Eastern and Central Europe (Eyewitness Travel Guides)

(Ben Green) #1

154 NORTH EASTERN EUROPE


For hotels and restaurants in this region see pp160–61 and pp162–3


Arts Square t
Площадь Искусств
Ploshchad Iskusstv

Map D3. q Nevskiy Prospekt,
Gostinyy Dvor.

Several of the city’s leading
cultural institutions are
located on this imposing Neo-
Classical square; hence its
name. The attractive square
was designed by Carlo Rossi in

Nevskiy Prospekt y
Невский проспект
Nevskiy prospekt

Map C3. q Nevskiy Prospekt,
Gostinyy Dvor.

Russia’s most famous street,
Nevskiy prospekt, is also
St Petersburg’s main thorough-
fare. In the 1830s, the novelist
Nikolai Gogol declared with
pride: “There is nothing finer
than Nevskiy Avenue...in
St Petersburg it is everything...
is there anything more gay,
more brilliant, more resplen-
dent than this beautiful street
of our capital?” Not much has
changed as the street’s
intrinsic “all-powerful” atmos-
phere still prevails today.
Laid out in the early days of
the city, it was first known
as the Great Perspective
Road, and ran 5 km (3 miles)
from the Admiralty (see
p142) to the Alexander
Nevsky Monastery. In spite
of roaming wolves and

Pushkin’s statue located in the
centre of Arts Square

Russian Museum, in the Neo-Classical Mikhaylovskiy Palace


Russian Museum r


Русский Музей
Russkiy Muzey


Inzhenernaya ulitsa 4. Map D3.
Tel 595 4248. q Nevskiy Pros pekt,
Gostinyy Dvor. @ 3, 7, 22, 27,
K-128, K-129, K-169, K-187, K-228.
 1, 5, 7, 10, 22. # 10am–5pm
Mon, 10am–6pm Wed–Sun (last
ticket an hour before closing). &
8 English. 9 English. 7 call for
details. - = http://www.rusmuseum.ru


Housing one of the greatest
collections of Russian art, the
Russian Museum was opened
to the public for the first time
in 1898. When the museum
was nationalized after the
1917 Revolution, art was
trans ferred to it from palaces,
churches and private col-
lections. The museum is
housed in the Mikhaylovskiy
Palace, one of Carlo Rossi’s
finest Neo-Classical creations,
which was built between
1819 and 1825 for Grand
Duke Mikhail Pavlovich.
The chronologically
arranged exhibition starts
on the first floor. The exhibi-
tion continues on the ground
floor of the main building and
Rossi Wing, then the first floor
of the Benois Wing, which
was added between 1913
and 1919. The museum’s
exhibits range from 12th–17th


century Russian icons to
avant-garde painting by
Kandinsky and Malevich.
Highlights of the exhibition
are the works of Russia’s
first-known por trait painters,
Ivan Nikitin and Andrey
Matveev and the brooding
canvases of 19th- and
20th-century artist Mikhail
Vrubel, who combined
Russian themes with an
interna tional out look. Other
leading artists, including Marc
Chagall, El Lissitskiy and
Alexander Rodchenko, are
also well represented in the
museum. Exhibitions are
changed regularly.
The museum also has a
selection of folk art, which
is wonderfully diverse and
includes painted ceramics
and exquisitely embroi-
dered textiles.

the early 19th century.
Opposite the Russian Museum
is the Great Hall of the St
Petersburg Philharmonia, also
called the Shostakovich Hall.
The Philharmonic Orchestra
has been based here since
the 1920s. Among the works
that premiered here were
Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis
in 1824 and Pathétique by
Tchaikovsky in 1893. On the
square’s western side is the
Mikhailovsky Theatre. In the
centre of the square is a
sculpture of one of Russia’s
greatest literary figures,
Alexander Pushkin.
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