This year the 6th international contemporary art fair Cosmoscow expanded as never has before. Bringing together 70 projects from Russia, Europe and Middle East, the space of Gostiny Dvor features already known sections Galleries , Focus and Special Projects alongside the newly added Frame, Design and Edition .
The Mead holds more than 750 works of Russian art, including oil paintings, sculptures, drawings, collages, and prints, the majority of which date between 1900 and 1950.
Freeman’s October 16 sale of British & European Furniture and Decorative Arts including Silver and Russian Works of Art features a Russian section highlighted with more than 70 lots of Russian Imperial Ephemera, silver, works by Fabergé, and an important selection of Russian and Soviet porcelain from the private “Ode to Joy” Collection.
5 days ago · LONDON.-Kicking off London’s Russian Art Week, on 26 November Christie’s Important Russian Art auction will present 268 lots featuring important paintings that are fresh to the market and valuable works of art. Highlights of the painting section include Ivan Aivazovsky’s Venice at sunset, 1873
Art Highlights in Russia–2014 Entrance to the Hermitage Museum Complex Every year when I return from my summer Art Lover’s Tour in Russia, hundreds of wonderful visuals whirl around my head.
The upcoming Russian Pictures sale (London, 5 June) presents a magnificent selection of 19th- and 20th-century Russian art. Highlights of the auction include a 1922 landscape work by Vasily Shukhaev that last came to auction at Sotheby’s in 1999, a significant work by Pavel Tchelitchew that foreshadows the artist’s famous use of triple-perspective, as well as a number of important works from the Soviet period.
The return of the Russian Art Week to London this autumn is a timely reminder of how the arts can transcend politics. From Nov. 27 – Dec. 4, Russian art sales will be hosted at the capital’s
Among the Mead’s more than 450 Russian works on paper are the complete War series by Goncharova and Olga Rozanova, as well as drawings by Iurii Annenkov, Alexandre Benois, Ivan Bilibin, Aleksandra Ekster, Elena Guro, Leon Pasternak, Kuz’ma Petrov-Vodkin, Zinaida Serebriakova, Konstantin Somov, and Ivan Puni. About thirty stage and costume designs by such important artists as Benois, Mstislav Dobuzhinskii, and Sergei Sudeikin form a significant subgroup within early-twentieth-century art.
The return of the Russian Art Week to London this autumn is a timely reminder of how the arts can transcend politics. From Nov. 27 – Dec. 4, Russian art sales will be hosted at the capital’s
The Russian Works of Art, Fabergé and Icons sale features the triptych icon given to the last Russian Emperor Nicholas II on the occasion of his wedding in 1894. Further highlights include a lavish Imperial presentation box by Fabergé workmaster Michael Perchin, a monumental pair of porcelain vases from the period of Nicholas I and a rare and monumental Soviet porcelain pot designed by Ivan Riznich.