History of the St. Petersburg

Saint Petersburg is a city and a federal subject located in Northwestern Federal District of Russia on the delta of the Neva River at the east end of the Gulf of Finland on the Baltic Sea. Founded by Tsar Peter the Great on May 27, 1703 as a "window to Europe", it served as the capital of the Russian Empire for more than two hundred years. To really feel all the beauty and harmony of St. Petersburg's architecture one must stroll along the banks of the Neva, listen to the ripple of its waves, contemplate the city's buildings, the vistas of its quays and canals.Only then will the city on the Neva reveal itself in all its charm – the charm of the wonderful and inimitable City of Bridges.

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Category Archives: The State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg

The Hermitage ranks with the very finest of the world s art museums. It is the largest and most splendid in the Russia and contains more than two and a half million works of art representing different ages, countries and peoples.

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Czechoslovakian, Hungrrian, Polish and Rumanium art (20th century)

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Exhibited in this room are works by artists from socialist countries in Europe. Continue reading →

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Art of the united states of America (20th century)

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The exhibition consists almost entirely of paintings by the famous American artist Rockwell Kent (1882-1971). Continue reading →

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Finish and Belgium art (20th century)

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Twentieth century Finnish art is represented by Two Girls of Juho Rissanen (1873-1950) and Morning in a Peasant House by Eero Nelimarkka (born 1891). Continue reading →

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Italian art (20th century)

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The small collection of paintings by twentieth century Italian artists includes some works of the artist, communist and champion of progressive realist art Renato Guttuso (born 1912) – Rocco and Son (1960), and Potatoes on Yellow Paper (1961). Continue reading →

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Belgium and Dutch art (19th-20th centuries)

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Nineteenth century Belgian art is represented by the genre paintings of Joseph Stevenson (1819-1892) and Hendrick Leys (1815- 1869). They are evidence of the strengthening of realist tendencies in nineteenth century Belgian art. Continue reading →

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Finnish, German and Spanish art (Late 19th – early 20th centuries)

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Much of the work of the eminent realist painter Albert Edelfelt (1854-1905) is based upon themes associated with the life of the Finnish people and his native countryside (The Laundresses, Pines in Borga, Fishermen at Sea). Continue reading →

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German art (19th century)

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An important part of the exhibition in these rooms is occupied by an excellent collection of works by the Romantic landscape painter Caspar David Friedrich (1774-1840), including Harbour at Night, Morning in the Hills and On a Sailing Ship. Continue reading →

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French art (19th-20th centuries)

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French art (19th-20th centuries)

A new chapter in French history was opened in 1789 when, under the onslaught of the Revolution, the feudal Bourbon monarchy collapsed. The artistic movement which expressed the revolutionary aspirations of the progressive factions of French society was Neoclassicism. Continue reading →

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French art (15th-18th centuries)

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French art (15th-18th centuries)

The collection of French art in the Hermitage is exceptionally rich and is the finest outside France among the museums of the world. More than forty rooms are used to house the displays of painting, sculpture and various items of applied art. Continue reading →

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English art (17th-19th centuries)

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The small but valuable collection in the Hermitage enables us to trace the major lines of development in English art, which reached its highest peak in the eighteenth century. Continue reading →

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