MOSCOW 137
GALLERY GUIDE
There are 62 rooms on two
main floors. Visitors first go
to the basement ticket office,
then head to the first floor.
Paintings are hung in rooms
1–54: visitors come down to
the ground floor after viewing
room 34. Rooms 56–62 contain
ancient Russian art; room 55
features collections of jewellery,
precious stones and icons.
Main Façade
The gallery’s façade was
designed in 1902 by
Viktor Vasnetsov. An
example of the Russian-
Revival style, it has a
frieze inspired by
medieval manuscripts.
Russian
jewellery
Main entrance
KEY
18th and early 19th centuries
Second half of the 19th century
Late 19th and early 20th centuries
Drawings and watercolours of
the 18th–20th centuries
Icons and jewellery
Non-exhibition space
Exit
. The Trinity (1420s)
This beautiful icon was
painted by Andrey Rublev
for the Trinity Monastery
of St Sergius, where he
had been a novice
monk. He dedicated
it to the monastery’s
founder, St Sergius
of Radonezh.
The Morning of
the Execution of
the Streltsy is by
Vasiliy Surikov.
Religious Procession in Kursk Province (1880–83)
Ilya Repin, a socially committed artist, painted this to
contrast the religious devotion of the peasants with the
cold hypocrisy of the rich.
Ground
floor
29
28
27
43
49
50
51
52
53
54
42
40
55
48
56
57
58
59
60
62
35
37
38
39
36
61
41
VISITORS’ CHECKLIST
Lavrushinskiy Pereulok 10. Map
E4. Tel 951 1362. q Tretya kov-
skaya. @ 6, K, 25. v 1, 4, 8,
33, 62. # 10am–6:30pm Tue–
Sun. & 8 Eng. 9 Eng. 7 0