Russian Baroque

[1] Baroque architecture is characterised by the opening of volumes into surrounding space, dynamism, expression of forms, exaggeration of scales, majestic ensembles, and huge building sizes.For comparison, during the Renaissance in Italy, the works of Leonardo da Vinci, Raphael, and Michelangelo became major artistic trends that later influenced the development of all Western European classical art.Its main significance lies not in being an integral artistic style, but rather as a humanistic, enlightenment ideological movement that introduced Russian culture to the achievements of Western European civilization.She wrote that after Peter the Great's reforms in the early 18th century, "many stages, consistently undergone by other European nations, in Russia often appeared as if spliced, compacted...there were sometimes unexpected combinations of very dissimilar phenomena".[4] Something similar happened in England, where the historical and territorial separation from continental Europe, combined with the unique English psychology, gave rise to a distinctive 'English style'.
The building of the Kunstkamera in Saint Petersburg . 1719–1758
BaroqueBaroque architectureKunstkameraSaint PetersburgRussian TsardomRussian EmpirePeter the GreatElizabeth of Russiaquadraturatrompe-l'œilRenaissanceLeonardo da VinciRaphaelMichelangeloAndrei RublevDionisiusBoris ViipperclassicismrococochiaroscurogildingNaryshkin Baroquearchitecture of Kievan Rus'Baroque in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealthoctagon on the quadrangleStroganovNizhny NovgorodSolvychegodskUstyuzhnaPetrine BaroqueElizabethan BaroqueFrancesco Bartolomeo RastrelliChurch of the Intercession at FiliZnamenskaya Church (Dubrovitsy)Kikin HallSmolny CathedralSiberian BaroqueVeliky UstyugVyatka regionUral regionSiberiaCossack BaroqueSlobozhanshchynaSebezhTrubchevskStarodubBelgorodBrazilCentral AndesCzech (Bohemia, Moravia)Dutch RepublicEnglandQueen Anne styleFranceSicilyNew SpainPolandPortugalRussiaPetrineNaryshkinElizabethanSiberianChurrigueresqueUkraineRussian architectureArt NouveauConstructivismNeo-ByzantineNeoclassicalNeoclassical RevivalPostconstructivismRussian RevivalStalinistRussian church architectureOne-day votive churchesNational Romantic styleRussian avant-gardeSuprematism