This exhibition traces Yixing ceramics from the 17th to the late 20th century through teapots, cups, caddies, vases and other objects. It highlights the material's ties to tea culture and the collecting histories that brought many of these works into Saint Petersburg and Moscow museums.
Created with Vita Nova Publishing House, this exhibition looks at bookmaking as a form of construction, moving through sections devoted to the 'facade', 'interior', 'windows' and the book as a complete work of art. More than 200 exhibits range from bindings and printing tools to artists' books and illustrated editions.
This exhibition focuses on the German 'Little Masters', whose tiny 16th-century prints reshaped the art of intimate viewing and collecting. Alongside the engravings, the display includes related decorative arts and later works that show the lasting impact of their inventions.
Timed to Victory Day, this focused exhibition reunites two 1945 canvases showing post-war views of the Hermitage. Together they reflect the museum's recovery after the siege of Leningrad and the beginning of its postwar reopening.
This exhibition surveys 16th- to 19th-century European table cabinets from the Hermitage collection, with many pieces shown for the first time. It focuses especially on the 17th century, when cabinets functioned as miniature chambers of curiosities and displays of technical virtuosity.
This large-scale exhibition marks 300 years since Catherine I's reign and follows her rise from humble origins to the Russian throne. More than 500 objects, including prints, portraits, costumes, jewellery and the Grand Coronation Carriage, trace her life and rule.
This exhibition brings together fans that belonged to Empress Maria Feodorovna, alongside selected evening gowns. Wedding, mourning and souvenir fans trace both court life and the development of fan-making from the 1860s to the 1910s.
This outdoor installation presents Ravinder Reddy's monumental sculpture Mother Earth in the Great Courtyard. The work forms part of the museum's Sculpture in the Courtyard series and connects with the wider Contemporary Art of India project.