
Anna Petrovna Ostroumova (married name: Ostroumova-Lebedeva; 1871–1955), artist, painter and graphic artist. She studied at the School of Technical Drawing and then at the Imperial Academy of Arts under Ilya Repin from 1892 until 1900. She worked in the studio of James Whistler from 1898 until 1899. She was a member of the World of Art union, a People’s Artist of the RSFSR (1946) and a full member of the Academy of Arts (1949). The main theme of her work was St Petersburg, and she dedicated several decades of unstinting labour to its depiction. She wrote the book “Autobiographical Notes”.
Konstantin Somov’s portrait of Anna Ostroumova was the result of long and arduous work. The sitter later recalled: “Somov spent a very long time painting me – seventy-three sittings sometimes lasting up to four hours … He began to paint my face in small sections, which were immediately finished. Begining with my forehead, which he took several sittings to paint, he descended to the eyebrows, where he also worked for a long time, then one eye, then the other, etc. I remember that he required five sittings to paint my mouth. When he had finished my chin, i.e. the whole face, he did not return to what had already been painted … the portrait was both like and unlike me. The facial features, the posture, the incline of the head and the hand dangling on the arm of the chair – all that is me. At the same time, I can discern much that is Somov’s shining through and even dominating the portrait. Most importantly, there are several features which are not typical of me. Somov depicts some dreamy, sorrowful figure. Though occasionally subject to fits of melancholy, I was active, energetic and at times a great jester.” Elements of stylisation and refinement can be seen in Somov’s scrupulous painting technique, similar to that of the Old Masters, and the elegant combination of black, grey and violet tones.
Portrait of Ivan Bilibin
- 1901
- Canvas, oil. 142 х 110
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1876
Ivan Yakovlevich Bilibin (1876–1942), graphic artist, theatre artist and painter. He graduated from the Law Department of St Petersburg University (1896–1900) and studied at the Drawing School of the Society for the Encouragement of Arts (1895–1900), at Anton Ažbe’s school in Munich (1898) at the Princess Maria Tenisheva Art School (1898–1900) under Ilya Repin, and at the Higher Arts Institute of the Imperial Academy of Arts (1900–1904). He was a founding member of the World of Art union (1900–1917) and drew pictures for the journals Mir iskusstva (World of Art), Adskaya pochta (Hell’s Mail), Zhupel (Bugbear), Zolotoye runo (Golden Fleece) and others. From 1907 he worked in theatre. He illustrated and designed children’s books for St.Petersburg publishers such as bylinas, folk tales and tales from Pushkin (1900s), and in the 1930s he illustrated tales from Pushkin for the State Literature Publishers. He had his own profoundly individual way of designing books, at whose heart lay motifs from Russian folk art and from the Middle Ages.
Автопортрет
- 1901
- Canvas, oil. 55 х 42
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1730
Д. С. Мережковский. Двойная бездна
- 1901
- Цинкография. 11 х 9,6
- The State Russian Museum
- АФ-1049
Новая Минерва (Торжество Дягилева)
- Paper, watercolours. 29 x 42 (в свету)
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-35902
Портрет С. Ю. Витте с сеттером
- 1901
- Bronze. 35 х 32 х 35
- The State Russian Museum
- Ск-550
Портрет графа Д. И. Толстого
- 1901
- Canvas, oil. 107 х 79
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2157
Peter I Riding to Hounds
- 1902
- paper mounted on cardboard, tempera. 29 x 50
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4290
In this composition, notable for the beauty of its finish and the sharply contrasting forms, Serov masterfully recreated the colourfulness of the hunt in old seventeenth century Russia, poeticizing the endless snow-covered expanse under a pale, northern sky. Play and Passion in Russian Fine Art. St-Petersburg. 1999. P. 305.
Виньетка
- 1902
- Рамка розового цвета, цинкография. И.: 13,2 х 19,7; л.: 14,8 х 21,4
- The State Russian Museum
- АФ-16111
Встреча у колонны
- 1901–1903
- Paper, watercolours, ink, nib. 17,8 х 12,2
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-279
Мир искусства
- 1902
- Цинкография. И.: 29,6 х 23; л.: 31,2 х 24,6
- The State Russian Museum
- АФ-32873
Мир искусства. V год издания
- 1902
- Цинкография. И.: 18,2 х 11,5; л.: 24,4 х 16,6
- The State Russian Museum
- АФ-40939
Портрет Льва Бакста
- gouache, ink. 47 х 34
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-13438
Ceremonial Sitting of the State Council on 7 May 1901 Marking the Centenary of its Foundation
- 1903
- Canvas, oil. 400 x 877
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4088
Founded by Tsar Alexander I (1801–25), the State Council celebrated its centenary with a ceremonial sitting in the Round Room of the Mariinsky Palace in St Petersburg on 7 May 1901. All the members of the State Council and the State Chancellery attended in full-dress uniform. Tsar Nicholas II (1894–1917) and senior members of the Imperial family are flanked by their ministers. Repin painted the scene from behind the chairs on the right (next to the columns).
He rapidly sketched the original modello on a canvas on which the perspective of the hall had already been marked out, working from a previously selected point. The artist later turned this study into a large picture with the help of two students of the Imperial Academy of Arts — Boris Kustodiev and Ivan Kulikov. Every member of the State Council is depicted in natural and diverse poses, with strong physical resemblances.
Portrait of Count Felix Sumarokov-Elston (Later Prince Yussupov)
- 1903
- Canvas, oil. 89 x 71,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4304
Count Felix Felixovich Sumarokov-Elston (1887–1967): Son of Count Felix Felixovich Sumarokov-Elston and Princess Zinaida Yussupova. Inherited the title of Prince Yussupov (1917). Married Grand Duchess Irina Alexandrovna.
In terms of its painting and delivery of the human character, Portrait of Count Felix Sumarokov-Elston (Later Prince Yussupov) is one of the most elegant works in the gallery of portraits of Russians of various classes painted by Valentin Serov from the mid-1880s onwards. The image of the sixteen-year-old schoolboy reflects many features later typical of this refined aristocrat, who participated in the murder of Grigory Rasputin in 1916. Although Serov took two years to paint the portrait, this fresh and sharp picture appears to have been executed in one sitting. The dog is masterly painted, with subtle understanding of animal psychology. In his memoirs, Felix Yussupov wrote that Serov considered the dog to be his best sitter. The artist’s portraits of Felix and his father, mother and elder brother (1902–03, Russ. Mus.) constitute an original cycle of family portraits, extremely rare for the twentieth century. The Yussupov series represents one of Valentin Serov’s highest achievements in portraiture.
Portrait of Nadezhda Stanyukovich
- 1903
- Canvas, oil. 195 x 105
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2034
Nadezhda Yurievna Stanyukovich (née Ryzhkova) (1876–1905):_Wife of Vladimir Konstantinovich Stanyukovich (1874–1939), art historian, curator of the Russian Museum, author of first monograph on Victor Borisov-Musatov (published 1906). Both were close friends of the artist.
Postman
- 1903
- Paper, watercolours, gouache. 37 x 20,3 (очерчен)
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-13527
Bakst’s fame as a stage set designer began with the ballet Die Puppenfee. Banal in content and traditional in choreography, this ballet was created by Nikolai and Sergei Legat and staged across Europe. Its completely new ring was all down to the “talented toils” of Bakst. The scene was St Petersburg of the 1840s–1850s — Gostiny Dvor, with its doll bazaars, and Nevsky Prospect, seen beyond the windows of the toy shop. The costume designs were firmly in keeping with the real sights of old St Petersburg. Among them, the Postman in his uniform is especially characteristic. The French doll, in her austere and elegant dress with its minute details, represents the kingdom of dolls that comes to life in the course of the action. Bakst’s high artistic taste and feeling for style allowed him to turn “that silly little ballet Die Puppenfee” into “a wonderful, purely Hoffmann fairy tale” (Benois). In 1909 the ballet correspondent of the Rech newspaper wrote: “Die Puppenfee is one of the most elegant and refined creations of modern art. The delight of this delicate miniature charm knows no limits ... It is impossible to tear one’s eyes away from these entrancing costumes, where every dot, speck, bow, curl, glove and even every beauty-spot is so delicately thought out, so stylish, so vividly necessary.”
Гибель богов
- 1903
- Цинкография. 22,2 х 17,7
- The State Russian Museum
- АФ-1020
Портрет Н. И. Бобрикова
- 1902–1903
- Canvas, oil. 60,5 х 43
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1887
Портрет П. И. Саломона
- 1902–1903
- Canvas mounted on cardboard, oil. 61,7 х 46,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-8111
Чаепитие
- 1903
- Cardboard, gouache, tempera. 23,1 x 47,7
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-56813
Flowers and Fruits on a Grand Piano
- Canvas, oil. 79 х 101
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2217
In the end of 1903 a significant event occurred in Grabar’s life – he met a painter and businessman Nikolai Meshcherin, a son of the founder of the Danilovskaya textile factory. Grabar was invited to the Dugino estate located to the south from Moscow in a beautiful place on the Pahra river. Grabar spent there more than 10 years and created all his masterpieces of 1900s. It was there where Grabar created his still lifes that got him recognition at once. It took the artist only four days to paint “Flowers and Fruits on a Grand Piano”, one of his most renowned still lifes. The work was painted by multicoloured strokes, full of light and air. The still life was a success at the exhibitions arranged by Sergei Diaghilev in St. Petersburg, Paris and Berlin as well as at the International exhibition in Venice. The fragmentary composition of the canvas, struggle of light and shadow, the expressive surface texture create the feeling of changeable environment full of dynamics and pulsation of life. The artist presented the canvas to his friend and benefactor Nikolai Meshcherin.
Portrait of Nadezhda Zabela-Vrubel with Birches in the Background
- 1904
- Paper, watercolours, pastel, gouache, charcoal pencil, graphite pencil, chalk. 67,6 x 32,3
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-14996
Rosebush after the Rain
- 1904
- Canvas, oil. 99 х 145,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Жб-1199
Six-Winged Seraph
- 1904
- Canvas, oil. 131 x 155
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1838
Six-Winged Seraph is linked to the theme of the prophetic mission of the artist, one that greatly occupied Symbolists of various lands and times. From the 1890s onwards, inspired by Alexander Pushkin’s poem The Prophet, Mikhail Vrubel dedicated a series of compositions in painting and graphic art to this theme. The artist seems to paint an inner vision of a “fire-like” messenger of God, an angel with a fiery gaze, the patron and merciless judge of the artist-prophet, reminding artists of their sublime mission and calling them “to burn people’s hearts with a word” and awaken their souls “from the trifles of everyday life with majestic images.” Vrubel’s inner experiences of the time when he was working on Fallen Demon are reflected in the painting’s sublime construction and its assiduity of feeling. The startling tones conjure up associations with the Byzantine mosaics in Venice and Ravenna seen by the artist in his youth.
Акации весной
- 1904
- Canvas, oil. 118 х 130
- The State Russian Museum
- ЖБ-1201
Барка (Нева)
- 1904
- Ксилография цветная. И.: 9,2 х 13,9; л.: 9,4 х 14,1
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-36198
Весенний мотив
- Paper, . И.:18,6 х 27,1. Л.:18,6 х 27,1
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр.-36340
Гимн солнцу
- 1904
- Цинкография. И.: 10,8 х 15,5 (овал); л.: 13,4 х 19,5
- The State Russian Museum
- АФ-34452
Народное творчество Русского Севера
- 1904
- Цинкография. И.: 20,4 х 16,2; л.: 22,7 х 18,4
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-24817
Перспектива Царского
- 1904
- Ксилография цветная. И., л.: 12,1 х 21,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-40044
Портрет Сергея Павловича Дягилева (1872–1929)
- 1904
- Canvas, oil. 97 х 83
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1922
In Love
- 1905
- Porcelain, painting over glaze. 14 х 20 х 13
- The State Russian Museum
- Ф-10280
Imperial Porcelain Factory.
Konstantin Somov first showed In Love at the World of Art exhibition of 1906. The ironic interpretation of the love scene and the costumes and subject types liken this porcelain group to the artist’s circle of paintings and drawings on analogous themes.
Peasant Women
- 1905
- Canvas, oil. 205 x 159
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1914
A student of the Imperial Academy of Arts at the end of the nineteenth century, Philipp Malyavin introduced a new type of peasant woman into Russian art — a stately, proud and sometimes intrepidly independent woman. His models were the inhabitants of the villages of Ryazan Province, dressed in bright festive attire. The painting is a sublime and romantic image of Russian womenfolk, with their wholesome characters and inner stature. The two heroines are strong and healthy women, filled with a sense of their own dignity and virtue. They display integrity of character and inner strength. The faces of the girls are meaningful, the looks in their eyes are intent and enigmatic, the colours of their attire glimmer in a bewitching manner. The expressive images are intensified by the artist’s inspired and temperamental painting. Malyavin contributed Peasant Women to the World of Art exhibition of 1906 and Sergei Diaghilev’s L’Exposition de l’Art Russe in Paris and Berlin.
Slavs on the Dnieper
- 1905
- Tempera, cardboard. 67 х 89
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1975
«Во все время разговора он стоял позадь забора…»
- 1905
- Paper, watercolours, ink. И.: 21,5 х 27,5; л.: 37,2 х 42,9 (очерчен)
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-57753
Афиша Историко-художественной выставки русских портретов
- 1905
- Цветная литография. 45,5 х 65,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр. луб.-2588
Маска (Дама с маской)
- 1905
- Porcelain, painting over glaze, gilding. 22 х 15,8 х 12,9
- The State Russian Museum
- Ф-5199
Ноябрь. Крылечко
- 1905
- Cardboard, tempera. 76 х 100,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2259
Пир у князя Гвидона
- 1905
- Paper, watercolours, ink, nib. 36,2 x 41,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-48964
Сон
- 1905
- Canvas, tempera. 68 х 69
- The State Russian Museum
- ЖБ-1051
Утро
- 1905
- plywood, watercolours, gouache, ink, nib. 21,8 х 22,2
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-34024
„И, дивясь, перед собой видит город он большой…“
- 1905
- Paper, watercolours, ink. 30 х 22,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-2132
Commedia dell’ arte
- 1906
- Oil. 68,5 x 101
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2102
The picture recalls an episode from the burlesque comedy Punchinello. On the proscenium there is the dimly - lit angular figure of an old man getting down on his knees with some difficulty before a young coquette. A harlequin purpose fully moves towards the footlights shouting witticisms and slander. The hero and trouble - maker, Punchinello, gently dances on the spot, dressed in a robe. The conceited Captain, with a sword under his coat, sneaks up indignantly. All three comment on what is happening by the use of grimaces and buffoon - like movements. The sometimes brightly blazing and sometimes gently glimmering golden, red and green colours heighten the sense of the festive magic of the scene. The world of the old, slightly naïve and farcical commedia dell' arte appeared in Benois' work in all its fascination and refined craftsmanship, an echo of majestic epochs lost forever. Play and Passion in Russian Fine Art. St-Petersburg. 1999. P. 154.
Le Bain de la Marquise
- 1906
- Cardboard, gouache. 49,6 х 51,4
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-5135
Portrait of Sergei Diaghilev and his Nanny
- 1906
- Canvas, oil. 161 x 116
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2117
Sergei Pavlovich Diaghilev (1872–1929) was one of the central figures of fin-de-siècle cultural life in St Petersburg. Before launching the Saisons Russes in Paris, he founded and published the World of Art (Mir iskusstva) magazine (1898–1904), curated a series of important art shows and wrote articles on art and the theatre.
One of Léon Bakst’s most outstanding works of portraiture, Portrait of Sergei Diaghilev and his Nanny is, perhaps, the most famous image of the legendary Russian impresario, who was a close friend of the artist. Diaghilev’s slightly fastidious pose, raised eyebrows and appraising glance betray a self-confident and authoritative personality. The figure of the old nanny sitting in the corner was a typical feature of the way of life of the old Russian nobility. Contrasting the figure of Diaghilev, she offers a clearer insight into the personality of the sitter — a former provincial whose energy and talent helped him to not only conquer the Russian capital, but the whole of Europe as well.
Vision antique
- 1906
- Paper, ink, nib. 16,1 х 17,9
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-2057
Бассейн Флоры в Версале
- Canvas, oil. 53 x 65
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2094
Вакх
- 1906
- Bronze, . 25 х 24 х 21
- The State Russian Museum
- Ск-1985
Каталог выставки «Salon d’Automne. Exposition de l’Arte Russe. Русская художественная выставка в Париже». Paris
- 1906
- Paper, . 16,5 х 13
- The State Russian Museum
- 2В 451 № 17938
Соколиная охота
- 1906
- Cardboard, watercolours, gouache. 63 x 47,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-56295
Торжество в небе
- 1906
- Canvas, oil. 49 х 57,5
- The State Russian Museum
- ЖБ-11217
Хоровод
- 1906 (?)
- Cardboard, oil. 71 х 75,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Жб-1229
Портрет Вальмира Федоровича Нувеля
- 1914
- Graphite pencil, sanguine. 37,2 x 26
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-3244
Group Portrait of the Members of the World of Art. 1916–20. Modello for an unpainted picture
- Canvas, oil. 52 х 89
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1864
Depicts (from left to right): Igor Grabar (1871–1960), Nicholas Roerich (1874–1947), Yevgeny Lanceray (1875–1946), Ivan Bilibin (1876– 1942), Alexander Benois (1870–1960), Georgy Narbut (1886–1920), Nikolai Milioti (1874– 1962), Konstantin Somov (1869–1939), Mstislav Dobuzhinsky (1875–1957), Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin (1878–1939), Anna Ostroumova-Lebedeva (1871–1955) and Boris Kustodiev (1878–1927).
In 1910, on behalf of the Tretyakov Gallery, Igor Grabar invited Boris Kustodiev to paint a group portrait of the members of the World of Art. Himself a frequent contributor to the World of Art exhibitions, Kustodiev willingly agreed and began work at the first opportunity. Between 1913 and 1916, he painted a series of personal portraits from life in mixed media. Almost all the artist’s compositional versions were later employed in this modello of the intended large group portrait, which was in fact never painted. Kustodiev depicts the artists sitting round a table laid for tea in Mstislav Dobuzhinsky’s drawing room. Engaged in friendly discussion, the figures are portrayed in a series of diverse movements, gestures and poses. The intended genre interpretation was both unusual for a group portrait and compositionally daunting. The artist’s study evoked all sorts of surmises and conjectures regarding the relationships between the sitters and the state of the World of Art at that time.
Unknown painter
Gsell Georg
1673, St Gallen, Switzerland – 1740, St PetersburgPainter, graphic artist. He painted portraits, murals, genre paintings, and icons. In 1690–1695 he studied in Vienna under the Antwerp painter А. Schoonjans. In 1704 he moved to Antwerp, and subsequently, to Amsterdam, where he married the artist Dorothea Maria Henrietta Graff in 1715. In 1717 (other sources mention 1716 and 1718) he came to Russia at the invitation of Peter the Great, whom he met in Amsterdam. He was in charge of the Picture Gallery in Peterhof. He painted the plafonds at the Summer Palace, and the rockwork in the Summer Garden. In 1726 he taught drawing and painting in the Academy of Sciences. He also worked at the Kunstkamera, made projects of illuminations, and designed compositions for the triumphal gates. He painted the picture for the dome of the Peter and Paul Cathedral, as well as nine icons for the interior. In 1729 he created thirteen paintings for the Lutheran Church of Saint Peter on Nevsky Prospect: the knee-high images of the Apostles and Gospel writers, and an image of the Crucifixion. In 1731 he took part in decorating the Triumphal Gates for the coronation of Anna Ioannovna. In 1728–1731 he made ten paintings for the Peter and Paul Cathedral based on the Stations of the Cross and the Passion of Christ. In 1735 he presented a project of murals for the Senate Hall of the Twelve Colleges, but the commission, consisting of Mikhail Zemtsov and Andrei Matveyev, rejected it. In 1738–1739 Georg Gsell helped Jacob von Stäehlin to complete inventories of the painting collections of Peterhof Palaces: Monplaisir, Hermitage, and Marly. For many years he worked at the Kunstkamera. His two sons were painters as well, so the artist was known as “Father Gsell.” Among his students were such artists as Fyodor Cherkasov, A. Grekov, Mikhail Nekrasov, Alexei Malinovkin, Ivan Nesterov, Pyotr Pagin, A. Dedeshin, and Ivan Shereshperov.
Tannauer (Tanauer, Danhauer, Danauer) Johann Gottfried
1680, Saxony (?) – 1737(3?), St PetersburgGerman painter, portrait artist, and miniaturist. Initially, Tannauer would practice watchmaking and music. He studied painting in Venice under S. Bombelli. Subsequently, he lived in Holland, where he would copy Rubens’s paintings. When Peter the Great was abroad, he invited Tannauer to come to Russia upon the recommendation of Johannes Kupezky. On October 1, 1710 an agreement was signed in Vienna, making Tannauer a painter serving in Russia. In March 1711 the artist came to Smolensk. During the Pruth River Campaign, he accompanied Peter the Great, and then settled down in St Petersburg. He was a court artist. Tannauer painted portraits, historical pictures, and miniatures; he also created ink drawings and fixed clocks. His son, Johann Sebastian Tannauer, studied engraving at the Academy of Sciences.
Schurmann, Karl
Karavak Louis
1684, Marseille - 1754, St. PetersburgPainter, portraitist, designer, miniaturist, graphic artist. Member of the third generation of French painters working in Marseilles and Tulon. Invited to Russia by Peter the Great (1715). Lived and worked in St Petersburg (from 1716). Painted portraits of Peter the Great and members of the Imperial family. Painted murals and headed painting work in Peterhof and in the Summer Palace in St Petersburg. Compiled festival projects for the Imperial court. Court artist with an exclusive right to paint Imperial portraits during the reign of Empress Anna Ioannovna (1730-1740) and Empress Elizabeth Petrovna (1741-1761). Taught painting to Ivan Vishnyakov, Alexei Antropov and Mikhail Zakharov.
Nikitin Ivan Nikitich
1680s, Moscow (?) - After 1741Painter, portraitist. Son of a Moscow priest, brother of Roman Nikitin. Possibly educated at the Armoury School of Printing in Moscow. Lived in St Petersburg (from 1711). Studied under Tommaso Redi in Florence as a fellow of Peter the Great (1716-19). Returned to Russia (1720). Court portraitist (from 1721). Painted life portraits of Peter the Great on Kronstadt (1715-21). Married and divorced Maria Fyodorovna Mamens, lady of the bedchamber to Empress Catherine I (1727). Arrested in St Petersburg in connection with the libelling of Archbishop Feofan Prokopovich (1732). Spent five years in the Peter and Paul Fortress. Exiled to Siberia (1737). Released by the Privy Council (1742). Died on the way from Siberia to Moscow.
Adolsky (Odolsky), Ivan-Bolshoi
After 1686 (1691?), Moscow – circa 1758, MoscowPainter and engraver. Adolsky worked at the Moscow Armoury, and in 1710 he was transferred to the Petersburg Armoury Chancellery. From 1721 he was instructor of painting and engraving at the Petersburg Printing House. His students were Moscow icon painters such as K. Yevtikhiyev, as well as painters of the Chancellery of Construction. During the mid 1720s he worked in Petersburg imperial palaces. He returned to Moscow in 1728; and in 1735–1736 he was the supervisor of the Moscow Armoury. The last reports, mentioning him as the supervisor of the Armoury, are dated 1750.
Matveyev Andrei Matveyevich
1702, ? – 1739, St PetersburgPainter, portraitist, iconpainter, author of allegorical and decorative-monumental compositions. Awarded a fellowship to study in Holland by Peter the Great (1716). Studied under Arnold Boonen in Amsterdam (1717–1723) and under Sperwer at the Antwerp Academy of Arts (1723–1727). Returned to St Petersburg and employed by the Chancellery of Construction (1727). Awarded the title of master and headed the team of painters at the Chancellery of Construction (1731). Helped to decorate the Cathedral of St Peter and St Paul and Imperial residences in St Petersburg. Painted icons for the Church of St Simeon and St Anne.
Ludden Johann Paul
l?, Braunschweig (?) — 1739, St PetersburgGerman painter, portraitist, author of history paintings. Came to St Petersburg (according to his own words) in 1728 with engraver Christian-Albert Wortmann. Court painter of Peter II. Made portraits as private commissions.
Prenner, Georg Caspar
Grooth Georg Christoph
1716, Stuttgart – 1749, Saint PetersburgGerman painter. Portraitist. He worked in Russia from 1740 (1?) to 1749. Since December 1743, the Keeper of the Palace art galleries. He also decorated the interiors of palaces and other buildings in St. Petersburg and Tsarskoe Selo. He created a whole gallery of portraits of the Russian aristocracy.
Rokotov Fyodor Stepanovich
1732 (1735), Moscow -1808, MoscowPainter, portraitist. Believed to have studied in his youth under Moscow icon-painters. Moved to St. Petersburg (17505). Studied at the Imperial Academy of Arts (from 1760). Junior assistant (1762). Academician (1765). Returned to Moscow (17605) and worked there as a free artist.
De Veilly (De Velly, Develly) Jean Louis
1730, Paris - 1804, St PetersburgFrench painter, draughtsman, miniaturist, author of monumental paintworks. Lived in Holland, England. Worked in Russia from 1754 to 1804. Signed a contract thereby “was bound to serve to Her Imperial Majesty as a painter at the St Petersburg Academy of Arts” (Russian State Historical Archive, fund 789, inv. l., part 1, 1759, file 6), taught at the Academy (more than a year). Author of portraits and plafonds. Created drawings for engravings.
Antropov Alexei Petrovich
1716, St. Petersburg - 1795, St. PetersburgPainter, portraitist, icon-painter. Studied under Louis Caravaque, Andrei Matveyev and Alexander Zakharov, took lessons from Pietro de Rotari (from 1732). Joined the painting department of the Ministry of Construction (1739), foreman (1749). Helped to decorate the interiors of palaces in and around St Petersburg and Moscow. Painted the interior decor of the Si Petersburg Opera House (1750). Created murals and icons for St Andrew’s Cathedral in Kiev (1750-55). Lived in St Petersburg (from 1758). Worked for the Holy Synod and supervised the work of painters (from 1761), Taught Dmitry Levitsky and Pyotr Drozhdin.
Losenko Anton Pavlovich
1757, Glukhov - 1773 St PetersburgHistory painter, portraitist, draughtsman. Studied at Ivan Argunov\'\'s studio (from 1753) and under Jean-Louis de Velly and Louis-Jean-Francois Lagrenee at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1758-60). Taught at the Imperial Academy of Arts. Adjunct (1762). Fellow of the Imperial Academy of Arts in France (1760-62, 1763-65), studied under Jean Restout and Joseph-Marie Vien. Awarded silver medals for drawings by the Academic des Beaux-Arts in Paris (1763, 1764,1765). Studied in Italy (1765-69). Nominated to the Imperial Academy of Arts (1769), academician and professor (1770). Head of the history painting class, director of the Imperial Academy of Arts (1772-73
Чемесов Евграф Петрович
Argunov Ivan Petrovich
1771, St Petersburg - After 1829Painter, portraitist. Studied art under his father Ivan Argunov, a Sheremetyev serf artist. Copied the paintings of West European artists in the Imperial Hermitage. Freed from serfdom (1816). Made an academician (1818) for his portrait of Pavel Runich (1817). Painted miniature portraits.
Torelli Stefano
Imperial Tapestry Manufactory
Unknown sculptor
Levitsky Dmitry Grigoryevich
1735, Kiev - 1822, St PetersburgLeading Russian eighteenth-century painter and portraitist. Son of Grigory Levitsky Nos, a priest and Ukrainian engraver. Moved to St Petersburg (c. 1758). Studied under Alexei Antropov. Worked in Moscow (17605). Nominated to the Academy (c. 1769). Academician (1770). Headed the portraiture class at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1771-87). Councillor (1776), member of the Academy council (1780). Retired for unknown reasons (1787). Worked as a free painter. Returned to the Academy council (1807).
Christinecke Carl Ludwig
1732 (3?), St. Petersburg - between 1792 and 1794, St. PetersburgDrozhdin Pyotr Semyonovich
174(5?), ?– 1805, St Petersburg (?)Painter; portraitist. Studied at the icon-painting studio of Trinity Lavra of St Sergius, then under Alexei Antropov in St Petersburg and later under Dmitry Levitsky. Appointed academician (1776), academician (1785). Copied paintings by Guido Reni, Pietro Testa, Jacopo Amigoni.
Shibanov Mikhail
SHCHUKIN, Stepan Semyonovich
1762, Moscow - 1828, St PetersburgPainter, portraitist, miniaturist, author of church paintings, teacher. Son of an army corporal Semyon Petrov and Euphemia Evlampieva. After the death of his parents, entered the Orphan House in Moscow (1765), where he received his prima
Kuchin, Grigory
Artist of the second half of the 18th century
Painter, portraitist. Worked in St Petersburg and Moscow (1770s–1780s). Arranged puppet shows for residents of the Moscow Orphanage.
Alexeyev Fyodor Yakovlevich
1753/1754 (?). St Petersburg - 1824, St PetersburgPainter, founding father of the Russian school of urbanscape painting. Son of a guard at the Imperial Academy of Arts. Studied fruit and flower and landscape painting at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1766-73). Awarded a fellowship to Venice (1773-77). Studied under Giuseppe Moretti and Pietro Gaspari. Returned to St Petersburg and worked as a painter for the Imperial Theatres (1799). Copied paintings by Canaletto and Bernardo Bellotto for Catherine the Great. Nominated to the Academy (1794). Sketched places visited by Catherine the Great (1787) in south Russia (1795). Painted urbanscapes in Moscow (1800). Councillor of the Imperial Academy of Arts (1802), Taught perspective painting at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1803-24).
Argunov Nikolai Ivanovich
1771, St Petersburg — after 1829, ?Painter, portraitist, author of miniature portraits, decorator. Studied art under his father Ivan Argunov. Serf artist of Count Nikolai Sheremetev. Copied the paintings in the Imperial Hermitage (1797). By order of his owner, painted portraits of artists from the serf theatre, parade portraits of Paul I, portraits of Sheremetev and his wife, the former actress P. Kovalyova-Zhemchugova. Freed from serfdom by the bequeath of Count Nikolai Sheremetev (1816). Appointed to the Imperial Academy of Arts (1816). Academician of the Imperial Academy of Arts (1818).
Voille Jean Louis
1744, Paris – after 1803, ?Shubin Fedot Ivanovich
1740, Archangel Province - 1805Leading Russian Neoclassical sculptor, portraitist. Son of a tusk carver in Archangel Province. Studied under Nicolas-Francois Gillet at the Imperial Academy of Arts through the intercession of Mikhail Lomonosov (1761-66), under Jean-Baptiste Pigalle in Paris (from 1767) and under Joseph Nollekens in Rome (from 1770). Combination of psychology and Neoclassical idealisation was highly rated by Catherine the Great. Portrayed many leading Russian statesmen.
Lampi Johann Baptist I
1751, Romeno, Southern Tyrol — 1830, ViennaAustrian painter, miniaturist, portraitist, author of compositions on historical and mythological themes. Son of the Tyrolean artist Matteo Lampi. Studied under F. Kb\'nig and F. N. Streicher in Salzburg, thereafter under F. and D. Lorenzi in Verona. Worked in Italy (1770-1780), Austria (1781-1788), Poland (1788-1791) at the invitation of the King Stanistaw August Poniatowski, and in Russia (1792-1797). Member of the Verona Academy of Arts (from 1773), professor of the Vienna Academy of Arts (from 1786) for the portrait of Joseph II as a Grand Master of the Order of the Golden Fleece; honoured associate member of the St Petersburg Academy of Arts (from 1794). Taught Russian artists. Head of the Council of the Verona Academy of Arts (from 1800). Handed over his studio to Johann Baptiste Lampi the Younger and practically stopped working (1822).
Borovikovsky Vladimir Lukich
1757, Mirgorod - 1825, St PetersburgPainter, draughtsman, miniaturist, icon painter, portraitist. Born into a family of low rank Cossacks. Studied painting under his father, the icon painter Luke Borovik, in Mirgorod. Listed "above the specified number" in the Mirgorod regiment where his father and relatives served (1774). Awarded the rank of "comrade of the colours" (1783), resigned with the rank of lieutenant. Moved to St Petersburg (1788) and studied under Dmitry Levitsky and Johann Baptiste I Lampi. Nominated to the Imperial Academy of Arts (1794), academician of portrait painting (1795). Councillor of the Imperial Academy of Arts (1802). Contributed to the iconostasis of the Kazan Cathedralin St Petersburg (1804). Mason and member of Ekaterina Tatarinova\'\'s mystical sect.
TONCI, Salvatore (Nikolai Ivanovich)
1756, Rome — 1844, MoscowItalian painter, portraitist. Studied art in Italy. Member of the Accademia de Forti in Rome (1792) and Accademia of Bologna (1793). Moved to St Petersburg (1795). Moved in Moscow (1804) and married Princess Natalia Gagarina (1778–1832). Lived in Vladimir (1812–1814). Worked as inspector at the Kremlin Construction Department (from 1815). One of the founders of the School of Architecture. Retired in the rank of collegiate counselor (1842) after 25 years of service.
Kiprensky Orest Adamovich
1772, Nezhinskaya (St Petersburg Province) - 1836, RomePortraitist, history painter, draughtsman.
Illegitimate son of a serf woman, Anna Gavrilova, who gave him the name Kipreisky, later changed to Kiprensky. Grew up in the family of his foster father Adam Schwalde. Emancipated from serfdom and enrolled in the Imperial Academy of Arts (1788). Studied history painting under Grigory Ugryumov and Gabriele-Francois Doyen. Fellow of the Imperial Academy of Arts (1803-09). Worked in St Petersburg, Moscow and Tver. Academician of portrait painting (1812), councillor of the Imperial Academy of Arts (1815). Contributed to the exhibitions of the Imperial Academy of Arts. Lived in Italy (1816-23, 1828-36). Contributed to the Paris Salon (1822). Donated Self-Portrait (1820) to the Galleria degli Uffizi in Florence (1825). Appointed second-class professor of history and portrait painting with automatic member¬ship of the nobility (1831). Councillor of the Accademia di Belle Arti in Naples (1831). Buried at Sant\'\' Andrea delle Fratte in Rome.
Voronikhin Andrey Nikifirovich
1759 New Usolye, Perm province. - 1814, St. PetersburgMitoire, Benois Charles
17… ?–after 1830, ?French painter and lithographer, portraitist, genre painter. Became a Russian citizen (1806). Appointed to the Imperial Academy of Arts (from 3 March 1813) for the “drawn from life” portrait. Academician of the Imperial Academy of Arts (from 1813) for the portrait of FeodosiusShchedrin.
Яковлев Иван Еремеевич
Reichel Carl Christian Filipp
Venetsianov Alexei Gavrilovich
1780, Moscow - 1847, Poddubie (Tver Province)Founding father of Russian peasant genre painting. Painter, portraitist, etcher, lithographer. Son of a Moscow merchant, educated at private boarding school, worked as a draughtsman. Moved to St Petersburg (1802) and worked as a land surveyor for the crown properties and forestry departments. Studied painting independently, copied works in the Imperial Hermitage and drew pastel portraits. Academician (1811). Resigned from the civil service, moved to the country and painted genre scenes from life (early 1820s). Exhibited at the Imperial Academy of Arts and the Society for the Encouragement of Artists. Had many students, who formed the Venetsianov school in Russian art. Killed in a road accident at the Milyukov estate.
Dawe George Edward
1781, London — 1829, Kentish Town (near London)Painter, draughtsman; portraitist. Son and student of engraver F. Dawe. Elder brother of engraver Henry Edward Dawe. Studied at the Royal Academy of Arts in London (1803). Academician (1813). Honourary member of the academies of arts of Florence, Dresden, Stockholm and Paris. Worked in Russia at the invitation of Emperor Alexander I (1819). Together with his Russian assistances Alexander Polyakov and Vasily Golike created 322 portraits of Russian generals for the Military Gallery in the Winter Palace. Produced many paintings on commission. Honourary associate member of the Imperial Academy of Arts in St Petersburg (1820). First portrait painter of the Imperial Court (1828). Returned to London (1829).
Pnin, Pyotr
Tropinin Vasily Andreyevich
1776, Karpovo (Novgorod Province) - 1857, MoscowPortraitist, genre painter, landscapist, draughtsman. Serf of Count Minich and then Count Morkov. External student at the Imperial Academy of Arts (from 1804). Called home by his owner, worked as a serf painter in the Ukraine and Moscow. Freed from serfdom and nominated to the Imperial Academy of Arts (1823). Academician (1824). Mostly worked in Moscow, influencing the Moscow school of painting. Painted portraits of such contemporaries as Alexander Pushkin and single-figure genre compositions. Contributed to many exhibitions in Moscow and St Petersburg.
Warnek Alexander Grigoryevich
1782, St Petersburg - 1843, St PetersburgPainter, draughtsman, portraitist. Son of Georg Dietrich Warnek, a mahogany furniture maker. Studied at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1795-1803). Fourteenth-class artist. Awarded a fellowship to Italy (1804-09). Academician of portraiture for Portrait of the Writer, Historian, Ethnographer, Geographer, Archaeologist and Honorary Member of the Imperial Academy of Arts Ivan Pototsky (1810). Painted icons for the iconostasis of the Kazan Cathedral (1810). Taught portraiture at the Imperial Academy of Arts (from 1810) and miniature painting (from 1815). Councillor (1814), second-class professor (1831), first-class professor (1832), professor emeritus (1834). Curator of drawings and prints at the Imperial Hermitage (from 1824). Contributed to the work of the Society for the Encouragement of Arts. Contributed to the exhibitions of the Imperial Academy of Arts (1814-24).
Bruni Fidelio (Fyodor Antonovich)
1801, Milan -1875, St PetersburgPainter, engraver, author of religious and history compositions, portraitist. Son of the painter and sculptor Antonio Baroffi-Bruni. Moved to Russia with his father (1807). Studied under Alexei Yegorov, Andrei Ivanov and Vasily Shebuyev at the Imperial Academy of Arts (from 1809). Graduated with a first-class degree (1818). Moved to Rome to con¬tinue his art education (1819). Returned to Russia and painted portraits and icons for churches and cathedrals in St Petersburg and environs (1835-38). Lived and worked in Rome (1838-43, 1843-45). Honorary member of the Academies of Art of Bologna and Milan, professor of the Florentine Academy of Arts and St Luke\'\'s Academy in Rome. Taught at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1836-38, 1846-71). Second-class professor (1836), first-class professor (1846), rector of painting and sculpture (1855-71). Curator of the Imperial Hermitage picture gallery (1849-64), headed the mosaic studio at the Imperial Academy of Arts (from 1866
Brioschi Vicentio
1786, Florence - 1843 St. PetersburgPainter, lithographer, history painter, portraitist. Studied under P. Benvenuti at the Accademia di Belle Arti in Florence. Worked in St Petersburg (from 1811). Appointed painter (1812), academician of the Imperial Academy of Arts for Cain Cursed by the Lord for Fratricide and Running from the Wrath of God (1813). Custodian and restorer of painting in the Imperial Hermitage (1817–1843).
Brullov (Bruleau) Karl Pavlovich
1799, St Petersburg -1852, Manziana (near Rome)Painter, watercolourist, draughtsman, history painter, portraitist, genre painter, mural painter. Born into an artistic family. Studied under Anton Ivanov, Alexei Yegorov and Vasily Shebuyev at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1809-22), graduated with a first-class gold medal. Sent to Italy by the Society for the Encouragement of Arts (1822-35). Worked in Milan, Naples and Rome. Won fame in Europe as a portraitist and history painter for such works as The Last Day of Pompeii (1827-33, Russian Museum. St Petersburg)- Returned to Russia and lived in St Petersburg. Honorary freeman (1834), second-degree professor (1835) and first-degree professor (1846) of the Imperial Academy of Arts, where he taught history painting, enjoying the love and respect of his many students. Professor of the Accademia di Belle Arti in Florence. Contributed to exhibitions in Rome, Milan, Paris and St Petersburg. Went abroad on the advice of doctors (1849), settled in Italy (1850).
Alexeyev (Syromyansky, Syromyatnikov) Nikolai Mikhailovich
Zaryanko Sergei Konstantinovich
1818, Lyadovo, Mogilev Province — 1870, MoscowPainter, portraitist, interior artist. Son of an emancipated serf. Studied under Alexei Venetsianov and simultaneously attended the Imperial Academy of Arts. Non-class artist (1836), major silver medal (1841), academician (1843), professor at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1850). Lived in St Petersburg (mid–1820s–1843; 1846–1855) and Moscow (1843–1846; 1856–1870). Taught drawing at various educational establishments. Professor of the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture (1856–1870).
Ge Nikolai Nikolaevich
1831, Voronezh - 1894, Ivanovskoe (Chernihiv Province)Painter, draughtsman, history and religious painter, portraitist, landscapist. Studied mathematics at Kiev University (1847-48) and St Petersburg University (1848- 50). Studied under Pyotr Basin at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1850-57) and influenced by Karl Brullov and Alexander Ivanov. Fellow of the Imperial Academy of Arts in Rome and Florence (1857-63). Lived in Florence (until 1869). Professor (1863; resigned 1869). Founding member of the Society of Travelling Art Exhibitions (1871). Influenced by Leo Tolstoy (i88os). Lived in Kiev and St Petersburg, moved to Ivanovskoe in Chernihiv Province (1876). Contributed to the exhibitions of the Imperial Academy of Arts (from 1857), Society of Travelling Art Exhibitions (1871-94), Exposition Universelle in Paris (1867) and the International Exhibitions in Munich (1869) and London (1873). One-man show at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1870).
Makovsky Konstantin Yegorovich
1839, Moscow — 1915, PetrogradPainter, draughtsman, watercolourist; portraitist, genre artist, author of painting on historical themes. Studied under Mikhail Scotti, Sergei Zaryanko at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture (1851–1858), under Alexei Markov at the Imperial Academy of Arts(1858–1863). Minor gold medal (1862) for Agents of the False Dmitry Kill the Son of Boris Godunov. Contributed to exhibitions (from 1860). One of “the rebellious fourteen” (1863). Academician (1867), professor (1869). Member of the St Petersburg Artel of Artists (1863). Founding member of the Society of Travelling Art Exhibitions (1870) and the St Petersburg Society of Artists (1898).
Perov Vasily Grigoryevich
1834, Tobolsk - 1882, Kuzminki (now part of Moscow)Painter, genre artist, portraitist, history painter, teacher. Studied under Alexander Stupin at the Arzamas School of Art (1846-61). Fellow of the Imperial Academy of Arts in France (1862-64). Academician (1866). Professor (1870). Founding member of the Society of Travelling Art Exhibitions. Taught at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture (1871-82).
Repin Ilya Efimovich
1844, Chuguyev (Kharkiv Province) - 1930, Kuokkala (Finland)Painter, draughtsman, watercolour painter, portraitist, history painter. Studied under local artists at the School of Military Topography in Chuguyev (1854-57), under Ivan Kramskoi at the School of Drawing, Society for the Encouragement of Artists (1863) and at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1864-71). Fellow of the Imperial Academy of Arts in Italy and France, lived mostly in Paris (1873-76). Academician (1876). Professor, full member of the Imperial Academy of Arts (1893). Member of the Society of Travelling Art Exhibitions (1878, exhibited from 1874). Headed a studio at the Higher School of Art, Imperial Academy of Arts (1894-1907) and taught at Princess Maria Tenisheva\'\'s school of art (1895-98). Lived in St Petersburg and Moscow, settled in Kuokkala (1900).
Kramskoi Ivan Nikolaevich
1837, Ostrogozhsk (Voronezh Province) - 1887 St. PetersburgPainter, draughtsman, engraver, portraitist, history painter. Worked as a retoucher with a travelling photographer (1853-57). Studied at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1857-63). Initiator of the rebellion of the fourteen (1863). Headed the St Petersburg Artel of Artists (1863-70). One of the founders and the ideological head of the Society of Travelling Art Exhibitions (1870-87). Academician (1869). Contributed to the exhibitions of the Imperial Academy of Arts, World Exhibition in Paris (1878) and the All-Russian Exhibition in Moscow (1882). Taught at the School of Drawing, Society for the Encouragement of Artists (1863- 69, with interval). Member of the Society for the Encouragement of Artists (1863-69, with intervals).
Levitan Isaac Ilich
1860, Kibarty (Lithuania) - 1900, MoscowPainter, graphic artist, teacher. Studied under Alexei Savrasov and Vasily Polenov at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture (1873-1885). Academician of painting (1898). Member of the Society of Travelling Art Exhibitions (1891) and the Munich Sezession (1897), Contributed to exhibitions (from 1880). Contributed to the exhibitions of the Society of Travelling Art Exhibitions (1884-1900), periodical exhibitions of the Moscow Society of Lovers of the Arts (1887-1900), Fellowship of South Russian Artists (1892), Moscow Fellowship of Artists (1893), Munich Sezession (1896, 1898, 1899), Exhibition of Russian and Finnish Artists (1898), World of Art (1899, 1900), Pan-Russian Exhibition in Nizhny Novgorod (1896), International Exhibition in Munich (1898) and the World Exhibitions in Chicago (1893) and Paris (1900). Taught at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture (1898-1900).
Якунчикова Мария Васильевна
Bakst Leon (Lev Samoilovich)
1866, Hrodno - 1924, ParisPainter, graphic artist, theatrical designer. Studied at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1883-87) and the Atelier dc Jean Louis Gerome and Academic de Rodolphe Julian in Paris (1893-96). Taught at the Elizaveta Zwantseva School of Drawing and Painting in St Petersburg (1906-09). Member of the Society of Russian Waterecolourists (1891-1907), World of Art (1899-1903, 1906, 1913) and the Union of Russian Artists (1903-1910). Life member of the Salon d\'\'\'\'Automne (from 1906). Academician (1914). Contributed to many exhibitions of theatrical design and one-man shows. Designed sets and costumes for the Mariinsky Theatre and Alexandrinsky Theatre in St Petersburg, Paris Opera and theatres in London and New York. Leading designers of Sergei Diaghilev\'\'\'\'s Ballets Russes (from 1909) and the ballet companies of Anna Pavlova and Ida Rubinstein. Emigrated to Paris (1909).
Vrubel Mikhail Alexandrovich
1856, Omsk - 1910, St PetersburgPainter, draughtsman, theatrical designer, applied artist, portraitist, writer of philosophical Symbolist compositions. Studied law at St Petersburg University (1874-79) and art under Pavel Chistyakov at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1880-84). Academician of painting (1905). Member of the Abramtsevo circle (from 1889). Contributed to exhibitions (from 1891). Contributed to the exhibitions of the Moscow Fellowship of Artists (1895, 1899, 1904), Exhibition of Russian and Finnish Artists (1898), World of Art (1900-03, 1906; member from 1900, 1911), 36 Artists (1901, 1902), Union of Russian Artists (1903-10; founding member), Exposition Universelle in Paris (1900; gold medal) and the International Exhibitions in Vienna (1901) and Venice (1907). Designed for Sawa Mamontov\'\'s Russian Private Opera (1890-1901).
Nesterov Mikhail Vasilyevich
1862, Ufa - 1942, MoscowPainter, portraitist, landscape artist, genre painter, author of memoirs and essays on artists. Studied at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture (1877-81, 1884-86) and the Imperial Academy of Arts (1881-84). Full member of the Imperial Academy of Arts (1910). Member of the Society of Travelling Art Exhibitions (1896) and founding member of the Union of Russian Artists (1903). Contributed to the exhibitions of the Society of Travelling Art Exhibitions (1889-1901), World of Art (1899-1901), 36 Artists (1901-03), Union of Russian Artists (1922, 1923), All-Russian Exhibition in Nizhny Novgorod (1896), Exposition Universelle in Paris (1900), International Exhibitions in Munich (1898,1909) and Rome (1911), Die erste russische Kunstausstellung in Berlin (1922) and the Exhibition of Russian Art in New York (1924). Honoured Artist of the RUSSIAN SOVIET FEDERATED SOCIALIST REPUBLIC (1942).
Ryabushkin Andrei Petrovich
1861, Stanichnaya (Tambov Province) - 1904, Divdino (Novgorod Province)Painter, graphic artist. Studied at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture (1875-82) and the Imperial Academy of Arts (1882-90). Member of the Society of Artists of History Painting (from 1895), World of Art (from 1901) and the Union of Russian Artists (from 1903). Contributed to exhibitions at the Imperial Academy of Arts (from 1888).
Somov Konstantin Andreyevich
1869, St Petersburg - 1939, ParisPainter, graphic artist. Studied at Ilya Repin\'s studio (from 1894) at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1888-1897) and the Academic de Filippo Colarossi in Paris (1898). Academician (1914). Member of the Munich and Berlin Sezessions (1898), World of Art (1899), Union of Russian Artists (1903) and the Salon d\'Automne (1906). Contributed to the exhibitions of the Society of Russian Water-colourists (1894-1895), Exhibition of Russian and Finnish Artists (1898) and Sezession in Munich (1898, 1899) and Berlin (1898). Lived in Paris (from 1925).
Serov Valentin Alexandrovich
1865, St Petersburg - 1911, MoscowPainter, graphic artist, teacher, portraitist, landscapist, history painter. Son of the composer Alexander Serov. Studied under Ilya Repin in Paris and Moscow (1874-75, 1878-80) and under Pavel Chistyakov at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1880-85). Academician of painting (1898), full member of the Imperial Academy of Arts (1903-05). Member of the Abramtsevo circle (from the 18705). Contributed to exhibitions (from 1889). Contributed to the exhibitions of the Society of Travelling Art Exhibitions (1890-99; member from 1894), Munich Sezession (1896, 1898,1899; member from 1899), Exhibition of Russian and Finnish Artists (1898), World of Art (1896-1906, member from 1900; 1911-12, founding member), Berlin Sezession (1903), Exhibition of Historical Russian Portraits at the Tauride Palace in St Petersburg (1905), Union of Russian Artists (1905-10; member from 1903), Sergei Makovsky Salon (1909), Exposition Universelle in Paris (1900, grand prix), International Exhibitions in Munich (1909), Vienna (1902), Venice (1907), Brussels (1910) and Rome (1911) and the Exhibitions of Russian Art in Paris (1906, 1910), Berlin (1906) and Vienna (1908). Member of the board of the Tretyakov Gallery. Taught at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture (1897-1909). Designed for theatres in Moscow and St Petersburg and Sergei Diaghilev\'\'s Saisons Russes (from 1886).
Ционглинский (Циоглинский) Ян (Иван) Францевич
Benois Alexander Nikolaevich
1870, St. Petersburg - 1960, Paris
Korovin Konstantin Alexeyevich
1861, Moscow - 1939, ParisPainter, theatrical designer, teacher. Studied under Vasily Perov, Alexei Savrasov and Vasily Polenov at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture (1875-1886) and at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1882). Academician of painting (1905). Member of the Abramtsevo Сircle (from 1885). Member of the World of Art (1900) and founding member of the Union of Russian Artists (1903). Contributed to exhibitions (from 1878). Contributed to the periodical exhibitions of the Moscow Society of Lovers of the Arts (1888-1897) and the exhibitions of the Society of Travelling Art Exhibitions (1889-1899), Moscow Fellowship of Artists (1894-1902), Exhibition of Russian and Finnish Artists (1898), World of Art (1899-1906, 1921, 1922), 36 Artists (1901, 1902), Union of Russian Artists (1903-1923), World Exhibitions in Chicago (1893) and Paris (1900, two gold medals) and the International Exhibitions in Munich (1898), Vienna (1902), Venice (1907) and Rome (1911). Designed for theatres in Moscow and St Petersburg (from 1885). Taught at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture (1901-1918), State Free Art Studios (1918-1919) and the Stroganov School (1900s-1910s). Emigrated (1922).
Lanceray, Yevgeny
Borisov-Musatov Victor Elpidiforovich
1870, Saratov - 1905, TarusaPainter, draughtsman. Studied under Vasily Konovalov in Saratov (from 1886), under Vasily Polenov at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture (1890-91, 1893-95), under Pavel Chistyakov at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1891-93) and at the Academic Fernand Connon in Paris (1895-98). Member of the Moscow Fellowship of Artists (1899) and the Union of Russian Artists (1903). Contributed to exhibitions (from 1885). Contributed to the periodical exhibitions of the Moscow Society of Lovers of the Arts (1898) and the exhibitions of the Moscow Fellowship of Artists (1899-1905), Scarlet Rose (1904), Union of Russian Artists (1904-05), Salon des Independants (1905), Salon de la Nationale (1905), Salon d\'\'Automne (1905) and the World of Art (1906).
Braz Josif (Osip)
Малютин Сергей Васильевич
Ober Artemy
Roerich Nicholas (Nikolai Konstantinovich)
1874, St Petersburg - 7, Kullu (India)Painter, theatrical designer, writer. Studied under Arkhip Kuindzhi at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1893-97), Faculty of Law, St Petersburg University (1893-98) and Fernand Cormon\'\'s studio in Paris (1900-01). Academician of painting (1909). Contributed to exhibitions (from 1895). Contributed to the exhibitions of the World of Art (1902, 1903, 191 1-17; founding member 1910; chairman 1910-13), Union of Russian Artists ( 1903-10; member from 1903), Salon d\'\'Automne (1906, 1907; member from 1906), Exposition Universelle in Paris (1900), World Exhibition in St Louis (1904), International Exhibitions in Munich (1909), Rome (1911, 1914) and Malmo (1914) and the Exhibitions of Russian Art in Paris (1906-08), Berlin (1906) and Vienna (1908). Director of the School of Drawing, Society for the Encouragement of the Arts (1906-16). Designed for theatres in Moscow and St Petersburg and Sergei Diaghilev\'\'s Saisons Russes (from 1907). Emigrated (1918). Settled in Kullu in India (1928).
Щербов Павел Егорович
Abramtsevo Pottery Workshop
Dobuzhinsky Mstislav Valerianovich
1875, Novgorod — 1957, New YorkGraphic artist, painter, theatrical designer, teacher, landscapist. Studied at St Petersburg university (1895–1899). Studied at Lev Dmitriev-Kavkazsky’s School of Painting in St Petersburg (1890s) and at the schools of Anton Ažbe and Simon Hollosy in Munich (1899–1901). Contributed to exhibitions (from 1902). Designed for theatres in St Petersburg and Moscow and Sergei Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes (from 1907). Taught at Elizaveta Zvantseva’s school of painting and drawing in St Petersburg (1906–1910) and the Petrograd State Free Art Studios/ VKHUTEIN (1918–1923). Emigrated (1924). Designed for theatres in Riga, Paris, Kaunas (1929–1935) and New York.
Kustodiev Boris Mikhailovich
1818, Astrakhan - 1927, LeningradPainter. Studied under Vasily Savinsky and Ilya Repin at the Higher School of Art, Imperial Academy of Arts (1896-1903). Fellow of the Imperial Academy of Arts in France and Spain (1903-1904). Academician of painting (1909). Founding member of the New Society of Artists (1904) and member of the Union of Russian Artists (1907), World of Art (1910) and the Association of Artists of Revolutionary Russia (1923). Contributed to exhibitions (from 1900). Contributed to the periodical exhibitions of the Moscow Society of Lovers of the Arts (1900-1901), Spring Exhibitions of the Imperial Academy of Arts (1900-1903) and the exhibitions of the New Society of Artists (1904-1908), Union of Russian Artists (1907-1910), World of Art (1910-1924), Association of Artists of Revolutionary Russia (1923, 1925) and the International Exhibitions in Munich (1901, gold medal; 1909) and Malmo (1914, gold medal). Designed for theatres in Moscow and St Petersburg (from 1911).
Troubetzkoy Paolo (Pavel Petrovich)
1866, Intra, Italy — 1938, Villa Cabianca near Pallanza, ItalyBilibin Ivan Yakovlevich
1876, Tarkhovka, St Petersburg Province — 1942, LeningradGraphic artist, theatrical designer. Studied at the Faculty of Law, St Petersburg University (1896–1900), School of Drawing, Society for the Encouragement of Arts (1895–1898), Anton Ažbè’s school in Munich (1898), under Ilya Repin at the Princess Maria Tenisheva School (1898–1900) and at the Higher School of Art, Imperial Academy of Arts (1900–1904). Contributed to exhibitions (from 1900). Founding member of the World of Art (1900–1917). Drew for World of Art, Hell’s Post, Bugbear and Golden Fleece and magazines. Designed for theatres (from 1907). Illustrated and designed children’s books — traditional heroic poems, folk tales and the fairytales of Alexander Pushkin — for publishing houses in St Petersburg (1900s). Illustrated the fairytales of Alexander Pushkin for Goslitizdat (1930s). Created his own highly original style of book design, based on the motifs of Russian folk and medieval art.
Grabar Igor Emmanuilovich
1871, Budapest — 1960, MoscowPainter, art historian, art critic, museum curator. Studied law, history and philology at St. Petersburg university (1889–1896). Studied at the Higher School of Art, Imperial Academy of Arts (1894–1896) and at Anton Ažbe’s school in Munich (1896–1898). Academician of painting (1913). Contributed to exhibitions (from 1898). Taught at the Ažbe/Grabar school in Munich (1898–1901). Trustee (1913–1918) and director (1918–1925) of the Tretyakov Gallery; director of the Central Art and Restoration Studios (1918–1930).
Larionov Mikhail Fyodorovich
1881, Tiraspole - 1964, Fontenay-aux-Roses (France)Painter, graphic artist, leader of the Russian avant-garde movement. Studied under Isaac Levitan, Valentin Serov and Konstantin Korovin at the Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture (1898-1910). Contributed to exhibitions (from 1898). Contributed to the exhibitions of the Union of Russian Artists (1906-1910), World of Art (1906, 1911-1913, 1915), Stephanos (1907-1908), Wreath (1908), Link (1908), Exhibition of Modern Trends in Art (1908), Golden Fleece Salons (1909-1910), Wreath/ Stephanos (1909), Vladimir Izdebsky Salon (1909-1910), Jack of Diamonds (1910), Union of Youth (1910-1912), Donkey\'s Tail (1912), Der Blaue Reiter (1912), Der Erste Deutsche Herbstsalon (1913), Target (1913), No. 4. Futurists, Rayonists, Primitive (1914), 1915 (1915), International Exhibitions in Venice (1907, 1920) and the Exhibitions of Russian Art in Paris (1906, 1921) and Berlin (1906). Designed for Sergei Diaghilev\'s Ballets Russes (1914-1929).
Ostroumova-Lebedeva Anna
Malyavin Philipp Andreyevich
1869, Kazanki (Samara Province) - 1940, NicePainter, draughtsman, portraitist, genre artist. Studied at the Holy Monastery of Agios Panteleimon on Mount Athos in Greece (1885-92) and under Pavel Chistyakov and Ilya Repin at the Higher School of Art, Imperial Academy of Arts (1892-99). Academician of painting (1906). Contributed to exhibitions (from 1895). Contributed to the exhibitions of the World of Art (1899-1903, 1906, 1921-22), Berlin Sezession (1903, 1904), Union of Russian Artists (1903-23), Exposition Universelle in Paris (1900), Venice Biennales (1901, 1907, 1924), L\'\'Exposition de 1\'\'Art Russe in Paris (1906) and Berlin (1906) and the Salon d\'\'Automne in Paris (1923, 1924). Emigrated (1922).
Meshcherin Nikolai
Милиоти Василий Дмитриевич
Imperial Porcelain Factory
Уткин Петр Саввич
Milioti Nikolai Dmitriyevich
Stelletsky Dmitry Semyonovich
1875, Brest-Litovsk, Hrodno Province — 1947, ParisPainter, sculptor, draughtsman, theatrical designer, portraitist, monumentalist, author of decorative panels. Studied at the Higher School of Art, Imperial Academy of Arts (1896–1903). Contributed to the Exhibitions of Russian Art in Berlin (1906), Paris (1906, 1910, 1921), Venice (1920), Belgrade (1930), Philadelphia (1932), and the International Exhibitions in Venice (1907), Malmö (1914) and Leipzig (1914). The artist often derived inspiration from Old Russian culture becoming one of the most prominent representatives of the modernist “Russian style”.
Судьбинин Серафим Николаевич
Self-Portrait
- 1893
- Cardboard, oil. 34 х 21
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2119
The early 1890s were an important period in the establishment of Léon Bakst’s cre¬ative personality. He became acquainted with Alexander Benois in March 1890, was introduced to the circle of artists that later constituted the nucleus of the World of Art, experienced the first tastes of success at the exhibitions of the Society of Russian Watercolourists and embarked on his first trip to Europe, visiting Germany, Belgium, France and Spain in summer 1891. The artist was influenced by classical European art. Bakst depicts himself trying on a beret and a smock, the traditional attire of the maes¬tro artist, symbolising his induction into the role of professional server of the muses.
Портрет Александра Николаевича Бенуа
- 1895
- Canvas, сharcoal , , graphite pencil, watercolours, whiting. 38,2 x 28,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-46303
Портрет В. Ф. Нувеля
- 1895
- Cardboard, watercolours, gouache. 56,8 х 45
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-13488
Portrait of Maria Tenisheva
- 1896
- Cardboard, watercolours. 35,5 х 27,9
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-7808
Tenisheva, Maria Klavdievna, Princess (1858–1928): Public figure, enamel artist, teacher, patron, collector.
Portrait of Alexander Benois
- Paper, watercolours, pastel. 64,5 х 100,3 (в свету)
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-26999
The name of Leon Bakst (1866-1924) is linked to the “World of Art” and “Saisons Russes” of Sergei Diaghilev. As a prominent book illustrator and theatrical designer, he reached major achievements in the art of painted portraits.
Benois, Alexander Nikolaevich (1870, St Petersburg - 1960, Paris) - graphic artist, painter, theatrical designer, art historian. Studied under brother Albert Benois, at the Imperial Academy of Arts (1887-1888) and at the Faculty of Law, St Petersburg University (1890-1894). Member of the World of Art (1899; founding member), Union of Russian Artists (1903) and the Salon d'Automne (1906). Contributed to the exhibitions of the Society of Russian Watercolourists (1891-1896), Sergei Makovsky Salon (1909), International Exhibitions in Munich (1898), Rome (1911), Malmo (1914) and the Exhibitions of Russian Art in Paris (1906, 1910) and Berlin (1906). Designed for the Mariinsky Theatre, Vera Komissarzhevskaya Theatre and the Starinny Theatre in St Petersburg, Moscow Arts Theatre, Sergei Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, Ida Rubinstein Ballet Company, Teatro Real de Madrid, Theatre des Champs Elysees and Theatre National de L'Opera in Paris. Curator of the Hermitage Picture Gallery (1918-1926). Member of the Commission for the Protection of Monuments of Art and Antiques. Edited the Art Treasures of Russia magazine (1901-1903). Emigrated to Paris (1926). He lived in France from 1926 and designed plays for the theatres of Paris and Milan. He wrote his memoirs.
Автопортрет
- 1898
- Paper, watercolours, . 46 x 32,6
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-6559
Лебедь
- 1898
- Watercolours, gouache, . 34,4 х 27,8
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-11123
Баба с лошадью
- 1899
- etching, . И.: 27 х 36; л.: 49,5 х 59,4
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-36458
Идиллия. Карикатура на М. К. Тенишеву и представителей «Мира искусств»
- Paper, ink, nib, watercolours, bronze. 27 x 42,7
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-46598
Корабли
- 1899
- Цветная литография. 11,7 х 27
- The State Russian Museum
- АФ-28889
Портрет А. П. Нурока
- 1899
- Lithography. И.: 31 х 21; л.: 35,5 х 27,3
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-41073
Портрет А. П. Остроумовой-Лебедевой
- 1899
- Lithography. И.: 22,8 х 23,8; л.: 24,2 х 31,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-39982
Портрет Д. В. Философова
- 1899
- Lithography. И.: 27,7 х 24,6; л.: 48,5 х 39,8
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-20394
Так сказал Заратустра (Поражение Стасовым сторонников нового направления в искусстве)
- 1899
- Paper, watercolours, , ink, nib. 31,4 x 48
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-8426
Мир искусства
- 1900
- Цинкография. 32,3 х 25
- The State Russian Museum
- АФ-33634
Пегас
- 1900
- Цинкография. И.: 7,7 х 7,4; л.: 13,5 х 18,6
- The State Russian Museum
- АФ-34457-а
Радость безмерная (Василий Васильевич Стасов, Илья Ефремович Репин, Михаил Васильевич Нестеров, Сергей Дягилев и другие)
- Paper, watercolours, gold. 26,6 x 42,9
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-11113
Portrait of Anna Ostroumova
- 1901
- Canvas, oil. 87 x 63
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-6533
The works of Konstantin Somov, with their retrospective stylised design, delicate taste and cultural knowledge of the past, are characteristic of the World of Art movement. He studied at the Imperial Academy of Arts with Anna Ostroumova and kept a friendly relationship with her. They were both members of the association “World of Art”.
Anna Petrovna Ostroumova (married name: Ostroumova-Lebedeva; 1871–1955), artist, painter and graphic artist. She studied at the School of Technical Drawing and then at the Imperial Academy of Arts under Ilya Repin from 1892 until 1900. She worked in the studio of James Whistler from 1898 until 1899. She was a member of the World of Art union, a People’s Artist of the RSFSR (1946) and a full member of the Academy of Arts (1949). The main theme of her work was St Petersburg, and she dedicated several decades of unstinting labour to its depiction. She wrote the book “Autobiographical Notes”.
Konstantin Somov’s portrait of Anna Ostroumova was the result of long and arduous work. The sitter later recalled: “Somov spent a very long time painting me – seventy-three sittings sometimes lasting up to four hours … He began to paint my face in small sections, which were immediately finished. Begining with my forehead, which he took several sittings to paint, he descended to the eyebrows, where he also worked for a long time, then one eye, then the other, etc. I remember that he required five sittings to paint my mouth. When he had finished my chin, i.e. the whole face, he did not return to what had already been painted … the portrait was both like and unlike me. The facial features, the posture, the incline of the head and the hand dangling on the arm of the chair – all that is me. At the same time, I can discern much that is Somov’s shining through and even dominating the portrait. Most importantly, there are several features which are not typical of me. Somov depicts some dreamy, sorrowful figure. Though occasionally subject to fits of melancholy, I was active, energetic and at times a great jester.” Elements of stylisation and refinement can be seen in Somov’s scrupulous painting technique, similar to that of the Old Masters, and the elegant combination of black, grey and violet tones.
Portrait of Ivan Bilibin
- 1901
- Canvas, oil. 142 х 110
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1876
Ivan Yakovlevich Bilibin (1876–1942), graphic artist, theatre artist and painter. He graduated from the Law Department of St Petersburg University (1896–1900) and studied at the Drawing School of the Society for the Encouragement of Arts (1895–1900), at Anton Ažbe’s school in Munich (1898) at the Princess Maria Tenisheva Art School (1898–1900) under Ilya Repin, and at the Higher Arts Institute of the Imperial Academy of Arts (1900–1904). He was a founding member of the World of Art union (1900–1917) and drew pictures for the journals Mir iskusstva (World of Art), Adskaya pochta (Hell’s Mail), Zhupel (Bugbear), Zolotoye runo (Golden Fleece) and others. From 1907 he worked in theatre. He illustrated and designed children’s books for St.Petersburg publishers such as bylinas, folk tales and tales from Pushkin (1900s), and in the 1930s he illustrated tales from Pushkin for the State Literature Publishers. He had his own profoundly individual way of designing books, at whose heart lay motifs from Russian folk art and from the Middle Ages.
Автопортрет
- 1901
- Canvas, oil. 55 х 42
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1730
Д. С. Мережковский. Двойная бездна
- 1901
- Цинкография. 11 х 9,6
- The State Russian Museum
- АФ-1049
Новая Минерва (Торжество Дягилева)
- Paper, watercolours. 29 x 42 (в свету)
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-35902
Виньетка
- 1902
- Рамка розового цвета, цинкография. И.: 13,2 х 19,7; л.: 14,8 х 21,4
- The State Russian Museum
- АФ-16111
Мир искусства
- 1902
- Цинкография. И.: 29,6 х 23; л.: 31,2 х 24,6
- The State Russian Museum
- АФ-32873
Мир искусства. V год издания
- 1902
- Цинкография. И.: 18,2 х 11,5; л.: 24,4 х 16,6
- The State Russian Museum
- АФ-40939
Портрет Льва Бакста
- gouache, ink. 47 х 34
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-13438
Гибель богов
- 1903
- Цинкография. 22,2 х 17,7
- The State Russian Museum
- АФ-1020
Гимн солнцу
- 1904
- Цинкография. И.: 10,8 х 15,5 (овал); л.: 13,4 х 19,5
- The State Russian Museum
- АФ-34452
Народное творчество Русского Севера
- 1904
- Цинкография. И.: 20,4 х 16,2; л.: 22,7 х 18,4
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-24817
Портрет Сергея Павловича Дягилева (1872–1929)
- 1904
- Canvas, oil. 97 х 83
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1922
Portrait of Sergei Diaghilev and his Nanny
- 1906
- Canvas, oil. 161 x 116
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2117
Sergei Pavlovich Diaghilev (1872–1929) was one of the central figures of fin-de-siècle cultural life in St Petersburg. Before launching the Saisons Russes in Paris, he founded and published the World of Art (Mir iskusstva) magazine (1898–1904), curated a series of important art shows and wrote articles on art and the theatre.
One of Léon Bakst’s most outstanding works of portraiture, Portrait of Sergei Diaghilev and his Nanny is, perhaps, the most famous image of the legendary Russian impresario, who was a close friend of the artist. Diaghilev’s slightly fastidious pose, raised eyebrows and appraising glance betray a self-confident and authoritative personality. The figure of the old nanny sitting in the corner was a typical feature of the way of life of the old Russian nobility. Contrasting the figure of Diaghilev, she offers a clearer insight into the personality of the sitter — a former provincial whose energy and talent helped him to not only conquer the Russian capital, but the whole of Europe as well.
Портрет Вальмира Федоровича Нувеля
- 1914
- Graphite pencil, sanguine. 37,2 x 26
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-3244
Group Portrait of the Members of the World of Art. 1916–20. Modello for an unpainted picture
- Canvas, oil. 52 х 89
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1864
Depicts (from left to right): Igor Grabar (1871–1960), Nicholas Roerich (1874–1947), Yevgeny Lanceray (1875–1946), Ivan Bilibin (1876– 1942), Alexander Benois (1870–1960), Georgy Narbut (1886–1920), Nikolai Milioti (1874– 1962), Konstantin Somov (1869–1939), Mstislav Dobuzhinsky (1875–1957), Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin (1878–1939), Anna Ostroumova-Lebedeva (1871–1955) and Boris Kustodiev (1878–1927).
In 1910, on behalf of the Tretyakov Gallery, Igor Grabar invited Boris Kustodiev to paint a group portrait of the members of the World of Art. Himself a frequent contributor to the World of Art exhibitions, Kustodiev willingly agreed and began work at the first opportunity. Between 1913 and 1916, he painted a series of personal portraits from life in mixed media. Almost all the artist’s compositional versions were later employed in this modello of the intended large group portrait, which was in fact never painted. Kustodiev depicts the artists sitting round a table laid for tea in Mstislav Dobuzhinsky’s drawing room. Engaged in friendly discussion, the figures are portrayed in a series of diverse movements, gestures and poses. The intended genre interpretation was both unusual for a group portrait and compositionally daunting. The artist’s study evoked all sorts of surmises and conjectures regarding the relationships between the sitters and the state of the World of Art at that time.
Golden Autumn. Slobodka
- 1889
- Canvas, oil. 43 x 67,2
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4271
The motif of Russian autumn is often encountered throughout the career of Isaac Levitan, a master of the lyrical landscape. The traditional gathering of autumn leaves, the special transparency of the air and the feeling of sorrow at the passage of summer found a lively response in the artist’s soul. Animating the world of nature with subtle emotions, Levitan creates a mood landscape, expressing the beauty of nature with the help of rich and complex paintwork. Growing among the peasant allotments divided by a narrow, stooping hedge, the young birch tree shows off its still magnificent foliage. This is the most active patch of paint in the entire canvas, uniting the slightly muffled tones of the rest of the colour orchestra. Mikhail Nesterov wrote that Levitan managed to convey the “modest and innermost concealed in each Russian landscape — its soul and charm.” Golden Autumn. Slobodka was shown at the Sezession exhibition of 1898.
Паперть Саввино-Сторожевского монастыря в Звенигороде
- Paper, gouache. 49,7 х 64,9
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-8433
Запах
- 1894–1895
- Цветная акватинта. И., д.: 12,9 х 17,1; л.: 24,8 x 32,4
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-28643
Страх
- 1893–1894
- Цветная акватинта. И., д.: 29,3 х 19,9; л.: 38,1 x 28,7
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-28646
Демон
- 1894
- Гипс раскрашенный. 50 x 58 x 22
- The State Russian Museum
- Ск-565
Seventeenth-Century Moscow Street on a Public Holiday
- 1895
- Canvas, oil. 204 x 390
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4355
The Russian way of life in the seventeenth century was the theme of many paintings by Andrei Ryabushkin in the second half of the 1890s. Recreating the historical setting, the artist accurately conveys the costumes and architecture of that period. Interpreting the subject as a vivid urban scene, Ryabushkin paints an internally dynamic image of a street after a downpour, transformed into a fast flowing river.
Вознесение Господне
- 1895
- paper mounted on cardboard, tempera, , lacquer. 51,7 х 39,4
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-40867
Сошествие Христа во ад
- 1895
- paper mounted on cardboard, tempera, ink, , sauce, graphite pencil, lacquer. 51,2 х 40,4
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-40866
Троица. Явление Христа на пути в Эммаус. Поясной деисусный чин с Христом-Эммануилом, Богоматерью и Иоанном
- 1895
- paper mounted on cardboard, tempera, , graphite pencil, . И.: 19 х 34,7 (полукруг); 19 х 34,5 (полукруг); 7,1 х 13,8; л.: 53,7 x 39,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-40868
Лежащий лев
- 1896
- etching, . И.: 13,8 х 11; д.: 15,9 х 12; л.: 28,8 х 20,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-28244
Портрет художника А. Н. Бенуа
- 1896
- Canvas, oil. 49 х 39
- The State Russian Museum
- ЖБ-616
После дождя
- 1896
- Paper, watercolours. 35,8 x 73,2
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-8362
Morning
- 1897
- Canvas, oil. 261 x 447
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1834
Vrubel dreamed about combining art and life in his creative work and searched for a high monumental style and a special national form that was expressed in ornamental and rhythmic patterns characteristic for his works. His style was close to the stylistics of art nouveau that is known for its rapid transitions from statics to movement and from serenity to sudden agitation. The artistic features of art nouveau include flowing lines, oblong figures, expressive contours, and the use of floral motifs. Stems, leaves, and flowers of faded exotic plants intertwine and create a complicated pattern in which one can see female figures or fantastic beasts.
Art nouveau artist were keen on allegories, and this tendency is vivid in the Spring panel. The awakening nature is symbolized by four mermaids. A naked female figure emerges from the mystical entwinement of giant trees, dense grass and fantastic flowers. The woman looks at the light of dawn – the “Beam”, as the artist calls it. It is embodied by another woman’s figure with a strangely bent body. The woman longs from the grass to the sky. The third “Fairy” comes out of the grass and marsh wilds. She represents the awakening – her face is motionless, her big dark eyes have just opened and her first morning thoughts float in them as the remains of her night dreams. The forth figure in the right is depicted only fragmentarily – we see a woman’s face with the expression of fear and despair. When asked about the meaning of this figure, Vrubel answered: “It’s a fairy tale”. Four female figures amplify the general emotional tone of the landscape, its poetry and music. The images created by the artist have multiple meanings and may arise various emotions. The use of various shades of green gives the feeling of early morning freshness when the sun is about to rise above the horizon. This panel is a part of a decorative and monumental triptych called Times of Day that was created by Vrubel for the interior of S.T. Morozov’s house in Moscow (designed by the Moscow art nouveau architect F.O. Schechtel).
Афиша "Выставка русских и финляндских художников. 1898"
- 1897
- Chromolithography. И.: 80 х 66; л.: 101 х 68
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр.луб-2655
Версаль. Людовик XIV кормит рыб
- 1897
- Cardboard, gouache, watercolours, chalk, graphite pencil, charcoal pencil. 47,7 x 62,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-5126
Версаль. Прогулка короля
- 1897
- Paper, watercolours, gouache, graphite pencil. 21,4 x 46 (в свету)
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-5131
Версаль. У Курция (Вид на дворец со стороны Швейцарского озера)
- 1897
- Paper, watercolours, gouache, graphite pencil, charcoal pencil. 48,8 х 63,6
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-5132
Иллюстрация к книге Е. В. Балобановой «Легенды о старинных замках Бретани». Кипарис
- 1897
- Cardboard, ink, nib, watercolours. 28,2 x 18,9
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-33801
Иллюстрация к книге Е. В. Балобановой «Легенды о старинных замках Бретани». Сросшиеся деревья
- 1897
- Cardboard, ink, nib, graphite pencil. 28 х 18,8
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-33803
Иллюстрация к книге Е. В. Балобановой «Легенды о старинных замках Бретани». Царица бурь
- 1897
- Paper, ink, nib, watercolours. 28,2 х 18,9
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-33802
На лугах Кавказа (Кавказская сцена)
- 1897
- paper mounted on cardboard, watercolours, whiting. 40 x 30
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-13428
Ручей
- Canvas, oil. 70 х 89
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4334
Autumn. Fog
- 1898
- Paper, watercolours. 48 х 60
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-13398
Salzburg (От нашего специального корреспондента) / Русско-финляндская выставка в Зальцбурге
- Paper, watercolours, ink, nib. 24,2 x 42,2
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-35904
«Корабельщики дивятся, на кораблике толпятся…»
- 1897–1898
- Paper, watercolours, . 16,4 х 11,8
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-1257
«Пушки с крепости палят…»
- 1897–1898
- Paper, watercolours, whiting, . 11,3 х 15,8
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-33961
Каракатица-осьминог с рыбой
- 1898
- Terracotta. 33 х 27 х 32
- The State Russian Museum
- Ск-1145
Кладбище зимой
- 1898
- Watercolours, gouache. 25 х 25,6
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-11124
Октябрь
- 1898
- etching. И.: 34,3 х 51,4; д.: 35,8 х 53,6; л: 53,4 х 79,3
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-32098
Портрет художника А. П. Соколова
- 1898
- Canvas, oil. 100 х 81
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4374
Portrait of Tsar Alexis Mikhailovich
- Before 1671 (?)/ After 1676 (?)
- Canvas, oil. 126 х 95
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3988
Alexis I Mikhailovich (March 19, 1629 – January 29, 1676)
Tsar, member of the Romanov dynasty, father of Peter the Great. Son of Mikhail Fedorovich and Eudoxia Streshneva. He assumed the throne on July 14, 1645, and was crowned on September 28, 1645. During his reign the Zemsky Sobor (Assembly of the Land) passed the Law Code of 1649; the Customs (1653) and New Trade (1667) Regulations were adopted; and Ukraine came under Russian rule (1654), which led to the signing of the Truce of Andrusovo between Russia and Poland (1667). On January 16, 1648 Alexis married Maria Ilyinichna Miloslavskaya (April 1, 1624 – March 3, 1669), together they had 13 children. On January 22, 1671 he entered into a second marriage with Natalia Naryshkina (August 22, 1651 – January 25, 1694), and had three children with her: Peter (May 30, 1672 – January 28, 1725), Natalia (August 22, 1673 – June 18, 1716), and Feodora (September 4, 1674 – November 28, 1678).
This portrait engraved by Cornelis Meyssens (1646–?) can be found among illustrations of the book Historia di Leopoldo Cesare (History of Leopold Caesar, Vienna, 1670); that is where its traditional dating comes from. However, an inscription made on the portrait “reigned and ruled” (in Latin, in the past tense) suggests that the portrait was made after the tsar’s death. The artist’s alterations and technical characteristics do not contradict the fact that the work was painted in the end of the 17th century.
Portrait of Prince Anikita Repnin
- Late 1690s
- Canvas, oil. 181 х 128
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3947
Anikita Repnin (1668 – July 3, 1726). Middle son of Ivan Repnin (1615– 1697) who was a boyar close to the tsar and a house steward of Tsar Alexis Mikhailovich, and Ivan’s wife Yevdokia Nikiforovna Pleshcheyeva (? – April 8, 1695). Russian Field Marshal General (1725). From his early years Anikita was close to Peter the Great and took part in the creation of the emperor’s Toy Army. In 1685 he became Lieutenant and within two years he was promoted to Colonel. Repnin participated in the Azov campaigns of 1695–1696. In 1696 he commanded a frigate. In 1699 he became Major General. In the beginning of the Northern War he commanded a division. Following the order of Peter the Great he reconstituted Russian forces withdrawing from Narva after they were defeated in 1700. He took part in the Siege of Nöteborg (1702) and Narva (1704). During the Battle of Poltava (1709) he commanded the centre of the Russian troops. During the years 1709–1710 he commanded the siege and the seizure of Riga. During the years 1712–1713 and 1715–1716 he commanded troops in Pomerania. In 1719 he was appointed Governor General of Livonia, and at the same time he acted as President of the Military College from 1724–1725. After the death of Peter the Great, he supported the enthronement of Catherine I, but shortly afterwards Alexander Menshikov sent him away to Riga.
From the second half of the 19th century to the early 21st century almost all scholars believed the person depicted here to be Ivan Borisovich Repnin; however, this traditional view was recently reconsidered. In 2014 a new version was accepted by the Attribution Council of the Russian Museum.
Portrait of Prince Andrei the Elder Repnin
- After 27 January 1699
- Canvas, oil. 194 х 109
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3945
Portrait of Prince Andrei the Younger Repnin
- School of the Armoury Chamber
- After 27 January 1699
- Canvas, oil. 195 x 149
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3946
Andrei the Younger Repnin (? – January 27, 1699)Youngest son of Ivan Repnin (1615– 1697). His father Ivan was a house steward of Tsar Alexis Mikhailovich, and a boyar close to the tsar; his mother was Yevdokia Nikiforovna Pleshcheyeva (? – April 8, 1695). Andrei, together with his brother Anikita, accompanied Peter the Great during his dramatic overnight ride to the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius on the night of August 7-8, 1689. In approximately 1689 Andrei married Tatiana Alexeyevna, daughter of Alexei Rzhevsky; who was an okolnichy (a senior court rank) and the military commander of Samara during the years 1689–1690. Andrei was among some 39 stolniks (cupbearers) and the same number of soldiers in February 1697 who were sent to Italy to study maritime affairs.
From the second half of the 19th century to the early 21st century scholars believed the person depicted here to be Alexander Borisovich Repnin; however, this traditional view was recently reconsidered. In 2014 a new version was accepted by the Attribution Council of the Russian Museum. Based on the clothing depicted the portrait was dated from the 1680s to 1690s. It appears that it was Anikita Ivanovich that outlived both of his brothers who ordered the painting.
Portrait of Field Marshal Boris Sheremetev
- After 1710
- Canvas, oil. 308 х 346
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5798
Boris Sheremetev (April 25, 1652 – February 17, 1719). Statesman, commander and diplomat. In 1682 he was made Boyar. He took part in the first Azov campaign. He was a close associate of Peter the Great and fought in all the most important battles of the Northen War (Dorpat, Narva, and Riga). He became Field Marshal General in 1701 and was the first Russian count (1706). At the battle of Poltava he commanded the centre of the Russian Army. Peter the Great called Sheremetev his “Turenne” and valued him greatly for his selflessness.
In 1905 the painting was kept in the Sheremetev Palace and exhibited within the Tauride Exhibition as work of Ivan Argunov. Later the portrait was attributed to Schurmann, even though some scholars have doubted the existence of this artist. An inscription recently read on the portrait; “Karl Schurmann pictorducalis curl […]” suggests that during the siege of Riga in 1710, Karl Schurmann was painter to Frederick William, the Duke of Courland, and the future husband of Anna Ioannovna.
Portrait of Pyotr Tolstoy
- Late 1710s – 1720s
- Canvas, oil. 77 х 62,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4903
Pyotr Andreyevich Tolstoy (1645 – February 17, 1729). Count (1724), statesman and diplomat. Son of Okolnichy Andrei Tolstoy and Solomonida Miloslavskaya (a distant relative of Tsaritsa Maria Ilyinichna Miloslavskaya). Took part in the Streltsy Uprising (1682), but after the uprising was successfully squashed, he switched sides and defected to Peter the Great. During the years 1701–1714 he was ambassador in Constantinople. He was appointed senator (1714) and president of the College of Commerce. In 1717 he convinced Tsarevich Alexis; who was hiding in Naples, to return to Russia, which made him one of the closest confidants of Peter the Great. In 1718 he was awarded the Order of St. Andrew the Apostle the First-Called. Tolstoy was in charge of the Secret Chancellery. In 1727 he was sentenced to death for conspiracy, but instead was sent to live in the Solovetsky Monastery.
The painting was dated based on the Order of St. Andrew the Apostle the First-Called that Tolstoy received in February 1718, for his contribution to the return of Tsarevich Alexis Petrovich to Russia. The portrait was first attributed to Georg Gsell in a guidebook published by the Russian Museum. Several scholars rightfully compared the painting with a mirror portrait from the Moscow Tolstoy Museum, signed and dated by Johann Gottfried Tannauer (1719). Research conducted confirmed the existence of technical similarities between the portrait from the Russian Museum and the work from the Tolstoy Museum in Moscow.
Portrait of Tsarevna Anna Petrovna and Tsarevna Elizabeth Petrovna
- 1717
- Canvas, oil. 76 х 97
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4904
Louis Caravaque’s painting is dated according to the official inventory of the artist’s works that he completed in November 1723. The entry for 1717 reads: “At the command of the Most Serene Prince, two portraits of Their Imperial Highnesses, Tsarevna Anna Petrovna and Tsarevna Elizabeth Petrovna, were painted on a single canvas.” The portrait is also mentioned in Jacob Schtelin’s Notes: “Louis Caravaque ... painted the Imperial Princesses Anna and Elizabeth in their youth.”
Anna Petrovna (February 7, 1708 – May 15, 1728)
Tsarevna, daughter of Peter the Great and Catherine Alexeyevna, awarded the title of Tsesarevna on December 23, 1721. On May 21, 1725 she married Duke Charles Frederick of Holstein-Gottorp (April 30, 1700 – June 18, 1739). She had a son, Peter (February 21, 1728 – July 2, 1762), future Emperor Peter III, who would succeed to the throne after Elizabeth Petrovna (1741 – 1761).
Elizabeth Petrovna (December 18, 1709 – December 25, 1761)
Tsarevna, daughter of Peter the Great and Catherine Alexeyevna, awarded the title of Tsesarevna on December 23, 1721. Became Empress on November 25, 1741. Crowned on 25 April, 1742.
Портрет Петра I
- Canvas, oil. Диам. 55 (круг)
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4906
Portrait of Catherine I with a Little Negro Boy
- Before December 1725 (?)
- Canvas, oil. 264 x 200
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5487
Catherine Alexeyevna (née Marta Skowrońska (April 15, 1684 – May 6, 1727). Second spouse of Peter the Great (became his wife on February 19, 1712). On May 7, 1724 Peter crowned her as empress-consort and made her his co-ruler. On January, 1725 she became Empress of Russia.
Catherine is depicted with a ribbon and a star of the Order of St. Andrew the Apostle the First-Called. Originally the portrait was smaller (190 x 133), the architecture and the landscape around the subject were painted later. Traditionally the portrait was dated 1725–1726 based on the engraving by Alexei Zubov. A document dated December 22, 1725 reads: “At the command of His Majesty [...] painter Ivan Adolsky received” one hundred rubles for painting these two portraits of Empress Catherine I: this one and the one housed in the State Museum-Preserve Tsarskoye Selo; the paintings are slightly different.
Portrait of Peter II
- Second half of the 1720s
- Canvas, oil. 71 х 59 (овал)
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-11
Peter II was the son of Tsarevich Alexis Petrovich and Princess Charlotte Christine Sophie of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, and the grandson of Emperor Peter the Great. He was himself Emperor from 1727. He was under the guardianship of the Supreme Privy Council, which was led by Peter the Great’s former favourite, his Supreme Highness Prince Alexander Menshikov. After Menshikov’s arrest in 1727 power in the Supreme Privy Council was usurped by the Dolgorukys, princes from an old boyar family. The system that existed before Peter the Great began to be restored and the court moved from St Petersburg to Moscow. The boyar aristocracy was strengthened and the army and navy fell into decline. Peter II had no inclination either to deal with matters of state or to study, and spent his time in games and entertainment. He died of smallpox in January 1730 and was buried in the Archangel Cathedral in the Moscow Kremlin.
Portrait of Peter II
- 1728
- Canvas, oil. 80 х 64,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5334
Peter II (1715–1730) was the son of Tsarevich Alexei Petrovich and Yevdokia (née Princess Charlotte Christine Sophie of Brunswick-Lüneburg), who died shortly after his birth; and the grandson of Peter I. He ascended to the throne on 7 May 1727, after the death of Catherine I. The young Emperor was constantly under the influence of others, becoming an instrument in the hands of various palace factions: first Menshikov, who, in order to increase his influence, wanted Peter I to marry his daughter Maria; then Dolgorukovs, who decided to marry him to the older daughter of Alexei Dolgorukov, Princess Ekaterina. On 30 November 1728, they got engaged, but he had contracted smallpox and died the day he proposed marriage. Upon his death, the male line of the Romanovs ended. He is depicted in ermine robes with the chain of the Order of St Andrew.
Portrait of a Boy in Hunting Attire
- End of 1720 - beginning of 1730
- Canvas, oil. 135 x 89
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж−5327
Equestrian Portrait of the Empress Elizabeth Petrovna with Retinue
- 1744–1755
- Canvas, oil. 50,5 x 66
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5374
Portrait of Grand Duke Peter Fyodorovich and Grand Duchess Catherine Alexeyevna
- 1745 (?)
- Canvas, oil. 129 х 100
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5341
Peter Feodorovich (1728–1762) was the son of Tsarevna Anna Petrovna and Duke Charles Frederick of Holstein-Gottorp; he was also the grandson of two implacable enemies, Emperor Peter the Great of Russia and King Charles XII of Sweden. He became heir to the Russian throne in 1742 and was Emperor from 25 December 1761 to 28 June 1762, but was never crowned. He imitated Peter the Great in intending to carry out a number of reforms. The Manifesto on the Freedom of the Nobility, the abolition of the Office for Secret Investigation and the secularisation of church lands formed the basis of the legislative measures subsequently taken by Catherine the Great. The view of traditional historiography is that he was ignorant and feeble-minded. He was overthrown by a palace coup instigated by his own wife, the future Catherine the Great, and was soon killed.
Empress Catherine II (the Great; 1729–1796), née Sophie Friederike Auguste von Anhalt-Zerbst-Dornburg, was born in the Prussian city of Stettin. In 1744, she arrived in Russia as the bride of Grand Duke Peter Feodorovich, the future Emperor Peter III. That same year, she converted to Russian Orthodoxy and took the name Catherine Alexeyevna. She married Peter Feodorovich in August 1745. In 1754 she gave birth to an heir, the future Emperor Paul I. The relationship with her husband did not work out, and he planned to have her sent to a convent. In the summer of 1762 she led a conspiracy of Peter’s guards and overthrew him, becoming Empress. In the first years of her reign she adhered to a policy of “enlightened absolutism”, but after the peasant rebellion led by Emelyan Pugachev (1773–1775) and the French Revolution (1789), she was forced to toughen her regime. She led victorious campaigns against Turkey (1768–1774; 1787–1792) and Sweden (1788–1790). During her reign, the Crimea (1783), the Northern Baltic Sea, the Baltic states, the eastern part of Poland, and the Aleutian Islands became part of Russia. Russian settlements were established in Alaska, and Eastern Georgia was taken under the protection of Russia. Russia’s prestige in Europe increased greatly.
Peter Fyodorovich is depicted in an official uniform of the Life Guard Dragoons Regiment of the Holstein Army with the Order of St. Andrews (the ribbon and the star). Catherine Alexeyevna is depicted with the Grand cross of the Order of Saint Catherine (the ribbon, the cross and the star). The stylistic elements and the lack of archival documents about the creation of this double portrait raise doubts about the authorship of the painter. The wedding of Peter Fyodorovich and Catherine Alexeyevna took place in August 1745. It is very likely that this double portrait was painted during that year as a portrait of the engaged couple. Their child, future Emperor Paul I was born on 20th of September (1st of October) 1754.
Portrait of Ivan Shuvalov
- Canvas, oil. 71,5 x 56,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-9281
Ivan Shuvalov (1727–1797) was an adjutant general. As he became the favourite of Empress Elizaveta Petrovna in 1749, he had a great influence on Russian foreign and domestic affairs. He was the curator of the Moscow University and the Academy of Art. He took Mikhail Lomonosov under his wing and was acquainted with Voltaire and Helvétius. After the accession of Catherine the Great to the throne, he lived abroad until 1777. After his return to Russia, he became Grand Chamberlain. The painting depicts Shuvalov in uniform with the Orders of St. Anna and the White Eagle. This painting is one of Rokotov’s early works.
Portrait of Ivan Shuvalov
- Between 1755 and 1757
- Canvas, oil. 217 x 157
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3924
Ivan Shuvalov (1727–1797) was a privy councillor, Great Chamberlain and lieutenant general. He was a favourite of Empress Elizaveta Petrovna. He was the founder and the first curator of the University of Moscow (1755), the first president of the Imperial Academy of Arts, which was also founded as his project, and was a patron of the arts. He contributed to the development of the arts and sciences in Russia. From 1763 through 1777, he travelled around Western Europe. He was acquainted with Diderot and Voltaire. He is depicted with the Order of the White Eagle (ribbon and star; 1754). The portrait was painted by artist prior into entering into a contract for admission into the service at the Imperial Academy of Art as an “example of his work and abilities”.
Portrait of the Grand Duke Peter Fyodorovich
- Canvas, oil. 114 x 90
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4938
Portrait of Sylvester Kulyabka
- Archbishop of St Petersburg and Schlüsselburg
- 1760
- Canvas, oil. 102 x 77,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4916
The portrait is one of a series of portraits of archimandrites of the St Alexander Nevsky Monastery in St Petersburg painted by Alexei Antropov in the 1760s and 1770s.
Sylvester (Semyon) Kulyabka (1701 or 1704–1761) was rector of Kiev Religious Academy (1740), Archbishop of St Petersburg and Schlüsselburg and Archimandrite of the St Alexander Nevsky Monastery (from 1750). The subject is depicted in the vestments of an archbishop, with a crosier and a panagia. On the background is the Kulyabka family coat of arms.
Портрет И. И. Шувалова
- 1760
- Canvas, oil. 85 х 70,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4965
Автопортрет
- 1761
- Canvas, oil. 48 х 40
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5450
Portrait of Catherine II
- Iconographic type of Pietro Antonio Rotari
- Canvas, oil. 245 × 176
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-14
Coronation Portrait of Catherine II
- Between 1763 and 1766
- Canvas, oil. 244 х 178
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5808
Portrait of Adjutant General Count Grigory Orlov
- After 1763
- Canvas, oil. 98,5 x 77
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5367
Battle of Poltava
- Tapestry
- Wool, silk, weaving. 317 х 408
- The State Russian Museum
- Тк-1032
The tapestry "Battle of Poltava" is one of the most significant and famous works of St. Petersburg Tapestry Manufactory, which was founded in 1716 on the initiative of Peter the Great. Battle paintings appeared to be a new genre in Russian art, brought to life by the brilliant victories of the Russian army in the Great Northern War. The victory at Poltava was often embodied in all kinds of art, including in weaving. "The Battle of Poltava" is one of the most significant and most famous works of the St. Petersburg Tapestry Manufactory.
In the centre of the tapestry is the equestrian portrait of Peter I, a convincing monumental image of the commander. The figure of the emperor on the rampant bay horse is spectacularly depicted against the background of the battle. The artist and the makers of the tapestry managed to find the necessary degree of generalization and achieve the monumentality necessary for this kind of work, creating an expressive artistic image through the means of carpet making.
Initially, the tapestry was surrounded by a wide frame with the images of the coats of arms of Russian towns. It is difficult to say, when and under what circumstances the tapestry lost this spectacular frame. Until 1863 the St. Petersburg furniture manufacturer Karl Tur owned the carpet. Then until 1912 the carpet decorated the rooms of the Petrovsky palace on Petrovsky island.
The fragments of the frame are currently kept in the State Russian Museum and the Historical Museum in Moscow.
The tapestry is an example of the most interesting monumental Russian decorative art of the 18th century thanks to the mastery of its performance.
Portrait of Count Ivan Orlov, Retired Captain of the Preobrazhensky Life Guards
- Canvas, oil. 58,5 х 46,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4942
Ivan Grigoryevich Orlov (1733–1791) was the eldest of the Orlovs brothers. One of his brothers, Grigory, was Catherine the Great’s favourite. Taking the lead in many family affairs, Ivan always remained deliberately in the background . He took part in the murder of Peter III in Ropsha and won the title of Count. In 1766 he was chosen at the head of a Commission for the redaction a new Constitution. Once retired, he managed his brothers’ vast estates. Ivan Orlov was described as an intelligent, ingenious and energetic man. This portrait is notable for its elegant range of colours.
Екатерина II в образе Минервы
- Marble. 90 х 57 х 36
- The State Russian Museum
- Ск-2070
Portrait of Vice-Admiral Samuel Greig
- Canvas, oil. 91,5 х 72,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4758
Портрет художника А. П. Антропова с сыном перед портретом жены
- 1776
- Canvas, oil. 84 х 70,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4929
Portrait of the Writer Alexander Khrapovitsky
- 1781
- Canvas, oil. 60,5 х 49
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4994
Khrapovitsky Aleksandr Vasilyevich (1749–1801) – a writer. He graduated from the Overland Gentry Corps, from a young age he was fond of literature. He was acquainted with M.V. Lomonosov. Khrapovitsky Aleksandr Vasilyevich was a friend of G.R. Derzhavin. From 1782 to 1793 he was the State Secretary of Catherine II. Since 1793 he was a senator. Mason. The author of the well-known "Memorandum Pads".
Khrapovitsky is depicted with the Order of St. Vladimir. He received the Order of St. Vladimir of the 3rd Class in 1783, and 2nd Class – in 1785.
Портрет Н. А. Львова, архитектора, художника и поэта
- 1780s
- Canvas, oil. 71 x 55,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5002
Portrait of the Architect and Adjunct Rector of the Academy of Arts Georg Friedrich Felten
- Canvas, oil. 60 х 47
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3229
Портрет А. М. Протасовой
- 1789
- Canvas, oil. 72 x 58
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-6246
Portrait of the Serf Actor Ivan Yakimov Dressed as Cupid
- 1790
- Canvas, oil. 142 x 92
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3284
Ivan Yakimov (1780-1804) was a student of Count Sheremetyev and member of the ballet troupe of the Sheremetev serf theatre on the Kuskovo estate. Count Sheremetyev recalled: "Once a ballet was performed in my theatre where he [Yakimov] danced as cupid. The graces carried him in a basket with garlands of roses, and as they only expected to find roses in it, the unexpected appearance of this cupid enraptured the entire audience?". Play and Passion in Russian Fine Art. St-Petersburg. 1999. P. 22.
Portrait of Brigadier Valerian Zubov
- 1791 (2?)
- Canvas, oil. 83 x 66
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5391
Portrait of Natalia Suvorova
- 1795
- Canvas, oil. 72 x 56.5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4556
Natalia Alexandrovna Suvorova (1775–1844), Countess, only daughter of Field Marshall Alexander Suvorov who affectionately called her “Suvorochka”. She was a lady-in-waiting to Catherine II (from 1791). From 1795 she was the wife of Senior-equerry Count Nikolai Zubov (1763–1805), the elder brother of one of the Empress’s favourites. In 1801 her husband took an active part in a plot to kill Emperor Paul I. Natalia Alexandrovna moved to Moscow and lived separately from her husband and once widowed, she dedicated herself to bring up her six children. According to legend, Natalia Alexandrovna did not manage to escape when the French army reached Moscow in 1812 and she and her carriage were detained. However, learning that before them stood the daughter of the great Suvorov, the French let her and her children escape through their lines giving them full military honours.
Portrait of Grand Duchess Alexandra Pavlovna
- 1790s
- Canvas, oil. 60 х 47,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3973
Alexandra Pavlovna, Grand Duchess (1783-1801) — daughter of Emperor Paul I and his wife Maria Feodorovna. A favorite of her father, educated and talented, she inherited artistic inclinations from her mother — she drew, sculpted from wax, and was engaged in translations from French. In 1799 she married Archduke Joseph of Austria, Palatine of Hungary.
The girl is shown in a festive brocade dushegreya and a silk blouse with lace. Catherine the Great, writing to her long-time correspondent Baron von Grimm in February 1796, raptly described a court masquerade ball where her granddaughters “danced a Russian dance to Russian music, which aroused everybody's delight… All of them … were dressed in splendid costumes”.
Portrait of Emperor Paul I
- 1797
- Canvas, oil. 251 х 179
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4699
Portrait of Anna Protasova, Maid of Honour of the Bedchamber to Catherine II
- Canvas, oil. 61 x 50,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5448
Portrait of Emperor Paul I
- 1798-1801
- Canvas, oil. 152 х 109
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3207
Emperor Paul I (1754–1801) was the only son of Emperor Peter III and Empress Catherine the Great. In 1762 he was named heir to the throne and given the title of Tsesarevich. He received an excellent education and believed in the romantic ideals of enlightened absolutism, but was critical of the policies of Catherine the Great. He spent decades waiting for the power that his mother had usurped. He became emperor in 1796. His efforts were intended to be to the state’s benefit, but he often acted against common sense. At his coronation in Moscow in 1797 he promulgated the Establishment of the Imperial Family which laid down that accession to the throne should be by primogeniture in the male line. He reformed local government. He restricted the rights of the nobility and allowed corporal punishment to be used on them. Military reforms affected not only uniforms and equipment, but also training and the tactics of officers and soldiers, with an emphasis on the Prussian military school. In an effort to protect Russia from revolutionary ideas, he banned the import of books from France and tightened censorship. In 1798, he took on the title of Grand Master of the Knights of St John of Jerusalem, of Rhodes and of Malta (Hospitaller), and took it under his patronage. He was killed by conspirators in St Michael’s Castle during the night of 11–12 March 1801, but according to the official version he died of an apoplectic fit (a stroke).
Emperor Paul I is depicted in the robes of the Grand Master of the Hospitaller Order of Saint John of Jerusalem, of Rhodes and of Malta. He is wearing the black mantle of the Order with a white eight-pointed Maltese cross, and a golden dalmatic under the mantle. A black stole with embroidered scenes of Christ’s sufferings hangs from his shoulder. He is wearing the Maltese crown on his head and the golden chain of the Grand Master of the Hospitaller Order around his neck. On his chest is the blue ribbon of St Andrew and a crimson sash. The Grand Master’s regalia stand on a nearby table.
Portrait of Prince Alexander Kurakin
- 1799
- Canvas, oil. 178 x 137
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5013
Prince Alexander Kurakin is depicted in the mantel of St Andrew, worn above a dalmatic of St John of Jerusalem, with the chain and star of St Andrew and the cross of St John of Jerusalem. Prince Alexander Borisovich Kurakin (1752–1818): Russian statesman, diplomat. Fellow pupil and close friend of the future Tsar Paul. Studied at Leipzig University. Gentleman of the bedchamber and procurator-general of the Senate (1778). Vice chancellor (1796), dismissed (1798), reinstated (1801). President of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (1801), member of the State Council (1802). Helped to negotiate the Treaty of Tilsit with Napoleon (1807). Visited Vienna with a Russian diplomatic mission. Russian ambassador in Paris (1809–12). Buried in the parish church of St Mary Magdalene in Pavlovsk, where the inscription on his gravestone To the Friend of My Husband was written by Empress Marie Fyodorovna.
Portrait of the Director of the Artillery School Lieutenant General Alexei Korsakov
- 1799
- Canvas, oil. 70 x 57
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3228
Portrait of Mikhail Trakhimovsky, Military Councillor and Godfather of Nikolai Gogol
- 1802
- Canvas, oil. 67 х 58
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5025
Портрет архитектора А. Д. Захарова
- Canvas, oil. 59 х 54
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5029
Portrait of Emperor Alexander I
- Canvas, oil. 73,5 x 58,3
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3230
Catherine II Promenading in the Tsarskoye Selo Park (With the Obelisk to Count Pyotr Rumyantsev's Victories in the Background)
- Late 1800s — early 1810s
- Canvas, oil. 99 х 68
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5008
Empress Catherine II (the Great; 1729–1796), née Sophie Friederike Auguste von Anhalt-Zerbst-Dornburg, was born in the Prussian city of Stettin. In 1744, she arrived in Russia as the bride of Grand Duke Peter Feodorovich, the future Emperor Peter III. That same year, she converted to Russian Orthodoxy and took the name Catherine Alexeyevna. She married Peter Feodorovich in August 1745. In 1754 she gave birth to an heir, the future Emperor Paul I. The relationship with her husband did not work out, and he planned to have her sent to a convent. In the summer of 1762 she led a conspiracy of Peter’s guards and overthrew him, becoming Empress. In the first years of her reign she adhered to a policy of “enlightened absolutism”, but after the peasant rebellion led by Emelyan Pugachev (1773–1775) and the French Revolution (1789), she was forced to toughen her regime. She led victorious campaigns against Turkey (1768–1774; 1787–1792) and Sweden (1788–1790). During her reign, the Crimea (1783), the Northern Baltic Sea, the Baltic states, the eastern part of Poland, and the Aleutian Islands became part of Russia. Russian settlements were established in Alaska, and Eastern Georgia was taken under the protection of Russia. Russia’s prestige in Europe increased greatly.
Borovikovsky did not have the possibility to paint a portrait from life, and when he painted Empress Catherine II, it was the lady in waiting of the Empress, Maria Perekusikhina, who posed. The first version of this portrait (with the Chesme Column in the background) was made in 1794 and is displayed at the Tretyakov Gallery. This portrait was then engraved by Nikolai Utkin in 1827.
Автопортрет (?)
- Canvas, oil. 68 х 57
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5035
Портрет архитектора К. И. Росси (1775-1849)
- Canvas, oil. 109,5 х 91
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5041
Портрет художника Д. Г. Левицкого (1735-1822)
- 1812
- Canvas, oil. 132 х 107
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3275
Портрет А. О. Орловского
- 1815
- Canvas, oil. 70 x 56
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4604
Portrait of Archbishop Mikhail (Mathew Desnitsky)
- 1816
- Canvas, oil. 111 x 85
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3158
Portrait of the Military Officer and Statesman Count Alexei Arakcheyev
- 1823
- Canvas, oil. 88 x 61
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-6349
Alexei Andreyevich Arakcheyev (1769–1834) was a Count. He studied at the Artillery Cadet Corps and in 1787 was made an officer. He was a favourite of the Grand Duke Paul Pavlovich. In 1796 he became major general, Commandant of St Petersburg.
He was made Baron (5 April 1797), Knight of the Order of St Alexander Nevsky (1797), and then Count (5 May 1799). His fall into disgrace took place from 1799 to 1808. Under the reign of Alexander I he became minister and Inspector General of all Infantry and Artillery. In the last decade of his rule Alexander I exerted unlimited influence over every area of Imperial rule. He was the author of the project (making plans, drawings, estimates) for military settlements, and the first barracks which were built on his estate in Gruzino served as a pattern for the building of similar barracks and other structures. From 1819 he was the head of military settlements. Following the accession of Nicholas I he retired and lived in the Gruzino estate, where he was buried in the Cathedral of St Andrew. He appears here in uniform against the background of the barracks of the military settlement in Gruzino. On his epaulettes is the monogram of Alexander I. On the neck ribbon of the Order of St Andrew is a silver medal “In Memory of the Patriotic War of 1812” and a medallion he was granted with a miniature portrait of Alexander I. On his chest is the Order of St Alexander Nevsky (star).
Portrait of the Engraver Nikolai Utkin
- 1824
- Canvas, oil. 122 х 88,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5224
Игра в шашки
- 1824
- Canvas, oil. 107 x 134
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3831
Portrait of Alexandra Tomilova in Childhood with a Doll in her Hand
- 1825
- Canvas, oil. 62.5 x 50.5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-6281
Alexandra Tomilova (1815- 1878) was the daughter of Alexei Tomilov and later wife of adjutant general Schwarz. Warnek knew Tomilov well and frequently visited him at his country estate in Uspenskoe. Tomilov himself was an exceptional individual and patron of artists. Among Warnek's best works are the portraits of Tomilov's three children two sons and a daughter - which make up a series, at the centre of which is the portrait of Alexandra Tomilova, one of the daughters. The adolescent girl is pictured wearing a white dress and sitting solemnly with a doll in her hands. She has a dreamy and meaningful look and pose. This, however, is no "small adult" as found in the portraits of the eighteenth century, but very much a product of the new Romantic era. Play and Passion in Russian Fine Art. St-Petersburg. 1999. P. 24..
Portrait of the Writer and Musician Princess Zinaida Alexandrovna Volkonskaya, née Princess Beloselskaya-Belozerskaya (1879–1862), Dressed as Tancred (from the Opera by G. Rossini)
- Not before 1820
- Canvas, oil. 188 x 130
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3409
Zinaida Alexandrovna Volkonskaya, née princess Beloselskaya-Belozerskaya (1789–1862), Wife of the Master of the Hunt Prince Nikita Volkonsky — writer, musician, member of the Society of Lovers of Literature and the Society of Lovers of History and Antiquities. Since 1824 lived in Moscow; her house was a meeting place for famous scientists and writers. In 1829 she moved to Rome, where she converted to Catholicism and after her death was beatified (beata). A lithographic portrait of Z. A. Volkonskaya as Joan of Arc (the variant of the painting from the Russian Museum collection) was sent by the princess to A. S. Pushkin in 1826, indicating that it was made d'après Bruni (after Bruni). It got to the State Russian Museum in 1926 from the office of the Department of Preservation and Registration of Objects of Art and Antiquities (Leningrad).
In the portrait of Z. A. Volkonskaya is personified the image of a knight from the poem "Jerusalem Delivered" (1575) by the famous Italian poet of the 16th century Torquato Tasso, which combines heroism and faith, love and disposition to heroic deeds, longing and determination. There is no representationalism required for ceremonial portraits. Romantic nature of a theatricalized character is obvious: half-fantastic costume, armour and helmet, wild rocky landscape, a shade of contemplative loneliness and longing. Volkonskaya is depicted as if dreaming, immersed in her own thoughts. The state of the model is maintained by exquisite colour: all the colours seem to twinkle, flash and retreat into the shade. She wears the costume of Tancred, the main character of the eponymous opera by G. Rossini, which was staged in the princess’s salon in Rome.
Portrait of the Archbishop and Writer Giuseppe Capecelatro
- Canvas, oil. 65 x 52,5 (овал)
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5101
Vincenzo Brioschi. Portrait of the St Petersburg Postal Director Konstantin Bulgakov
- 1830
- Canvas, oil. 85 х 72
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3473
Konstantin Yakovlevich Bulgakov (1782–1835) was the younger son of the diplomat Yakov Bulgakov, and in 1797 he was appointed to the College of Foreign Affairs. Under Alexander I he was attached as a supernumerary to the mission to Vienna, and was then put at the disposal of the Commander-in-Chief of the Transdanubian Army, Nikolai Kamensky. He became an actual state councillor in 1814, postal director for Moscow in 1816, and was transferred to the same position in St Petersburg in 1819.
Under his direction communications by stage-coach were set up, as well as a permanent urban postal system in St Petersburg. In 1822 he concluded a postal convention with Prussia and Austria that speeded up the delivery of letters from abroad. He was appointed privy councillor in 1826 and director of the Department of Posts in 1831. He was well known for his generous philanthropic work, his love of literature and art and for organising numerous charitable evenings; he was friends with many figures in the arts and with contemporaries who were collectors (in particular Alexei Tomilov). He was the author of a correspondence that has become a chronicle of Russian life at the start of the 19th century.
Portrait of Empress Alexandra Fyodorovna and her Daughter, Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna, Horse Riding in the Peterhof Park
- Modello for an unpainted portrait
- 1837
- Canvas, oil. 89 x 70,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3375
Portrait of Alexander Stupin with Pupils
- 1838
- Canvas, oil. 120 x 167
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5253
Alexander Vasilyevich Stupin (1776–1861) was an artist. He began studying with the artist Lopytin in Arzamas in 1787, and then worked as the pupil of a number of masters. He became an independent artist in September 1797, accepting commissions and taking in pupils. As he was thinking of setting up a school in Arzamas, he travelled to St Petersburg where he studied in the Imperial Academy of Art from 1800 to 1802, paying special attention to methods of teaching. In 1801 he received the silver medal of the second rank and on graduation a certificate as Artist of the 14th class. On his return home he began organising the Arzamas School of Painting and opened it in 1805. The Imperial Academy of Art took Stupin’s school under its patronage in 1809, and the artist himself received the title of Academician. The portrait was painted as an academic exercise “To reproduce in natural size a group of four or five people, knee-length, showing Academician Stupin surrounded by pupils and examining the work of one of them”. Alexeyev received the title of Academician for the picture in 1839.
Зал Училища правоведения с группой учителей и воспитанников
- 1840
- Canvas, oil. 86 x 126
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5196
Portrait of Ulyana Smirnova, née Spiridonova
- 1837–1844
- Canvas, oil. 90 x 71,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5100
Портрет А. П. Брюллова
- Canvas, oil. 123,5 х 97,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5440
Portrait of the Art Lover and Patron the Most Serene Princess Maria Volkonskaya, née Kikina, Wife of the Steward of the Household the Most Serene Prince Dmitry Volkonsky
- Canvas, oil. 103 x85 (овал)
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5095
Портрет А. П. Ге с детьми
- 1861–1866
- Canvas, oil. 137 х 98
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-10117
Портрет графа Н. Н. Муравьева-Амурского
- 1864
- Canvas, oil. 105,2 х 84,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-6255
Портрет И. С.Тургенева
- 1872
- Canvas, oil. 102 х 80
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4090
Portrait of Vladimir Stasov
- 1883
- Canvas, oil. 74 x 60
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4043
Stasov, Vladimir Vasilyevich (1824–1906): Art and music critic, art historian.
Портрет Н. В. Стасовой
- 1884
- Canvas, oil. 90,5 х 72,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4036
Portrait of the Astronomer Wilhelm Von Struve
- Canvas, oil. 135,5 х 102
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2991
Ivan Kramskoi was a portraitist, author of thematic paintings, art critic and thought leader of an entire generation of Russian artists. He was the head of the Peredvizhniki Society (The Wanderers, the society of Russian Realist artists). He saw the mission of the artist in the civic consciousness, in the service of the people’s interest. He is the author of many portraits of Russian scientists and cultural figures.
Otto Wilhelm von Struve (1819-1905) was a Russian astronomer and academician. He was the head of the Pulkovo Observatory for more than 25 years. He is depicted in the attic story of the Pulkovo Observatory tower and is concentrated on himself.
Portrait of Elena Likhacheva
- Canvas, oil. 103 х 71,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4147
The compositional solution of the portrait of the writer and social activist Elena Likhacheva (1836-1904) is not typical of Ge’s portrait work. Likhacheva is shown in the study at a table. Her small figure in a black dress seems to be lost, surrounded by various objects. Likhacheva's eyes gaze intently at the viewer, showing intellect and spiritual depth.
Even in his younger years, Ge was convinced that "the artist must convey the image of his dear compatriots", doing that not for himself, but "for society." He felt like this while painting the portraits of Alexander Herzen, Nikolai Nekrasov, Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin, and later Leo Tolstoy. The civic-mindedness was a typical feature of the Peredvizhniki’s portraits.
Портрет П. А. Костычева
- 1892
- Canvas, oil. 89,5 х 67,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4153
Portrait of Maxim Gorky
- 1899
- Canvas, oil. 75 x57
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-8471
Portrait of Alexander III
- 1900
- Canvas, oil. 160 х 107
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2004
Alexander III (the Peacemaker; 1845–1894) was the second son of Emperor Alexander II and Maria Alexandrovna, née Princess Maria of Hesse and by Rhine of Darmstadt. Before the death of his older brother Nikolai (1865) he was not in line for the throne and was preparing for a military career. In 1866 he married the Danish princess Dagmar, daughter of King Christian IX, who was christened Maria Fyodorovna when she converted to the Russian Orthodox religion. He came to the throne in March 1881 after the tragic death of his father, who was killed by terrorists. He conducted a conservative domestic policy which revealed that his main intention, having reversed the positive results of the liberal reforms, was to stave off the beginning of a period of revolutionary chaos in Russia. There was an increase in censorship, new regulations were introduced in universities, there were restrictions on autonomy, and the position of land captain was established in rural districts, aimed at securing the pre-eminence of the gentry in the social hierarchy. National politics were characterised by an attempt to prioritise a cohesive internal trajectory for a polyethnic Russia in place of a plethora of ethnic Russians.
The stabilization of the political situation created the prerequisites for an impressive economic and cultural emergence. The budgetary deficit caused by the construction of the Trans-Siberian Railway was overcome, the military was rearmed, the Black Sea fleet was reinstated, and a network of Parish Church Schools and professional-technical schools was organised to meet the new needs of industrialisation. Russia’s foreign policy was notable for its peacefulness and ensured international security. Giving state and personal support to museums, he established cultural centers in both capitals and in the provinces and was a passionate collector of art. His collections laid the foundations for the Emperor Alexander III Russian Museum in St. Petersburg.
Портрет графа Д. И. Толстого
- 1901
- Canvas, oil. 107 х 79
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2157
Ceremonial Sitting of the State Council on 7 May 1901 Marking the Centenary of its Foundation
- 1903
- Canvas, oil. 400 x 877
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4088
Founded by Tsar Alexander I (1801–25), the State Council celebrated its centenary with a ceremonial sitting in the Round Room of the Mariinsky Palace in St Petersburg on 7 May 1901. All the members of the State Council and the State Chancellery attended in full-dress uniform. Tsar Nicholas II (1894–1917) and senior members of the Imperial family are flanked by their ministers. Repin painted the scene from behind the chairs on the right (next to the columns).
He rapidly sketched the original modello on a canvas on which the perspective of the hall had already been marked out, working from a previously selected point. The artist later turned this study into a large picture with the help of two students of the Imperial Academy of Arts — Boris Kustodiev and Ivan Kulikov. Every member of the State Council is depicted in natural and diverse poses, with strong physical resemblances.
Portrait of Count Felix Sumarokov-Elston (Later Prince Yussupov)
- 1903
- Canvas, oil. 89 x 71,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4304
Count Felix Felixovich Sumarokov-Elston (1887–1967): Son of Count Felix Felixovich Sumarokov-Elston and Princess Zinaida Yussupova. Inherited the title of Prince Yussupov (1917). Married Grand Duchess Irina Alexandrovna.
In terms of its painting and delivery of the human character, Portrait of Count Felix Sumarokov-Elston (Later Prince Yussupov) is one of the most elegant works in the gallery of portraits of Russians of various classes painted by Valentin Serov from the mid-1880s onwards. The image of the sixteen-year-old schoolboy reflects many features later typical of this refined aristocrat, who participated in the murder of Grigory Rasputin in 1916. Although Serov took two years to paint the portrait, this fresh and sharp picture appears to have been executed in one sitting. The dog is masterly painted, with subtle understanding of animal psychology. In his memoirs, Felix Yussupov wrote that Serov considered the dog to be his best sitter. The artist’s portraits of Felix and his father, mother and elder brother (1902–03, Russ. Mus.) constitute an original cycle of family portraits, extremely rare for the twentieth century. The Yussupov series represents one of Valentin Serov’s highest achievements in portraiture.
Портрет Н. И. Бобрикова
- 1902–1903
- Canvas, oil. 60,5 х 43
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1887
Портрет П. И. Саломона
- 1902–1903
- Canvas mounted on cardboard, oil. 61,7 х 46,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-8111
Афиша Историко-художественной выставки русских портретов
- 1905
- Цветная литография. 45,5 х 65,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр. луб.-2588
Peter I on His Death Bed
- Early 1725
- Canvas, oil. 82 x 60,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4907
The painting of Nikitin may be perceived as a requiem for the "father of the fatherland." Immediately after the death of Peter I Nikitin was invited to embody the dead emperor. The portrait introduces the tsar, dressed in a white shirt, covered up to his chest with the yellowish draped fabric with a blue ermine mantle. The image of Peter I is full of majestic solemnity.
The portrait reflects deep and sincere sorrow: for Nikitin Peter I was not only the emperor, but the close and familiar person whose death was a personal loss for the artist. Master traced every wrinkle, every fold, every strand of hair, as if he felt his responsibility towards future generations.
Death has already distorted the face of Peter. But looking at the picture of the dead emperor, one can understand the greatness of his lifetime. In 1762 by order of Empress Catherine the portrait was transferred from the old wooden Winter Palace on Nevsky Prospekt near the Police Bridge to the Imperial Academy of Arts.
I.N. Nikitin, J.G. Tannauer, Andrei Matveyev were considered to be the authors of the portrait. Modern researchers state that this is the indisputable work of I.N. Nikitin. This fact is proven by the technological analysis of the portrait.
Peter I Alexeyevich [Peter the Great (May 30 [June 9], 1672 – January 28 [February 8], 1725) was the last ruler to formally take the title Tsar (starting from April 27, 1682) and the first to take the title Emperor of All Russia (starting from October 22, 1721). He was a member of the Romanov dynasty.
Peter was the fourteenth child of Tsar Alexis Mikhailovich; his father's first child with Natalia Naryshkina. He was baptised by Protopope Andrei Savinov on June 29, the Feast of Saints Peter and Paul, in the Chudov Monastery (according to other sources, in the Church of St. Gregory of Neocaesarea, Moscow) and given the name Peter. After his father’s death in 1676, Peter’s half-brother and godfather, Tsar Theodore Alexeyevich, became his guardian. Upon his death, Peter was proclaimed Tsar on April 27 (May, 7), 1682. This triggered the Streltsy Uprising, which resulted in the deaths of many Naryshkin supporters and the coronation of Ivan and Peter on June 25. Tsarevna Sophia became regent. Peter stayed with his mother, Natalia Naryshkina, in the village of Preobrazhenskoye, where he formed the first two new order regiments, Preobrazhensky and Semenovsky, and organised meetings of the “Drunken Synod of Fools and Jesters.” Foreigners Franz Lefort and Patrick Gordon became his closest associates. On January 27, 1689, Peter married Eudoxia Lopukhina. They had three sons: Alexis (February18, 1690 – June 26, 1718), Alexander (October 3, 1691 – May 14, 1692), and Paul (1693–1693). During August of 1689, confrontations between Peter and Sophia began to sharply intensify. Fearing assassination, Peter fled to the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius on the night of August 7-8, accompanied by a small retinue. On August 8 both Tsaritsas, Natalia and Eudoxia joined him followed by the “Toy Army” and the artillery. Peter issued several decrees, demanding that existing regiments based in Moscow obey him as their rightful ruler. Sophia, recognizing her defeat, subsequently was confined to the Novodevichy Convent; while Peter’s elder brother, Tsar Ivan, effectively ceased intervening in affairs of the state.
The Capture of the Ottoman Fortress of Azov (July 19, 1696) in two Azov campaigns (1695–1696) became Peter’s first serious victory. Russia gained access to the Black sea. In 1697–1798 Peter the Great travelled to Europe for the first time as a member of the Grand Embassy. He visited Riga, Königsberg, Brandenburg, Holland, England, and Austria; he also planned to visit Venice and meet the Pope. He studied shipbuilding and military science in Holland and in England; the Grand Embassy recruited several hundreds of specialists to work in Russia. In July 1698 news about a new Streltsy Uprising in Moscow interrupted the mission. When the Tsar arrived in Moscow on August 25, investigation and interrogations took place resulting in almost simultaneous execution of 800 Streltsy. Tsarevna Sophia was made to take the veil under the name of Susanna. Eudoxia Lopukhina, whom Peter never loved, shared her fate: she was sent the Intercession Convent of Suzdal. And transformations began. On August 26, 1698 Peter issued his famous decrees on Western dress, shaving beards and moustaches, and Old Believers’ clothing. In 1700 the New Year was moved to January 1. After his coming back from the Grand Embassy, the Tsar began preparations for war with Sweden to gain access to the Baltic Sea. In 1699 Denmark, Saxony and the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth joined Peter’s Northern Union against Charles XII, King of Sweden. The Northern War started with a failure: on November 19 (30), 1700 Peter’s army was defeated at Narva. In autumn 1702 Peter renewed the war. He seized the fortress of Noteburg (that he renamed Schlisselburg) on the Baltic seashore, and in spring 1703 he took the fortress of Nyenschantz at the mouth of the Neva river. On May 10 (21), 1703 Peter (who was then Captain in the Bombardier Company of the Life-Guards Preobrazhensky Regiment) received the Order of St. Andrew the Apostle the First-Called, which he had established himself, for brave capture of two Swedish vessels. On May 16 (27), 1703 he founded St. Petersburg, and placed a Russian naval base, the fortress of Kronslot (later Kronstadt) on the island of Kotlin.
In 1703 he met Catherine, née Marta Skowrońska, widow of the dragoon Johan Cruse, who was captured as a war trophy during the seizure of the Swedish fortress of Marienburg. Peter officially married Catherine on February 19, 1712 after the Pruth River Campaign. Together they had several children: Catherine (December 28, 1706 – July 27, 1708), Anna (February 7, 1708 – May 15, 1728), Elizabeth (December 18, 1709 – December 25, 1761), Natalia (March 3, 1713 – May 27, 1715), Margarita (September 3, 1714 – July 27, 1715), Peter (October 29, 1715 – April 25, 1719), Paul (January 2, 1717 – January 3, 1717), Natalia (August 20, 1718 – March 4,1725).
In 1706 Charles XII, King of Sweden started a new campaign. Expecting to get support against Russia from the Little Russia hetman Ivan Mazepa, Charles XII sent troops to the Ukraine. In response, Peter personally commanded the cavalry corps of Alexander Menshikov at the Battle of Lesnaya, which took place on September 28 (October 9) and resulted in the crushing defeat of Lewenhaupt corps that were about to join the army of Charles XII coming from Livonia. Peter would later celebrate the anniversary of this battle as the decisive turning point in the Northern War. On June 27 (July 8), 1709 the army of Charles XII was completely defeated at the Battle of Poltava. During the years 1714–1720 the Russian army achieved more land and sea victories in the Baltic area. On August 30 (September 10), 1721 Russia and Sweden concluded the Treaty of Nystad, which ended the 21-year-long war. Russia gained access to the Baltic sea and annexed Ingria, Estonia, Finland, and part of Karelia. On October 22 Peter was accorded the title of Emperor of All Russia, Great Father of the Fatherland.
During the reign of Peter the Great Kamchatka was annexed by Russia. His most significant foreign policy undertaking after the Northern War was the Persian campaign of 1722–1724 resulting in annexation of the Western and the Southern coast of the Caspian sea including the towns of Derbent and Baku, and the provinces of Gilan, Mazandaran, and Astarabad. On February 5 (16), 1722 Peter issued a decree on succession to the throne (which was annulled by Paul I 75 years later) abolishing the old rules of succession of direct descendants in the male line, and stating that the reigning monarch could nominate his own successor. On May 7, 1724 Peter crowned Catherine as empress-consort and made her his co-ruler, but later suspected her of adultery. He failed to nominate his own successor before his death.
Peter the Great died after terrible suffering (according to the official information – of pneumonia) early in the morning of January 28 (February 8), 1725 in the Winter Palace by the Winter Canal. After his death the Senate proclaimed his wife, Catherine, his successor. On January 28 (February 8), 1725 she became Empress of Russia under the name of Catherine I.
Portrait of Baron Sergei Stroganov, Youngest Son of the Salt manufacturer Grigory Stroganov and his Wife Maria
- 1726
- Canvas, oil. 87 х 65 (овал, вписанный в прямоугольник)
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4908
Sergei Stroganov (August 20, 1707 – September 30, 1756). Youngest son of Grigory Stroganov, a prominent person and salt manufacturer, and his second wife Maria Yakovlevna, née Novosiltseva. Baron (from 1722), actual gentleman-in-waiting, Lieutenant General. Owner of a palace located on Nevsky Prospect, St Petersburg designed by Francesco Bartolomeo Rastrelli. Collector and founder of the Stroganov Art Gallery. In 1735 he married Sofia Kirillovna Naryshkina. His son, Alexander Stroganov, would become president of the Imperial Academy of Arts.
The work was first attributed to Ivan Nikitin in 1804 and there is no question of his authorship. This is one of the few works of the artist that was signed and dated. Researchers note that the technique of the portrait is very good, and it has been preserved better than other works, which makes the individual manner of the artist more apparent. A similar style is visible on his portraits of Prasovia Ioannovna and Anna Petrovna.
Self-Portrait with Wife
- 1729 (?). After 1727 (?)
- Canvas, oil. 75,5 x 90,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4913
Andrei Matveyev (1702, (?) – 1739, St Petersburg). Painter, portrait artist, and icon painter, who created allegorical, and decorative and monumental compositions. In 1716, at the request of Peter the Great, he was then sent to study painting in Holland. From September 1717 to September 1723, he studied under Arnold Boonen in Amsterdam, and from December 1723 to May (?) 1727 – in the Antwerp Academy of Fine Arts under (?) Sperwer. In August 1727, he came back to Petersburg and began his work in the Chancellery of Construction. In 1731, Matveyev attained the rank of Master and became the head of the Painting Brigade of the Chancellery of Construction. He participated in creating murals for the Peter and Paul Cathedral, as well as tsarist residences in Petersburg, he also painted icons for the Church of The Holy Righteous Simeon and Anna The Prophetess.
Irina Matveyeva (1712/14–1740s). Daughter of the blacksmith Stepan Antropov. In 1729 (or 1728) she married the artist Andrey Matveyev. She later entered into a second marriage with the merchant Turgenev.
The portrait is thought to have been painted in 1729, the year the artist got married. Some researchers believed that the woman depicted is much older than the artist’s wife (who was only 16 years old when the portrait was painted), and that the people depicted are Princess Anna Leopoldovna and her husband Duke Anthony Ulrich of Brunswick. Modern technical analysis established that the woman’s face was “aged” by alterations introduced after the work was completed.
Портрет великого князя Павла Петровича в детстве
- Canvas, oil. 58,5 х 47,5 (овал, вписанный в прямоугольник)
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4939
Портрет А. Ф. Кокоринова
- 1769
- Canvas, oil. 134 x 102
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4985
Портрет великого князя Павла Петровича в юности
- Canvas, oil. 84 x 67
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-29
Portrait of Catherine II in Travelling Costume
- Canvas, oil. 70,5 x 56
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4963
View of Palace Embankment from the Peter and Paul Fortress
- 1790s
- Canvas, oil. 72 x 107
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-3292
This is a repeat version of a painting for which Fyodor Alexeyev was elected to the Imperial Academy of Arts – View of Palace Embankment from the Peter and Paul Fortress (1794, Tret. Gal.). On the left is the Peter and Paul Fortress with the Naryshkin Bastion. The Naryshkin Bastion was renamed the Catherine Bastion after the wife of Peter the Great (1725). The Summer Garden can be seen on the opposite bank of the River Neva. Palace Embankment begins on the right with the Marble Palace and the Betskoi and Saltykov houses.
Портрет Екатерины II
- Marble. 63 х 35 х 35
- The State Russian Museum
- Ск-1392
Портрет генерал-фельдмаршала светлейшего князя Г. А. Потемкина-Таврического
- Marble. 63 х 41 х 35
- The State Russian Museum
- Ск-300
Portrait of Skobeyeva, Wife of the Smolensk Landlord D. Skobeyev
- The second half of the 1790s
- Canvas, oil. 72 х 57
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5018
At the end of the eighteenth century Borovykovsky created a series of portraits (mostly female) and established in portrait painting a so-called new type of man, "not composed, but discovered only by him " (portraits of V.I.Arseneva, M.I.Lopuhina, N.A.Naryshkina , M.A.Orlova-Denisova, and etc.). In the portrait of Skobeeva (name and patronymic are unknown), as in most others, the artist has used his compositional scheme: “half-figure” model with distinctive portrait features is depicted with arms crossed in a light dress on the background of a landscape.
Open energetic face with large features expresses determination and courage. This impression is supported by the facts from biography of the heroine of the portrait. Skobeeva was the daughter of the Kronstadt sailor. She was a pupil and mistress of D.P. Troshchinsky, the State Secretary of Catherine II. There is a version that in an effort to confront her ambiguous position, the girl ran from a guardian and married a poor Smolensk landowner D. Skobeev.
Perhaps as a sign of approval of the union the spouses decided to have a portrait painted by the most fashionable portrait painter of those times. The head of the family ordered the artist two portraits of his wife: in the bosom of nature (the portrait) and the image of inaccessible Diana (Skobeeva as Diana. The end of the 1790s. The State Historical Museum. An embodiment of the portrait of smaller).
Portrait of Marfa Arbenieva
- 1798
- Canvas, oil. 78,4 x 58,2
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5012
Marfa Ivanovna Arbenieva (1741–1804): Daughter of Ivan Kozlov and wife of I. I. Arebniev. Aunt of the poet Ivan Kozlov. Played hostess to the poet Gavriil Derzhavin, Count Alexander Stroganov and the playwright Jacob Knyazhnin.
Portrait of Alexei Tomilov
- 1808
- Canvas, oil. 68 х 55,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5131
Alexei Romanovich Tomilov (1779-1848) was an artillery officer by education and a commander during the building of a fortress in Kronstadt (1799). He left the service in 1808. Alexei Romanovich was a collector and an art amateur, one of the founders and a committee member of the Artists Support Society (since 1820) and a honored free member of the Imperial Academy of Sciences (1833).
View of the Kazan Cathedral in St Petersburg
- After 1810
- Canvas, oil. 71 х 112,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5049
The Kazan Cathedral in St Petersburg is one of the most important churches in the Orthodox world. It houses one of the two most venerated duplications of the Our Lady of Kazan icon, the patroness of the imperial house and the protector of the Russian land. The cathedral, built from 1801–1811 from a design by Andrei Voronikhin, was intended to emphasise the political aspirations of the Russian Empire. The majestic colonnade of the cathedral, spreading out toward Nevsky Prospect, is reminiscent of St Peter’s Basilica in Rome. This is the influence of both the romantic interest in Catholicism and the mission of Russia in the greater Christian world. In the solemn rhythm of the forms of the orders of Classical architecture, undoubtedly, there is a kind of heroic sensibility. And it is no wonder that after Napoleon’s expulsion from Russia, Kazan Cathedral became a war memorial, where in 1813 the ashes of Field Marshal Mikhail Kutuzov were laid to rest, and trophies of the Patriotic War of 1812 were housed: flags, banners, and keys to forts and cities.
Fyodor Alexeyev depicts Andrei Voronikhin’s Kazan Cathedral and the original layout of the adjoining square. The wooden obelisk crowned with a cross stood in the centre of the square until 1826. Ivan Martos’s plaster figures of St Gabriel the Archangel and St Michael the Archangel stand at the ends of the colonnade. Pendant statues of Field Marshal Mikhail Kutuzov and Field Marshal Michael Barclay de Tolly were opened outside the Kazan Cathedral in 1837.
The landscapes of Fyodor Alexeyev are created with accurate views of the city, which capture its emotional picturesqueness. In front of the Cathedral of Our Lady Kazan there is an obelisk erected in honour of the sanctification of the building. The painter drew not only the capital’s greatness, but he also depicted its everyday life. The simple street life surrounds the edifice: kiosks and stalls, laundresses washing the clothes in the canal, boats going under the bridge, on which bystanders walk. The figures of people are clustered in an intricate genre.
View onto the Admiralty and Palace Embankment from the First Cadet Corps
- Canvas, oil. 138 x 178
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5813
The paintings of Fyodor Yakovlevich draw the attention to themselves, not only because he recreates on canvas the views of St. Petersburg with such accuracy, but because he gives them an emotional and artistic dimension. His works became the interesting subject to study when it came to the history and architectural changes in the city’s appearance.
In the foreground, there is an upper terrace of the First Cadet Corps, which was founded in 1732 and placed in the former Palace of the Governor-General of St. Petersburg, His Serene Highness Prince Menshikov. On the opposite bank, there is the Admiralty, rebuilt by Andrei Zakharov after a fire in 1806. Behind the canal, which encircles the Admiralty, the Palace Embankment appears on the left.
Крестьянские дети в поле (Мальчик с двумя девочками)
- Canvas, oil. 38,5 х 30
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5164
Sleeping Shepherd Boy
- Between 1823 and 1826
- Wood, oil. 27,5 x 36,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5157
The landscape background to this picture is a view onto the River Vorozhba from the windows of Alexei Venetsianov’s house in Safonkovo in Tver Province. The painting was first exhibited at the Society for the Encouragement of Artists in 1826. The heartfelt interpretation of this portrait of a peasant boy is typical of the Russian school of painting. Rejecting any attempts at ethnographic accuracy, it is both concrete and poetically uplifting. The device of tearing the foreground away from the background conjures up the sensation of the endless breadth and depth of the landscape. The subtle transitions of light and colour create an almost tangible feeling of the passage of life — slow in the summer heat, yet inexorable and endlessly diverse. Full of calm and tranquillity, Venetsianov’s painting introduces us to the private world of the Russian village, where the appearance of a stranger is an important event.
Portrait of the Writer Varvara Lizogub
- 1847
- Canvas, oil. 82,5 x 68
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5227
The writer and representative of the intellectual elite is depicted by the artist as if she were participating in some kind of masquerade. She is dressed in an Eastern costume and in a headdress that resembles a Russian kokoshnik. Lizogub, Varvara Ippolitovna (née Petrovskaya; dates unknown) was the wife of the colonel Vasily Ivanovich Lizogub (1801–1870). Lizogub was the author of the Zuleika narrative poem, published in August 1845, and of poetry published in the magazine Moskvityanin (1841, No. 7).
Portrait of Infantry General Yakov Rostovtsev, his Wife Vera Rostovtseva, nee Emin, Sons Nikolai Rostovtsev and Mikhail Rostovtsev and Daughter Alexandra Rostovtseva
- Unfinished
- 1850 — 1854
- Canvas, oil. 90 x 69
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-6272
Christ and the Disciples Entering the Garden of Gethsemane
- 1889
- Canvas, oil. 142 x 192
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4145
Nikolai Ge painted mostly Gospel subjects in the final years of his career in art. His cycle of works dedicated to the life of Jesus Christ is one of the finest achievements of both his own life and the Russian Realist painting of the 1880s and early 1890s. Work on Christ and the Disciples Entering the Garden of Gethsemane coincided with a period of close contacts with Leo Tolstoy, who greatly influenced the artist’s own ethical viewpoints. Like Tolstoy, Ge presents himself and the viewer with a moral dilemma in this work. The unusual colour scheme is deliberately intended to bring out the emotional aspects of the theme the figures of Christ and the disciples are immersed in darkness and virtually indiscernible.
Portrait of Alexander Verzhbilovich
- 1895
- Canvas, oil. 89 x 58
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4084
Verzhbilovich, Alexander Valerianovich (1850–1911): Cellist.
Princess of Dreams
- On the subject of Edmond Rostand’s play of the same name. Study-variant for the panel in the art section of the All-Russian Industrial and Art Exhibition in Nizhny Novgorod in 1896
- 1896
- Watercolours, gouache, graphite pencil. 27,1 x 68,4 (в свету)
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-14992
Версаль. Людовик XIV кормит рыб
- 1897
- Cardboard, gouache, watercolours, chalk, graphite pencil, charcoal pencil. 47,7 x 62,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-5126
Magic
- 1898–1902
- gouache, watercolours, , graphite pencil. 49,5 х 34,1
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-3253
Konstantin Somov began work on Magic during his first trip to Paris, where he was invited by Alexander and Anna Benois. The French capital was at that time also home to Léon Bakst, Evgeny Lanceray and Anna Ostroumova-Lebedeva, later members of the World of Art. The city and its suburbs, its museums and antique shops, confirmed the young painter’s interest in the art of the “gallant” 18th century, which was shared by many World of Art members. Work on this gouache lasted for four years. The well planned composition is elegant, refined and balanced, though the image is somewhat aloof and affected. As Sergei Ernst, a famous critic of the late 19th and early 20th century, wrote: “It is thought that the art of Somov was born here, in this fantastic decoration, full of the fragrance of precious aromas. From here it was summoned to bewitch the world.”
Self-Portrait with Sister
- 1898
- Canvas, tempera, oil. 143 x 177
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2032
Victor Borisov-Musatov’s works generally lack a developed subject. The master’s elegiac art is permeated with sorrowful reflections and notes of tranquillity. The artist deprives reality of concrete features, almost implying the existence of parallel worlds. In Self-Portrait with Sister, his sister is like the ghostly resident of an old, historical estate. The composition seems to have frozen in time, like a frame from a film reel, with the figures on the point of slipping away into the space beyond the clouds.
The elders converge
- 1898
- Canvas, oil. 40 х 71
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-5504
Баба-яга
- 1898
- Гипс раскрашенный. 31 х 33 х 32
- The State Russian Museum
- Ск-1424
Белый медведь
- 1898
- Статуя, гипс тонированный. 40,5 х 73 х 42
- The State Russian Museum
- Ск-487
Тишина
- Canvas, oil. 96 х 128
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4276
Лужайка
- 1899
- Cardboard, pastel. 33 х 42
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2128
Морская царевна
- 1899–1900
- Майолика, цветная глазурь с металлическим отблеском, восстановительный обжиг. 60 x 30 x 24
- The State Russian Museum
- ФС-1478
Портрет В. В. Матэ (в пальто и шляпе)
- 1899
- Офорт (в тоне сепии). И.: 19,7 х 13,3; л.: 31,9 х 24,4
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-28220
Sadko on the Shore of Lake Ilmen
- Majolica plate design on a subject from Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s Opera Sadko
- 1899
- Watercolours, , , graphite pencil. 51,8 х 65,9 (овал)
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-5413
Peter II and Princess Elizabeth Riding to Hounds
- 1900
- paper mounted on cardboard, tempera, gouache. 41 x 39
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4291
In the middle of the eighteenth century, the period of Rococo, the different forms of hunting which had been popular in Russia since ancient times acquired a ritual and spectacular character. The elegant Tsarist horsemen, inflamed by high-spirited conversation and the imminent hunt, ride purposefully past the half-destroyed village and the poverty stricken villagers, accompanied by a splendid cortege of courtiers. By juxtaposing two Russias, the aristocratic Russia, in step with Europe, and the peasant Russia, dark and denied all rights, Serov exposes the source of the insurmountable contradictions of Russian life. Play and Passion in Russian Fine Art. St-Petersburg. 1999. P. 304.
Designed to illustrate Nikolai Kutepov’s book Tsarist and Imperial Hunting, Valentin Serov’s work reflects the new understanding of history painting at the turn of the century. Serov and the other members of the World of Art preferred poetic images of daily life in the “golden age” of the eighteenth century to the more important historical events. The artist depicted historical themes in order to reflect on the fate of his country. He depicts a dashing cavalcade consisting of the fourteen year-old Tsar Peter II (1727–30) and Princess Elizabeth, daughter of Peter the Great, against a background of rickety huts and down-at-heel peasants. Dynamic, poignant and piquant, Peter II and Princess Elizabeth Riding to Hounds offers an excellent example of Serov’s painterly mastery. The rustic landscape in autumn makes an important contribution to the artistic image.
Портрет детей С. С. Боткина
- Paper, watercolours, graphite pencil. 49,8 х 40,6
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-13439
Idols
- 1901
- Cardboard, gouache. 49 х 56
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1961
Портрет С. Ю. Витте с сеттером
- 1901
- Bronze. 35 х 32 х 35
- The State Russian Museum
- Ск-550
Peter I Riding to Hounds
- 1902
- paper mounted on cardboard, tempera. 29 x 50
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-4290
In this composition, notable for the beauty of its finish and the sharply contrasting forms, Serov masterfully recreated the colourfulness of the hunt in old seventeenth century Russia, poeticizing the endless snow-covered expanse under a pale, northern sky. Play and Passion in Russian Fine Art. St-Petersburg. 1999. P. 305.
Встреча у колонны
- 1901–1903
- Paper, watercolours, ink, nib. 17,8 х 12,2
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-279
Portrait of Nadezhda Stanyukovich
- 1903
- Canvas, oil. 195 x 105
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2034
Nadezhda Yurievna Stanyukovich (née Ryzhkova) (1876–1905):_Wife of Vladimir Konstantinovich Stanyukovich (1874–1939), art historian, curator of the Russian Museum, author of first monograph on Victor Borisov-Musatov (published 1906). Both were close friends of the artist.
Postman
- 1903
- Paper, watercolours, gouache. 37 x 20,3 (очерчен)
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-13527
Bakst’s fame as a stage set designer began with the ballet Die Puppenfee. Banal in content and traditional in choreography, this ballet was created by Nikolai and Sergei Legat and staged across Europe. Its completely new ring was all down to the “talented toils” of Bakst. The scene was St Petersburg of the 1840s–1850s — Gostiny Dvor, with its doll bazaars, and Nevsky Prospect, seen beyond the windows of the toy shop. The costume designs were firmly in keeping with the real sights of old St Petersburg. Among them, the Postman in his uniform is especially characteristic. The French doll, in her austere and elegant dress with its minute details, represents the kingdom of dolls that comes to life in the course of the action. Bakst’s high artistic taste and feeling for style allowed him to turn “that silly little ballet Die Puppenfee” into “a wonderful, purely Hoffmann fairy tale” (Benois). In 1909 the ballet correspondent of the Rech newspaper wrote: “Die Puppenfee is one of the most elegant and refined creations of modern art. The delight of this delicate miniature charm knows no limits ... It is impossible to tear one’s eyes away from these entrancing costumes, where every dot, speck, bow, curl, glove and even every beauty-spot is so delicately thought out, so stylish, so vividly necessary.”
Чаепитие
- 1903
- Cardboard, gouache, tempera. 23,1 x 47,7
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-56813
Flowers and Fruits on a Grand Piano
- Canvas, oil. 79 х 101
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2217
In the end of 1903 a significant event occurred in Grabar’s life – he met a painter and businessman Nikolai Meshcherin, a son of the founder of the Danilovskaya textile factory. Grabar was invited to the Dugino estate located to the south from Moscow in a beautiful place on the Pahra river. Grabar spent there more than 10 years and created all his masterpieces of 1900s. It was there where Grabar created his still lifes that got him recognition at once. It took the artist only four days to paint “Flowers and Fruits on a Grand Piano”, one of his most renowned still lifes. The work was painted by multicoloured strokes, full of light and air. The still life was a success at the exhibitions arranged by Sergei Diaghilev in St. Petersburg, Paris and Berlin as well as at the International exhibition in Venice. The fragmentary composition of the canvas, struggle of light and shadow, the expressive surface texture create the feeling of changeable environment full of dynamics and pulsation of life. The artist presented the canvas to his friend and benefactor Nikolai Meshcherin.
Portrait of Nadezhda Zabela-Vrubel with Birches in the Background
- 1904
- Paper, watercolours, pastel, gouache, charcoal pencil, graphite pencil, chalk. 67,6 x 32,3
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-14996
Rosebush after the Rain
- 1904
- Canvas, oil. 99 х 145,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Жб-1199
Six-Winged Seraph
- 1904
- Canvas, oil. 131 x 155
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1838
Six-Winged Seraph is linked to the theme of the prophetic mission of the artist, one that greatly occupied Symbolists of various lands and times. From the 1890s onwards, inspired by Alexander Pushkin’s poem The Prophet, Mikhail Vrubel dedicated a series of compositions in painting and graphic art to this theme. The artist seems to paint an inner vision of a “fire-like” messenger of God, an angel with a fiery gaze, the patron and merciless judge of the artist-prophet, reminding artists of their sublime mission and calling them “to burn people’s hearts with a word” and awaken their souls “from the trifles of everyday life with majestic images.” Vrubel’s inner experiences of the time when he was working on Fallen Demon are reflected in the painting’s sublime construction and its assiduity of feeling. The startling tones conjure up associations with the Byzantine mosaics in Venice and Ravenna seen by the artist in his youth.
Акации весной
- 1904
- Canvas, oil. 118 х 130
- The State Russian Museum
- ЖБ-1201
Барка (Нева)
- 1904
- Ксилография цветная. И.: 9,2 х 13,9; л.: 9,4 х 14,1
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-36198
Весенний мотив
- Paper, . И.:18,6 х 27,1. Л.:18,6 х 27,1
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр.-36340
Перспектива Царского
- 1904
- Ксилография цветная. И., л.: 12,1 х 21,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Гр-40044
In Love
- 1905
- Porcelain, painting over glaze. 14 х 20 х 13
- The State Russian Museum
- Ф-10280
Imperial Porcelain Factory.
Konstantin Somov first showed In Love at the World of Art exhibition of 1906. The ironic interpretation of the love scene and the costumes and subject types liken this porcelain group to the artist’s circle of paintings and drawings on analogous themes.
Peasant Women
- 1905
- Canvas, oil. 205 x 159
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1914
A student of the Imperial Academy of Arts at the end of the nineteenth century, Philipp Malyavin introduced a new type of peasant woman into Russian art — a stately, proud and sometimes intrepidly independent woman. His models were the inhabitants of the villages of Ryazan Province, dressed in bright festive attire. The painting is a sublime and romantic image of Russian womenfolk, with their wholesome characters and inner stature. The two heroines are strong and healthy women, filled with a sense of their own dignity and virtue. They display integrity of character and inner strength. The faces of the girls are meaningful, the looks in their eyes are intent and enigmatic, the colours of their attire glimmer in a bewitching manner. The expressive images are intensified by the artist’s inspired and temperamental painting. Malyavin contributed Peasant Women to the World of Art exhibition of 1906 and Sergei Diaghilev’s L’Exposition de l’Art Russe in Paris and Berlin.
Slavs on the Dnieper
- 1905
- Tempera, cardboard. 67 х 89
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-1975
«Во все время разговора он стоял позадь забора…»
- 1905
- Paper, watercolours, ink. И.: 21,5 х 27,5; л.: 37,2 х 42,9 (очерчен)
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-57753
Маска (Дама с маской)
- 1905
- Porcelain, painting over glaze, gilding. 22 х 15,8 х 12,9
- The State Russian Museum
- Ф-5199
Ноябрь. Крылечко
- 1905
- Cardboard, tempera. 76 х 100,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2259
Пир у князя Гвидона
- 1905
- Paper, watercolours, ink, nib. 36,2 x 41,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-48964
Сон
- 1905
- Canvas, tempera. 68 х 69
- The State Russian Museum
- ЖБ-1051
Утро
- 1905
- plywood, watercolours, gouache, ink, nib. 21,8 х 22,2
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-34024
„И, дивясь, перед собой видит город он большой…“
- 1905
- Paper, watercolours, ink. 30 х 22,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-2132
Commedia dell’ arte
- 1906
- Oil. 68,5 x 101
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2102
The picture recalls an episode from the burlesque comedy Punchinello. On the proscenium there is the dimly - lit angular figure of an old man getting down on his knees with some difficulty before a young coquette. A harlequin purpose fully moves towards the footlights shouting witticisms and slander. The hero and trouble - maker, Punchinello, gently dances on the spot, dressed in a robe. The conceited Captain, with a sword under his coat, sneaks up indignantly. All three comment on what is happening by the use of grimaces and buffoon - like movements. The sometimes brightly blazing and sometimes gently glimmering golden, red and green colours heighten the sense of the festive magic of the scene. The world of the old, slightly naïve and farcical commedia dell' arte appeared in Benois' work in all its fascination and refined craftsmanship, an echo of majestic epochs lost forever. Play and Passion in Russian Fine Art. St-Petersburg. 1999. P. 154.
Le Bain de la Marquise
- 1906
- Cardboard, gouache. 49,6 х 51,4
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-5135
Vision antique
- 1906
- Paper, ink, nib. 16,1 х 17,9
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-2057
Бассейн Флоры в Версале
- Canvas, oil. 53 x 65
- The State Russian Museum
- Ж-2094
Вакх
- 1906
- Bronze, . 25 х 24 х 21
- The State Russian Museum
- Ск-1985
Каталог выставки «Salon d’Automne. Exposition de l’Arte Russe. Русская художественная выставка в Париже». Paris
- 1906
- Paper, . 16,5 х 13
- The State Russian Museum
- 2В 451 № 17938
Соколиная охота
- 1906
- Cardboard, watercolours, gouache. 63 x 47,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Р-56295
Торжество в небе
- 1906
- Canvas, oil. 49 х 57,5
- The State Russian Museum
- ЖБ-11217
Хоровод
- 1906 (?)
- Cardboard, oil. 71 х 75,5
- The State Russian Museum
- Жб-1229