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The Yekaterinburg Museum of Fine Arts, established in 1986, is the largest art museum of the Urals region of Russia. It is based in Voevodina Street on the banks of the Iset River in the city of Yekaterinburg (known as Sverdlovsk between 1924 and 1991 and the fourth largest city in Russia).

Yekaterinburg Museum of Fine Arts
Established1936; 86 years ago (1936)
LocationVoevodina Street, Yekaterinburg
Coordinates56°50′6.46″N 60°36′11.65″E
Website

At the heart of the museum building is one of the oldest buildings in Yekaterinburg, a hospital built in 1730 for the Yekaterinburg Ironworks. The building was modified several times during the 19th century. In the 1970s, most of the buildings of the former ironworks were demolished and the Historical Square laid out in their place. At the end of the 1970s, the idea of converting the remainder into a museum space was suggested. The project was completed in 1986.


History


The art gallery, then known as the Sverdlovsk Art Gallery, was originally established in a second building in Weiner Street in 1936. Here collections of works of the Russian artistic avant-garde of the 1910–1920s, Russian art of the 1920–1950s, and the later period - the 1960s to the present day, were exhibited. During the Second World War the collection of the Hermitage Museum were transferred there for safety.

In the mid-1980s much of the art collection was rehoused in the newly rebuilt Voevodina Street building. It was granted the status of a Museum of Fine Arts in 1988 and renamed the Yekaterinburg Museum of Fine Arts in 1992 after the city of Sverdlovsk was itself renamed.


Collections


The museum is known primarily for the unique collection of Kasli art casting and the world famous Kasli cast-iron pavilion - a participant in the 1900 Paris World Exhibition.




References



    На других языках


    - [en] Yekaterinburg Museum of Fine Arts

    [ru] Екатеринбургский музей изобразительных искусств

    Екатеринбу́ргский музе́й изобрази́тельных иску́сств — крупнейший художественный музей Урала, имеет четыре здания — главное расположено на берегу реки Исети в Екатеринбурге, в Историческом сквере, второе на улице Вайнера, 11, где в 2021 году открылся культурно-выставочный центр «Эрмитаж-Урал»[1], третье здание Музей наивного искусства[2] на ул. Розы Люксембург, 18, и Центр истории камнерезного дела имени А. К. Денисова-Уральского на ул. Пушкина, 5[3].



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