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Our Little Secrets by Soosh Quilt cuddles by Soosh Midtown Light and Shadows by Beverly Brown Quiet time by Soosh Woman in a Black and Gray Dress Fashion Illustration Art Print by Beverly Brown

Untitled 521 by Chris N Rohrbach Untitled 219 by Chris N Rohrbach Untitled 339 by Chris N Rohrbach Untitled 336 by Chris N Rohrbach Untitled 93 by Chris N Rohrbach

Female Figure Drawings

RV Dusk by Scott Listfield New Yorker March 29, 1976 by Saul Steinberg The Beatles Abbey Road by Paul Meijering The Parking Ticket by Scott Listfield The Great Wave of Kanagawa by Hokusai

Cascade by Steve Mitchell By the window by John Silver Ophelia by John William Waterhouse Woman in Plaid Skirt and Big Sunglasses Fashion Illustration Art Print by Beverly Brown Prints Harbinger by Patricia Ariel

The Delicate Female

Elysium by Steve Mitchell Water Nymph by Otto Theodor Gustav Lingner In her own World by John Silver Lilith by John Collier Summer on the Beach by Paul Fischer

The Female Body

Chanel by Mark Ashkenazi Beautiful Lady by Olga Shvartsur Eiffel Tower Shoe by Marian Voicu Frida Kahlo painting 3 by Mark Ashkenazi Sad Woman by Marian Voicu

Womens Graphic Tees

Made of Iron by Miranda Sether American Hero 2 by Miranda Sether Lightning Speed by Miranda Sether Son of Asgard by Miranda Sether Bounty Hunter by Miranda Sether

Comic Character Paintings

The Soul of the Rose by John William Waterhouse Seated Woman with Bent Knee by Egon Schiele Dancers in blue by Edgar Degas Women Taking Tea by Albert Lynch Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci

Victorian Lady in a Rose Hat by Sue Halstenberg A Red Rose by John William Godward Swinging in Red by Dorina Costras

Fire by Karina Llergo Dancers in blue by Edgar Degas Folklore by Karina Llergo Dancing In The Moonlight by Anthony Falbo Ballerina

Water Nymph by Otto Theodor Gustav Lingner Nausicaa by William McGregor Paxton by William McGregor Paxton Nude lying on a chaise longue by Gustave-Henri-Eugene Delhumeau Seated female nude by Joanne Claxton Nude In The Greenhouse by Linda Monfort

The Female Body

Lady Victoria Victorian Elegance by Sue Halstenberg Portrait of Alitta by Sue Halstenberg Big Yellow Fashion Hat by Sue Halstenberg Evening Tea by Sue Halstenberg Naked Butterfly Lady Transformation by Sue Halstenberg

Metamorphosis by Mia Tavonatti Sogni Dolci by Mia Tavonatti Santita by Mia Tavonatti Emerge Painting by Mia Tavonatti Susperia by Mia Tavonatti

Mermaid Mother and Child by Shijun Munns Mermaid Bride by Shijun Munns Mystic Mermaid III by Shijun Munns Summer Song by Shijun Munns Rebirth by Shijun Munns

Blue Portrait by Eve Ventrue March by Eve Ventrue Grace by Eve Ventrue

Gothic Butterflies by Michael Creese Nose Ring by Michael Creese Eye of Horus by Michael Creese Delicious by Michael Creese Butterflies by Michael Creese

Twilight Romance by Steve Henderson Evening Waltz by Steve Henderson Light Reading by Steve Henderson Quiet Contemplation by Steve Henderson Beauty and the Abyss by Steve Henderson

Cardinal Day 2 by JQ Licensing Flower Pond by JQ Licensing Butterfly Deco 1 by JQ Licensing Deco Flower Yellow by JQ Licensing Four Butterfly Patch Blue by JQ Licensing

Forgiven by Greg Olsen After the Masquerade by Greg Olsen The Master White as Snow by Greg Olsen

Wall Art - Painting - The Soul of the Rose by John William Waterhouse

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Wall Art - Painting - African Spirits II by Ricardo Chavez-Mendez

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Wall Art - Painting - Will You Trust Me Blonde by Cliff Hawley

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Wall Art - Painting - Lady Victoria Victorian Elegance by Sue Halstenberg

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Wall Art - Painting - Victorian Lady in a Rose Hat by Sue Halstenberg

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One of Catherine the Great’s Greatest Passions? Art

See inside the Hermitage, Empress Catherine II of Russia’s enduring contribution to the world of art.

By Nancy Gould Chuda Published: Nov 19, 2021
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catherine the great

Heritage Images // Getty Images

She was the most powerful woman in the world. An avid reader who maintained lengthy correspondence with the leading philosophers of her day. She wrote plays, works of children’s literature, and a memoir. She embraced scientific innovation and oversaw one of the first mass inoculations for smallpox. And, oh yes, she expanded the Russian empire by over 200,000 square miles.

It’s no wonder Catherine the Great, who ruled Russia from 1762 to 1796, has been the subject of so much academic attention and, lately, the source of television-series inspiration (season 2 of Hulu’s The Great debuts tonight). But one of her most lasting accomplishments, if not overlooked, is often relegated to footnote. Starting in 1764, she began a buying spree that lasted years and ultimately resulted in one the world’s most important art collections—now the State Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg.

winter palace hermitage museum

The Winter Palace, a former Russian royal palace in St. Petersburg, is now the State Hermitage Musuem.

raisbeckfoto // Getty Images

She was, by her own description, “gluttonous” when it came to acquiring art and she spent millions of rubles on paintings by old masters and contemporary artists—ultimately procuring more than 4,000 paintings as well as countless statues and elaborate works of automaton.

Today the Hermitage is a multi-building institution that houses more than 3 million pieces of art, only a fraction of which are on display at one time. The main complex comprises the Winter Palace (the Romanov family’s former residence) and adjacent buildings, including the Small Hermitage, the Old and New Hermitages, and the Hermitage Theater. The collection has survived revolution, invasion, and mouse infestation (see below). Like most of Empress Catherine II’s undertakings, accumulating art was part of a larger strategy (one started by a predecessor, Peter the Great). In the 18th century, European courts vied to be centers of artistic and scientific innovation. Having a world-class collection at the palaces in St. Petersburg broadcasted to European leaders that Russia held equal ground.

the corridor of the raphael loggias, inside the hermitage museum, st petersburg, russia

The corridor of the Raphael Loggias, inside the Hermitage Museum.
Nigel Jarvis // Getty Images

Her first purchase was a group of more than 200 paintings, including works by Rembrandt and Rubens, assembled by a Berlin merchant and art dealer named Johann Ernst Gotzkowsky. He had gathered the pieces at the request of Frederich II only to have the Prussian leader back out of the purchase at the last minute (the price tag was high and Prussia was still recuperating from the costly Seven Years War). It was the first in a series of major acquisitions in which Catherine would sweep in and acquire a collection that had interested another European leader.

rembrant hermitageyoung woman with earrings

Rembrandt’s Young Woman with Earrings was added to the Hermitage collection in 1781.
PHAS // Getty Images

Although the Hermitage has been open to the public since 1852, it began as a private collection. Catherine had artwork and libraries installed in the “Small Hermitage,” a pavilion she had built adjacent to the Winter Palace where she could host theatrical presentations, social assemblies, and dinner parties around an enormous table dressed in the silver and Wedgwood porcelain. The table featured mechanical devices that raised and lowered dishes from the kitchen below—a novelty that offered a side benefit of allowing Catherine and her guests to converse freely without fear of being overheard by servants.

peacock clock hermitage

The Peacock Clock, built by British automaton expert James Cox, was acquired with the help of Prince Grigory Potemkin.

Alamy

Russian courtiers jockeyed to help the Empress with her new passion. Grigory Potemkin, the Russian prince, military leader, and Catherine’s longtime lover, famously helped her acquire the Peacock Clock, an automaton featuring a head-swiveling owl, crowing rooster, and peacock that fans golden plumage. The timepiece, which was designed by the English artisan James Cox, arrived in St. Petersburg in boxed pieces and took a Russian craftsman and inventor two years to assemble. Potemkin died of a sudden fever, at the age of 52. “A terrible deathblow has just fallen on my head…” the Empress wrote to a friend. “My pupil, my friend, almost my idol, Prince Potemkin of Taurida, has died… you cannot imagine how broken I am.” The clock still functions and is wound and run for visitors to the Hermitage once a week (check on the museum website for times).

hermitage museum cats

A cat in front of the Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg.
OLGA MALTSEVA // Getty Images

Most of the Hermitage Museum collection is housed in former royal palaces (including the Winter Palace and Hermitages) located along the Neva River. These grand, cavernous buildings were perfect for hosting royal events and housing rare artwork and fine tapestry and, since construction, mice who like to chew on both. Peter the Great’s daughter, Empress Elizabeth, was the first to install a battalion of house cats, including some larger specimens imported from Kazan, to deter the invaders. There have been cats in and around the Hermitage ever since although today they can be seen mostly on the grounds, in the basements, and on their own Instagram page.

The Hermitage is the largest museum (by gallery space) in the world. Most first timers start at the Winter Palace in the main complex. Opening times and ticket requirements have changed due to pandemic-related restrictions. Check the museum’s website for information about new preregistration requirements.

Colin Wynn
the authorColin Wynn

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