Strong points of the Hermitage collection of Western art include Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Rubens, Van Dyck, Rembrandt, Poussin, Claude Lorrain, Watteau, Tiepolo, Canaletto, Canova, Rodin, Monet, Pissarro, Renoir, Cezanne, Van Gogh, Gauguin, Picasso, and Matisse. There are several more collections, however, including the Russian imperial regalia, an assortment of Faberge jewellery, and the largest existing collection of ancient gold from Eastern Europe and Western Asia.
Gradually imperial collections were enriched by relics of Greek and Scythian culture, unearthed during excavations on ancient burial mounds in southern Russia. Thus started one of the world's richest collections of ancient gold, which now includes a substantial part of Troy's treasures unearthed by Heinrich Schliemann and seized from Berlin museums by the Red Army in 1945.
To house the ever-expanding collection of Greek, Roman, and Egyptian antiquities, Nicholas I commissioned the neoclassicist German architect Leo von Klenze to design a building for the public museum. Probably the first purpose-built art gallery in Eastern Europe, the New Hermitage was opened to the public in 1852.
As the Russian tsars continued to amass their art holdings, several works of Leonardo da Vinci, Jan van Eyck, and Raphael were bought in Italy. The Hermitage collection of Rembrandts was considered the largest in the world.
This period in Hermitage's history came to an end in 1945. At that time the government attempted to compensate recent losses by transferring to the museum some of the art looted by the Red Army in Germany during World War II. The most highly-priced part of the booty were Impressionist and Post-Impressionist paintings taken from private collections of German business elite. These paintings were considered lost until 1995 when the museum unveiled them to the public. The Russian government maintains that these works provide just a small compensation for irreparable losses inflicted on Russian cultural heritage by the German invasion, including the almost complete destruction of Peterhof and Tsarskoe Selo. Moreover, the State Duma passed a law forbidding return of disputed works to their owners in case they were guilty of financing the Nazi regime.
The Hermitage was featured in the film Russian Ark, a single-shot walkthrough with period reenactments spanning three hundred years of court meetings, balls, and family life in the Winter Palace.
Art museums and galleries in Russia | Museums in Saint Petersburg
Ермитаж | Eremitage (St. Petersburg) | Ερμιτάζ | Museo del Hermitage | Ermitejo (muzeo) | 에르미타쥬 미술관 | Museo dell'Ermitage di San Pietroburgo | הרמיטז' | ერმიტაჟი (სანქტ-პეტერბურგი) | Ермитаж | Hermitage (Sint-Petersburg) | エルミタージュ美術館 | Ermitaż | Государственный Эрмитаж | Eremitaaši | Eremitaget | Ермітаж
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It uses material from the
"Hermitage Museum".
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