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Major Russian collections under review following runaway success of Royal Academy exhibition

Pushkin State Museum of Fine Art, Moscow 
State Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow
State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg
State Russian Museum,
St. Petersburg

The landmark exhibition, From Russia, at the Royal Academy of Arts in London, explores the fascinating exchange that existed between French and Russian art during a crucial period that was witness to upheaval and revolution. For the first time, works from these principal Russian museums have been gathered for a single exhibition, surveying the main directions of modern art from Realism and Impressionism to Abstract painting. 

Modern masterpieces include groundbreaking paintings by van Gogh, Matisse, Picasso, Repin and Malevich. Following the success of the exhibition, Bridgeman is pleased to report that licensing opportunities for many of the paintings on display, as well as countless other important and striking Russian and French works, remain plentiful.

Portrait of Dr. Felix Rey, 1889
 Vincent van Gogh (1853-90)

 

 Jaguar Attacking a Horse(detail), 1910 
Henri J.F. Rousseau (1844-1910)

Pushkin State Museum of Fine Art. As well as possessing a rich collection of works by the art masters of Italian and Northern Renaissance, such as Perugino, Botticelli, Bronzino and Cranach, this museum also holds important works by Cezanne, van Gogh, Picasso, Rousseau and Matisse.

Bathing of the Red Horse, 1912
Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin (1878-1939)

 

Portrait of an Unknown Woman, 1883
Ivan Nikolaevich Kramskoy (1837-87)  

State Tretyakov Gallery is the national treasury of Russian fine art. The Gallery's collection consists entirely of Russian art and artists who have made a contribution to the history of Russian art or been closely connected with it. 

Winter Landscape, 1909, 
Wassily Kandinsky (1866-1944)

 

Woman Farmer (half length)
1908, Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)  

State Hermitage Museum is one of the largest museums in the world, presenting the development of world culture and art from the Stone Age to the 20th century. Founded in 1764 when Empress Catherine the Great purchased a collection of Flemish and Dutch paintings, Catherine called her art gallery my hermitage as very few people were allowed within to see its riches. However, by the time of the Revolution of 1917 it was claimed as the property of the Soviet state and expanded when private art collections from several palaces of the Russian Tsars and numerous private mansions were being nationalized. 

After World War II, Henri Matisse donated forty canvases to the museum and  today it houses many other important Impressionist and Post-Impressionist paintings.

Portrait of the Russian poet Anna Andreevna Akhmatova, 1914
Natan Isaevic Altman (1889-1970)

 

Black Square, 1913 
Kazimir Malevich (1878-1935)  

State Russian Museum was established in 1895, upon the enthronement of Nicholas II to commemorate his father, Alexander III; its original collection  was composed of artworks taken from the Hermitage Museum, Alexander Palace, and the Imperial Academy of Arts. After the Russian Revolution of 1917, many private collections were nationalized and relocated to the Russian Museum. These included Kazimir Malevich's Black Square.

"As the first European picture library to represent a Russian museum, we are thrilled to see the pictures exhibiting in London and extremely pleased to be able to respond to the demand for licensed products following the exhibition" Harriet Bridgeman

For more information on these collections please contact your Account Manager or our Collections Manager, Adrian Gibbs. 

To see how you can win tickets to this exhibition and buy prints from these collections from Art on Demand click here.  

 

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