William Shakespeare

“ I AM STANDING UP FOR SHAKESPEARE... ”

Valentina Lentsova

Article: 
EXCLUSIVE PUBLICATIONS
Magazine issue: 
#2 2016 (51)

English literature was discovered by Russia’s educated circles in the 18th century, although mainly in German and French translation; soon after the Patriotic War of 1812 there emerged a keen interest not only in British writers, but in the English language as well.

“ I AM STANDING UP FOR SHAKESPEARE... ”

English literature was discovered by Russia’s educated circles in the 18th century, although mainly in German and French translation; soon after the Patriotic War of 1812 there emerged a keen interest not only in British writers, but in the English language as well.

THE BEST OF ALBION. “From Elizabeth to Victoria” from London’s National Portrait Gallery

Tatyana Karpova

Article: 
CURRENT EXHIBITIONS
Magazine issue: 
#2 2016 (51)

While the British school of painting has always been appreciated in Russia, it is, unfortunately, far from fully represented in the collections of the country’s museums. Such an omission has been significantly remedied in recent years with a series of shows from various British museums held in Russia, many in the framework of the UK-Russia Year of Culture 2014, which included the exhibitions “Francis Bacon and the Legacy of the Past”, at the Hermitage; “Unrivalled Wedgwood”, held at Moscow’s Museum of the Applied and Folk Arts; “Charles Rennie Mackintosh: Manifesto of the New Style” presented at the Moscow Kremlin Museums; “Oscar Wilde. Aubrey Beardsley. The View from Russia” at the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts; and the “‘English Breakfast’ in Russia. Late 18th-19th Century” exhibitionat the Historical Museum.

THE BEST OF ALBION. “From Elizabeth to Victoria” from London’s National Portrait Gallery
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