Вернуться   Форум по искусству и инвестициям в искусство > English forum > Exhibitions and events
 English | Русский Forum ARTinvestment.RU RSS Регистрация Дневники Справка Сообщество Сообщения за день Поиск

Exhibitions and events Share experiences and exchange opinions about all the events in the art world.

Ответ
 
Опции темы Опции просмотра
Старый 31.01.2011, 03:20 Язык оригинала: Русский       #1
Гуру
 
Аватар для Тютчев
 
Регистрация: 19.09.2008
Сообщений: 5,529
Спасибо: 4,883
Поблагодарили 11,836 раз(а) в 2,947 сообщениях
Записей в дневнике: 8
Репутация: 22525
По умолчанию Pictures of the Romanovs in Paris

Pictures of the Romanovs in Paris

 
The museum "Pinakothek Paris" exhibition "The Hermitage: The Birth of the Imperial Museum. Romanovs, the kings and collectors." Presented by about a hundred paintings and drawings collected by the four autocrats - Peter I, Catherine II, Alexander I and Nicholas I

The exposition included the works of Titian, Rembrandt, Rubens, Poussin, Van Dyck, Velazquez, Murillo, Chardin, and other masters.

At the root of the imperial collection was Peter the Great, who sent emissaries to Europe to buy paintings and sculptures. Big fan of Dutch art - Peter bought in Amsterdam a few paintings with biblical scenes and, in particular, a picture of David and Jonathan - the first Rembrandt, who went to Russia. For its part, Catherine II sought to give a collection of encyclopedic character and as a "curator" has invited well-known figures such as Diderot and Baron Grimm. The best pictures of his collection in Paris, she became in 1772 the banker and philanthropist Pierre Crozat.

"Every time the king's purchase caused dissatisfaction of French public opinion, protesting against the diversion of masterpieces in Russia - the director of" Paris Pinakothek Mark Restellini.

The point of his grandmother - Catherine II - is successfully continued, Alexander I, who favored the Spanish painter. This is partly explained by the fact that during the Napoleonic wars, the Spaniards rendered heroic resistance to the invaders. It is curious that Alexander I bought 38 paintings from the former wife of Napoleon, Josephine de Beauharnais. And in a sign of gratitude for showing her "generosity," she gave the Russian monarchy priceless cameo.

Nicholas I after the fire in the Winter Palace in 1837 decided to build the new Hermitage and make it a public museum. He preferred the Italian art of the Renaissance and bought several paintings by Titian and other great Italians of Assembly Barbarigo in Venice. The emperor received the collection of the Hermitage works of the Dutch school XV and XVI centuries, and Spaniards - Surbaranom and Murillo.

During the reign of Nicholas I, The Hermitage was opened two or three hours a day. But when Alexander II of Russia was the best museum accessible and free to all comers. A good example for the current times.

http://www.izvestia.ru/culture/article3150987/



Тютчев вне форума   Ответить с цитированием
Этот пользователь сказал Спасибо Тютчев за это полезное сообщение:
Евгений (31.01.2011)
Старый 31.01.2011, 08:10 Язык оригинала: Русский       #2
Banned
 
Регистрация: 05.06.2008
Адрес: UKRAINE
Сообщений: 8,039
Спасибо: 5,979
Поблагодарили 7,016 раз(а) в 2,462 сообщениях
Репутация: 12460
Отправить сообщение для uriart с помощью Skype™
По умолчанию

But the best museum of Alexander II of Russia was accessible and free to all comers.
A good example for the current times.


 
I should remind this Piotrovsky!

Here he began to rant ....



uriart вне форума   Ответить с цитированием
Эти 2 пользователя(ей) сказали Спасибо uriart за это полезное сообщение:
GalARTA (02.02.2011), Евгений (31.01.2011)
Старый 31.01.2011, 14:29 Язык оригинала: Русский       #3
Гуру
 
Аватар для Pavel
 
Регистрация: 13.02.2009
Сообщений: 7,384
Спасибо: 3,976
Поблагодарили 4,028 раз(а) в 1,687 сообщениях
Репутация: -2
По умолчанию

Цитата:
Сообщение от Tiutchev Посмотреть сообщение
Pictures of the Romanovs in Paris

 
The museum "Pinakothek Paris" exhibition "The Hermitage: The Birth of the Imperial Museum. Romanovs, the kings and collectors." Presented by about a hundred paintings and drawings collected by the four autocrats - Peter I, Catherine II, Alexander I and Nicholas I

The exposition included the works of Titian, Rembrandt, Rubens, Poussin, Van Dyck, Velazquez, Murillo, Chardin, and other masters.

At the root of the imperial collection was Peter the Great, who sent emissaries to Europe to buy paintings and sculptures. Big fan of Dutch art - Peter bought in Amsterdam a few paintings with biblical scenes and, in particular, a picture of David and Jonathan - the first Rembrandt, who went to Russia. For its part, Catherine II sought to give a collection of encyclopedic character and as a "curator" has invited well-known figures such as Diderot and Baron Grimm. The best pictures of his collection in Paris, she became in 1772 the banker and philanthropist Pierre Crozat.

"Every time the king's purchase caused dissatisfaction of French public opinion, protesting against the diversion of masterpieces in Russia - the director of" Paris Pinakothek Mark Restellini.

The point of his grandmother - Catherine II - is successfully continued, Alexander I, who favored the Spanish painter. This is partly explained by the fact that during the Napoleonic wars, the Spaniards rendered heroic resistance to the invaders. It is curious that Alexander I bought 38 paintings from the former wife of Napoleon, Josephine de Beauharnais. And in a sign of gratitude for showing her "generosity," she gave the Russian monarchy priceless cameo.

Nicholas I after the fire in the Winter Palace in 1837 decided to build the new Hermitage and make it a public museum. He preferred the Italian art of the Renaissance and bought several paintings by Titian and other great Italians of Assembly Barbarigo in Venice. The emperor received the collection of the Hermitage works of the Dutch school XV and XVI centuries, and Spaniards - Surbaranom and Murillo.

During the reign of Nicholas I, The Hermitage was opened two or three hours a day. But when Alexander II of Russia was the best museum accessible and free to all comers. A good example for the current times.

http://www.izvestia.ru/culture/article3150987/
 Who is this, everyone?



Pavel вне форума   Ответить с цитированием
Ответ


Ваши права в разделе
Вы не можете создавать новые темы
Вы не можете отвечать в темах
Вы не можете прикреплять вложения
Вы не можете редактировать свои сообщения

BB коды Вкл.
Смайлы Вкл.
[IMG] код Вкл.
HTML код Выкл.

Быстрый переход

Похожие темы
Тема Автор Разделы Ответов Последние сообщения
Christie's in Paris Dogel Auctions 2 12.11.2010 12:00
Pictures for your homes and houses for your pictures fross Auctions 0 19.05.2010 10:47
Jewels of the Romanovs uriart Auctions 1 11.04.2010 18:19
Jewels of the Romanovs homes sold at Sotheby's four times higher than the starting price Евгений Auctions 0 18.11.2009 06:33





Часовой пояс GMT +3, время: 15:13.
Telegram - Обратная связь - Обработка персональных данных - Архив - Вверх


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd. Перевод: zCarot