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The academy traces its history to the Imperial Academy of Arts.After the October Revolution, the academy actually stopped working and was abolished by a decree of the RSFSR government on April 12, 1918; after a series of transformations in the building of the Academy of Arts, the Institute of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture was established in 1932 (the modern St. Petersburg Academy of ...
The building in Leningrad was devoted to the Ilya Repin Leningrad Institute for Painting, Sculpture and Architecture, named in honor of the Ukrainian-born Repin, one of the foremost realist artists in the Russian Empire and Soviet Union. Since 1991 it has been called the St. Petersburg Institute for Painting, Sculpture and Architecture.
Saint Petersburg Conservatory; Saint Petersburg Repin Academy of Arts; Saint Petersburg Roman Catholic Theological Academy; Saint Petersburg State Institute of Film and Television; Saint Petersburg Stieglitz State Academy of Art and Design; Saint Petersburg Theological Academy; St. Petersburg State Institute of Psychology and Social Work
View history; General ... Saint Petersburg Stieglitz State Academy of Art and Design alumni ... Pages in category "Repin Institute of Arts alumni"
The Saint Petersburg team Yusupov Sad («Юсупов Сад») toured Germany, Sweden and Finland in 1907 under the name Sankt Petersburger Amateur Eislaufverein and won most of its games. Bandy was also played during the Soviet years, with Dynamo Leningrad becoming the runner-up for the Soviet Cup in 1947 and Lenin IVF Leningrad being the ...
Pages in category "Players of American football from St. Petersburg, Florida" The following 59 pages are in this category, out of 59 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Repin began painting icons at age sixteen. He failed at his first effort to enter the Imperial Academy of Fine Arts in Saint Petersburg, but went to the city anyway in 1863, audited courses, and won his first prizes in 1869 and 1871. In 1872, after a tour along the Volga River, he presented his drawings at the Academy of Art in St. Petersburg.
Opanas Slastion (1855–1933), studied at the Imperial Academy of Arts, lived and worked in Saint Petersburg for several years before returning to Ukraine at the end of 19th century; Andrey Markov (1856–1922), mathematician; Alexander Makarov (1857–1919), Imperial Russian Politician, lived in Saint Petersburg 1857–1917