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  1. In 1893, Imperial Academy of Arts was divided into the Academy of Arts itself, which was responsible for all the artistic work in the Russian Empire, and the Higher Art School of the Academy of Arts, which dealt only with academic affairs.

  2. The Imperial Academy of Arts was one of the most progressive cultural entities in those days. The Academy’s first homegrown talents, such artists and architects as A. Losenko, F. Shubin, V. Bazhenov, F. Rokotov, testified to the high level of art education in Russia.

  3. Academy of Arts Building. On the suggestion of Count Ivan Shuvalov, Empress Elizabeth issued an imperial decree for the foundation in St. Petersburg of an "academy of the three most noble arts" (painting, sculpture, and architecture) in 1757.

  4. The Russian Academy of Arts, informally known as the Saint Petersburg Academy of Arts, was an art academy in Saint Petersburg, founded in 1757 by the founder of the Imperial Moscow University Ivan Shuvalov under the name Academy of the Three Noblest Arts.

  5. Initially, the foundation of the museum’s collection consisted of 80 paintings from the Hermitage, 120 paintings from the Imperial Academy of Arts, 200 paintings from the Winter Palace, the...

  6. What is the Imperial Academy of Arts? The Imperial Academy of Arts was virtually required for artists to make successful careers.

  7. His primary achievement was his patronage of education, and his most enduring acts were the founding of Moscow University and the Imperial Academy of Arts. Shuvalov composed the “Regulations of the Academy of Arts” and “Constitution of the Imperial Academy of Arts in 16 Articles”, which defined the principles of its functioning.[7]

  8. Pages in category "Members of the Imperial Academy of Arts". The following 188 pages are in this category, out of 188 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .

  9. Academy of the three most famous arts, painting, skulptura and architecture with the educational school of the Academy Печ. при Имп. Акад. художеств Betskoi, Ivan Ivanovich (1704-1795).

  10. These rebel artists broke the classical canons of the Imperial Academy of Arts and became the forerunners of Russian avant-garde.