This photography exhibition follows the history of Saint Petersburg's tiled stoves and fireplaces from early Russian relief tiles to later decorative fashions. The display uses photographs to show how these heating pieces shaped interiors and social prestige across the city.
This retrospective surveys Evgeny Rapoport's work as one of Leningrad-Saint Petersburg's leading architects of the 1970s to 2000s. Realized projects, unbuilt schemes, drawings, and sketches reveal the formal thinking behind his individual approach.
This solo exhibition presents Oleg Shorov's sculptures from 2017 to 2025, with a focus on Christian figures and Gospel subjects. Installed across the Peter and Paul Cathedral and Grand Ducal Mausoleum, it centers on a terracotta angel and related images of saints and biblical figures.
More than 60 works from the Plyos Museum-Reserve show how the landscapes associated with Isaac Levitan continued to inspire artists in Russia and abroad. The exhibition links twentieth- and twenty-first-century landscape painting with the long-running Green Rustle project.
This exhibition treats Peter and Paul Fortress as a living stage rather than a static monument. Across three acts, it combines archaeological finds, contemporary objects, and personal stories linked to Hare Island.
This focused display brings 20 objects from the Novgorod Museum-Reserve to the fortress. It introduces key types of seventeenth-century church tiles from Veliky Novgorod and their decorative traditions.
Marking 200 years since the Decembrist uprising, this exhibition returns to the city, the revolt, and the trial held in the Commandant's House. Paintings, documents, personal objects, and multimedia material connect Senate Square with the fortress imprisonment of the Decembrists.
This exhibition looks at how the museum built one of its most distinctive collections by rescuing architectural details from Saint Petersburg buildings. Around 80 objects, from facade sculpture to stained glass and fireplaces, trace salvage work carried out during major repairs in the 1970s and 1980s.
This exhibition brings together works by August Lanin in the Engineering House.
Opening around the city's 323rd anniversary, this exhibition draws on the museum's rich art holdings of Leningrad-Saint Petersburg views. Landscapes, portraits, and street scenes by late Soviet and contemporary avant-garde artists frame the city as a space of freedom and self-expression.
This exhibition explores the wartime history of Pulkovo Heights and the later work of remembrance around the site. It pays special attention to the destroyed and restored Pulkovo Observatory, using photographs, film, objects, and reconstruction projects.
This exhibition examines the Peter and Paul Cathedral bell tower as a rare ensemble of Russian bells, a carillon, and chiming clocks. It traces more than three centuries of change and marks 25 years since the modern carillon was installed.
This exhibition reconsiders Savely Schleifer as part of the wider Russian avant-garde rather than a footnote to a few canonical names. Works from several museum collections place him back into the circle of St Petersburg's early twentieth-century experimental art.