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The State Tretyakov Gallery (Russian: Государственная Третьяковская Галерея, romanized: Gosudarstvennaya Tretyakovskaya Galereya; abbreviated ГТГ, GTG) is an art gallery in Moscow, Russia, which is considered the foremost depository of Russian fine art in the world.
Tretyakovskaya (Russian: Третьяко́вская. English: Tretyakov's) is a station complex of Moscow Metro located in the Zamoskvorechye District, Central Administrative Okrug. It offers a cross-platform interchange between Kaluzhsko-Rizhskaya and Kalininsko-Solntsevskaya lines. It is named after the nearby Tretyakov Gallery.
The New Tretyakov Gallery is the second building of the Tretyakov Gallery, located in Moscow in Krymsky Val in the Museon Park. It was built in 1983 according to the project of architects Yuri Sheverdyaev and Nikolai Sukoyan in Soviet modernism style .
Another sketch with the same title (cardboard, watercolour, 20.5 × 26.5 cm), kept in the collection of the Kyiv Art Gallery until 1941, was lost during the Great Patriotic War. [15] [43] The State Russian Museum holds a drawing comprising several studies, entitled A peasant's head in a bandage. Legs. Hand (paper, graphic pencil, 25.4 × 21.2 cm).
In 1926, Vladivostok's first radio station began broadcasting. Three theaters and three cinemas were opened in the city in 1931. The Primorye Picture Gallery's collection was assembled from 1929 to 1931. About 1,000 pictures were brought there from the Hermitage, the Russian Museum and the Tretyakovskaya Gallery.
According to the catalogue of the Tretyakov Gallery, the purchase took place in 1867. [6] It was the first work by Maximov that Tretyakov acquired. [43] Furthermore, in 1867 [44] or 1868, Maximov was awarded a prize of 500 rubles by the Society for the Encouragement of Artists for his painting Grandma's Fairy Tales. [17]
Gosudarstvennaya Tretyakovskaya galereya — katalog sobraniya Государственная Третьяковская галерея — каталог собрания [State Tretyakov Gallery - catalogue of the collection] (in Russian). Vol. 3: Zhivopis pervoy poloviny XIX veka. Y.V. Brooke, L.I. Iovleva. Moscow: SkanRus. 2005.
After the composer's death she financed the launching of Scriabin's museum and sustained members of his family for quite a while. In 1910 Morozova transferred most of her late husband's art collection (more than 60 paintings) to the Tretyakovskaya Gallery. [2] [3]