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The Exhibits
The permanent exhibition consists of six different
departments. By far the most popular is the
Department of Western European Art. Spread over the
second floor of the whole complex and the third floor
of the Winter Palace, it includes painting,
sculpture, and applied art from the Middle Ages to
modern times.
French art prior to the 19th century is located at
the southern end of the second floor of the Winter
Palace in some of the nicest rooms of the whole
museum, with the White Hall (Bely zal) outstanding in
its grandeur. Among the paintings are some excellent
sculptures, particularly Houdon's Voltaire (room 287)
and several works by Falconet (who also did the
Bronze Horseman), including two vivid statues of a
guy getting chomped by a lion (room 285). The English
art collection, located in rooms 298-302, is small
and often closed.
Wandering over to the Old and New Hermitage
buildings, you'll find room after room of Dutch,
Italian, Flemish, German, and Spanish* art. The
biggest crowd-puller is room 254, where twenty-odd
Rembrandts are hung. Also extra-notable are room 247,
where lovers of roundy Rubens' nudes will find their
calling; room 246, packed full of Van Dyck; the
sculpture-filled Gallery of Ancient Painting (room
251); room 229, filled with Italian porcelain from
the 15th and 16th centuries as well as the
Michelangelo statue, Crouching Boy, and the
centerpiece, Dead Boy on a Dolphin by Lorenzo
Lorenzetti; the ornate room 214 (formerly Nicholas
I's office) where the museum's two Leonardo's are
displayed; and a couple rooms of Titian (219 and
221).
The third floor is home to Western European art of
the 19th and 20th centuries, a very impressive
collection of leading names of the early modern
period - Monet, Degas, Renoir, Gaugain, Van Gogh,
Cezanne and others of that crowd. If everything is
here (paintings from this exhibition occasionally go
abroad on holiday) you can treat yourself to two
rooms of Picassos * and the very large Matisse
collection, which includes two paintings from his
famous Dance series. Don't miss the somewhat hidden
rooom 315 which is filled with the fantastic
sculpture of Auguste Rodin.
The bulk of the Russian Culture exhibition is
accessible from a corridor - the Peter I Gallery -
that runs parallel to the State Rooms. In this
corridor and in the room that opens off it you can
find items representing Russian life and culture from
the 15th to the early 18th century including tools,
icons, books, and a 1698 cloth map of Siberia. Just
off the Malachite Hall is the White Dining Room, a
small room lined with tapestries showing silly
depictions of the continents; for those visitors not
acquainted with the Marxist-Leninist approach to
Winter Palace appreciation, signs here and in the
Malachite Hall inform us that the White Dining Room
was where the members of the provisional government
were arrested during the October Revolution. From the
Malachite Hall you can cruise through thirteen rooms
showing examples of Russian interior design complete
with an 18th century studio apartment (office, living
room, and boudoir in one), an Eastern-style smoking
room, a "moderne" children's room, and many more. On
your way to the French art be sure not to miss two of
the most outrageous rooms in the entire place: room
306, which can only be described as the inspiration
for late perestroika-era joint-venture restaurants,
and room 304, a garish, gilt-ridden palatial room
which holds a large exhibition of carved precious
gems (Catherine the Great collected over ten thousand
of them) dating from the 13th century.
The first floor holds an exhibition called Art and
Culture of Antiquity as well as the Department of
Primitive Culture. The former features a large
assortment of artifacts from Ancient Egypt, Greece,
and Rome, and the latter is an interesting display of
items found on archeological digs throughout Russia
and the former Soviet Union. The Egypt room, right
smack in the center of the whole complex, is filled
with reliefs, statues, huge sarcophagae and little
ancient knick-knacks, but the three thousand-year-old
mummy definitely steals the show. The Greece and Rome
rooms are worth seeing not only for the amazing
collections of ceramics, sculptures, and narrative
reliefs, but also for the rooms themselves, all
located on the first floor of the New Hermitage. Of
special note is room 107, with a 3.5 meter Jupiter
and several classic busts; room 108, designed to
resemble the inner courtyard of a Roman villa; room
128, which has the Kolyvan Vase, a nineteen-ton
jasper monster that is 2.6 meters tall and took
fourteen years to carve; and room 120, the Hall of 20
Columns, filled with Etruscan amphorae, pitchers, and
other receptacles for the juice of Bacchus.
Finding the Primitive Culture exhibition can be
difficult as most of the staircases to the first
floor are closed. Currently the staircase just off
the end of the Peter I Gallery gets you there. This
is always the least crowded exhibition, though that's
not to say that there's nothing of interest. The
exhibition begins with Russia's answer to the
Egyptian mummy (room 24). The items displayed date
back to the Paleolithic, which was 500,000 years ago
last Tuesday. Room 12 has a slab taken from a cliff
near Lake Onega with some petroglyphs that have yet
to be deciphered - anyone deciphering them will get
fifty percent off their next admission to the
Hermitage. There are several rooms featuring
artifacts from the Scythian epoch (700-200 B.C.)
mostly taken from burial mounds discovered around the
Black Sea/Caucases area. The Scythians, like the
Egyptians, took burials quite seriously and the more
weight a person pulled in society, the more stuff got
stuck into the ground with him when he died; tribal
chiefs would make their journey to the next world
laden down with snacks, weapons, utensils, expensive
jewelry, horses, servants, and wives.
The collection known as Art and Culture of the East
suffers more than any other from temporary closures.
The section of the exhibition that is located on the
first floor has been closed for a while, and the
supervisors of the third floor part are the first to
get moved to other places requiring more supervision
- the staff cafeteria, for instance - thus rendering
certain rooms unreachable. Chances are you will be
able to see some of the China exhibit (rooms 351-357
and 359), Indonesia (358), and a couple Byzantium
rooms (381-382). Also on the third floor are
exhibitions featuring the Near and Middle East, with
a large display of Persian silver from the 3rd to 7th
centuries, Egyptian fabrics from the 7th to 15th
centuries, and tons of Turkish applied art; a
relatively modern exhibit of Indian art and weapons
from the 17th to 20th centuries; two thousand years
of Mongolian relics; and a collection of Japanese
decorative and applied art.
People into numismatics will find many items of
interest spread about the Hermitage. In addition to
the coins and seals that are part of various other
departments, large collections of Russian and
European coins, medals, and decorations are displayed
in the Raphael Loggia, in the foyer of the Hermitage
Theater, and in a hall on the third floor accessible
from the staircase at the end of the Peter I Gallery.
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