Art of the ancient world at The Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts in Moscow, Russia

Art of the ancient world at The Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts in Moscow, Russia.
The ancient collection of the Pushkin State Museum currently includes more than 37,000 pieces. Antique art is dedicated to 8 rooms on the first and second floors of the Main building with a special hall dedicated to Heinrich Schliemann's "Gold of Troy". Works include not only original pieces from Cyprus, Greece, Etruria, Rome, Egypt, and Mesopotamia, but casts from major objects held in other museums including the Museo Archeologico in Naples, the Louvre, the Vatican Museums, the British Museum, the Cairo Museum, and the Antik Sammlung in Berlin. The art of ancient Greece and Rome was a particular interest of the museum's founder, Ivan Tsvetaev, and initially 12 out of 20 rooms were dedicated to it. Galleries containing objects from ancient Egypt and the Near East were updated in 2012 as part of the museum's 100th anniversary. A new hall was also added to house the museum's collection of Fayum portraits and other artifacts from Egypt's Greco-Roman period including a collection of Coptic fabrics.


Image: Stele with two Hellenistic soldiers of the Bosporan Kingdom from Taman peninsula (Yubileynoe), southern Russia, 3rd quarter of the 4th century BCE courtesy of Wikimedia Commons contributor Shakko.

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