Stephano Torelli’s “Coronation Portrait of Catherine II”: Crowns as a Visual Formula of the Lands of the Russian Empire

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu15.2020.206

Abstract

The “Coronation portrait of Catherine II” by Stephano Torelli introduces a new type of iconography of the Russian Empress in which she appears as a bearer of multiple (i. e. four) crowns. Whereas originally such a portrait type in European art served as a representation of the several titles of the ruler and correspondent lands joined in a personal union, it became a representation of the titles of Catherine II as the Russian Empress and tsarina of the conquered tsarstva of Kazan, Astrakhan and Siberia. The theme of titles and lands of the Empire had already developed in 18th-century Russia in other forms (allegorical figures, coats-of-arms) and visual media (decorative painting and sculpture). Circa 10 examples collected here for the first time are set side by side with their European counterparts. Three types of representations of native and conquered territories emerged in which the very choice of particular titles and the place of their symbolic representation in composition accentuated different aspects in the concept of the Russian Empire. But it was only with Torelli’s “Coronation Portrait of Catherine II” that the symbolism of three crowns appeared in Russian portrait painting. Torelli previously worked for the Elector of Saxony and King of Poland, some of whose portraits incorporate two crowns. Another important factor seems to be the fact that such iconography gained special popularity with Catherine’s senior peer Maria Theresia. Only the Habsburgs, the rulers of the Holy Roman Empire, with which a newly established Russian Empire aspired to rival, possessed more than three crowns. The importance attached to symbolism of multiple crowns by Catherine is illustrated by direct mentioning of it in her “Zapiski”.

Keywords:

Stephano Torelli, coronation portrait, Catherine II, representation of Emperor, crowns, 18th-century Russian art, Russian-European artistic links

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
 

Author Biography

Ekaterina A. Skvortcova, Saint Petersburg State University

PhD, Associate Professor of the Department of Russian Art History at the Institute of History

References

References

1. Renne, Elizaveta. “Catherine the Great through the Eyes of Vigilius Eriksen and Alexander Roslin”. In Catherine the Great & Gustav III: A Catalogue of the Exhibition, Nationalmuseum, 9th October 1998 — 28th February 1999, ed. by Magnus Olausson, 96–105, 629. Helsingborg: Nationalmuseum; St. Petersburg: State Hermitage museum Publ., 1999.

2. Il’ina, Irina. And “Italian or a Danish?” In Zolotaia palitra: khudozhestvennyi zhurnal, no. 1/5 (2011): 46–50. (In Russian)

3. Renne, Elizaveta. “Paintings of Scandinavian Artists in Russian Collections of the 18th Century”. In Ministerstvo kul’tury Rossiiskoi Federatsii, Gosudarstvennyi muzei izobrazitel’nykh iskusstv im. A. S. Pushkina, Gosudarstvennyi Ermitazh. “Strana zhivitel’noi prokhlady…”: iskusstvo stran Severnoi Evropy XVII — nachala XX veka iz sobranii muzeev Rossii: Daniia, Islandiia, Norvegiia, Finliandiia, Shvetsiia: katalog vystavki, comp. by N. Aleksandrova et al., 13–24, 63–80, 341. Moscow: Krasnaia poshchad’ Publ., 2001. (In Russian)

4. Renne, Elizaveta. “‘They Liked Me at the First Glance’. Painted Portraits of Catherine the Great”. In Catherine the Great: Art for Empire: Masterpieces from the State Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg: A Catalogue of an Exhibition Held at the Art Gallery of Ontario, October 1, 2005 to January 1, 2006, the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, February 2 to May 7, 2006, ed. by Nathalie Bondil, 149–55. Montreal: Montreal Museum of Fine Arts; Ghent: Snoeck Publ., 2005.

5. Gosudarstvennyi Russkii muzei. Painting. Catalogue. Ed. by Grigorii Goldovskii. 15 vols. St. Petersburg: Palace Editions, 1998, vol. 1: XVIII vek. (In Russian)

6. Kotel’nikova, Irina. Portrait Painting in 18th-Century Russia. From the Collection of the Hermitage: Catalogue. Leningrad: Gosudarstvennyi Ermitazh Publ., 1987. (In Russian)

7. Vilinbakhov, Georgii, comp. Catherine the Great. Russian Culture of the 2nd Half of the 18th Century: A Catalogue of the Exhibition. St. Petersburg: Slavia-Interbuk Publ., 1993. (In Russian)

8. Nekrasov, Sergei, foreword. “God-like Tsarevna”. Image of Сatherine II in Poetry of G. Derzhavin: A Catalogue of the Exhibition. St. Petersburg: Art assemblies Publ., 2012. (In Russian)

9. Bušmina, Tat’ana. “Al servizio di tre imperatori. Pittori italiani a San Pietroburgo nel XVIII secolo”. In Pietroburgo e l’Italia, 1750–1850: Il genio italiano in Russia: catalogo della Mostra, 30 aprile — 15 giugno 2003, Roma, a cura di Sergej Androsov, e Vittorio Strada, 55–71. Milano: Skira, 2003.

10. Ivanova, Iulia. “Technical and Colour-Plastic Methods of Painting of Venetian Setteccento”. Iskusstvoznanie, no. 1 (2006): 84–135. (In Russian)

11. Wortman, Richard S. Scenarios of Power: Myth and Ceremony in Russian Monarchy. Rus. ed. Transl. by Sarra Zhitomirskaia and Igor’ Pil’shchikov. 2 vols. Moscow: O. G. I. Publ., 2002. (In Russian)

12. McBurney, Erin. “Art and Power in the Age of Catherine the Great: The State Portraits”. PhD diss., Columbia University, 2015.

13. Epatko, Iurii. “The Portrait Iconography of Catherine II”. In Catherine the Great & Gustav III: A catalogue of the Exhibition, Nationalmuseum, 9th October 1998 — 28th February 1999, ed. by Magnus Olausson, 81–95. Helsingborg: Nationalmuseum; St. Petersburg: State Hermitage museum Publ., 1999.

14. Epatko, Iurii. “Portraits of Empress Catherine II”. In Ekaterina Velikaia v strane i mire: [po materialam vystavki], comp. by Sergei Alekseev et al. St. Petersburg: Palace Editions, 2017. (Al’manakh, Russkii muzei, iss. 519). (In Russian)

15. Petrova, Evgeniia. “Portraits by Stephano Torelli from the Collection of the Russian Museum”. In Stranitsy istorii otechestvennogo iskusstva. XVIII — pervaia polovina XIX veka, science ed. by Evgeniia Petrova, ed. by Nataliia Obnovlenskaia, 41–62. St. Petersburg: Gosudarstvennyi Russkii muzei Publ., 1999, iss. IV. (In Russian)

16. Pchelov, Evgenii. “Motions and Emotions on the Ceremonial Portraits of Russian Monarchs”. Vestnik RGGU. Seriia “Literaturovedenie. Iazykoznanie. Kul’turologiia”, no. 3 (2019): 98–122. (In Russian)

17. Gollerbakh, Erikh. Portrait Painting in Russia. 18th Century. Moscow; Petrograd: Gos. izdatel’stvo Publ., 1923. (In Russian)

18. Ernst, Serge. “Stefano Torelli in Russia”. Arte Veneta XXIV (1970): 173–84.

19. Graziani, Irene. La bottega dei Torelli. Da Bologna alla Russia di Caterina la Grande. Bologna: Compositori, 2005.

20. Volkova, Marina. “Tsar Regalia as Symbols of Power in Russian Artistic Culture of the 18th Century”. PhD diss., MGU im. M. V. Lomonosova Publ., 2011. (In Russian)

21. Uspenskii, Boris. Tsar and Emperor. Anointing for Kingdom and Semantics of Monarchial Titles. Moscow: Iazyki russkoi kul’tury Publ., 2000. (Iazyk. Semiotika. Kul’tura: Malaia seriia). (In Russian)

22. Bobrovnitskaia, Irina, and Marina Martynova. Regalia of Russian Rulers and Other Attributes of the Grand Ducal and Royal Orders from the 14th to the 17th Centuries: Catalogue. Moscow: Gos. istorikokul’turnyi muzei-zapovednik “Moskovskii Kreml’” Publ., 2018. (In Russian)

23. Samoilova, Tatiana. Faith and Power. The Age of Ivan the Terrible: A catalogue of the Exhibition. Moscow: Gos. istoriko-kul’turnyi muzei-zapovednik “Moskovskii Kreml’” Publ., 2007. (In Russian)

24. Amelekhina, Svetlana, and Elena Morshakova, comp. Russian Emperors and the Armoury: A Catalogue of the Exhibition. Moscow: Khudozhnik i Kniga Publ., 2006. (In Russian)

25. Lavrentyev, Alexander. “‘Muscowy Crown’ in Polish King’s Treasury, 17th–18th Centuries (On the Origins and Fate of the Regalia)”. Slověne. International Journal of Slavic Studies, no. 1 (2018): 93–114. (In Russian)

26. Filiushkin, Aleksandr. “The Problem of Genesis of the Russian Empire”. In Novaia imperskaia istoriia postsovetskogo prostranstva, ed. and comp. by Il’ia Gerasimov, 375–408. Kazan’: Tsentr issledovaniia natsionalizma i imperii Publ., 2004. (Biblioteka zhurnala Ab Imperio). (In Russian)

27. Pchelov, Evgenii. “Images of Siberia in Symbolism of Power in Pre-revolutionary Russia”. In Sibirskie chteniia v RGGU: Al’manakh, 46–87. Moscow: Rossiiskii gos. gumanitarnyi universitet Publ., 2007, iss. 2. (In Russian)

28. Vilinbakhov, Georgii. The State Coat of Arms of Russia. 500 Years. St. Petersburg: Slaviia Publ., 1997. (In Russian)

29. Piotrovskii, Boris, ed. Hermitage. History of Buildings Erection and Architecture. Leningrad: Stroiizdat Publ., 1989. (In Russian)

30. Bykova, Iuliia. “Regalia in Funeral Ceremonies of the House of Romanovs in the First Half of the 18th Century”. In Petrovskoe vremia v litsakh — 2017, 81–92. St. Petersburg: Gos. Ermitazh Publ., 2017. (Trudy Gosudarstvennogo Ermitazha, XC). (In Russian)

31. Logunova, Marina. “Mourning Ceremonial in Russian Empire in the 18th–19th Centuries”. PhD diss., Severo-zapadnaia akademiia gos. sluzhby Publ., 2010. (In Russian)

32. Aronova, Alla. “The Last Triumph of the Empress Elizaveta Petrovna”. Iskusstvoznanie, no. 3 (2016): 98–135. (In Russian)

33. Tiukhmeneva, Ekaterina. “State Symbols in Decoration of Imperial Mourning Ceremonial in Russia in the First Half of the 18th Century”. In Petrovskoe vremia v litsakh — 2019, 316–26. St. Petersburg: Gos. Ermitazh Publ., 2019. (Trudy Gosudarstvennogo Ermitazha, СI) (In Russian)

34. Solov’ev, Sergei. The History of Russia. 18 books. Moscow: AST Publ., 2003, bk. 9: Nachalo 20-kh godov XVIII veka — 1725. (Istoriia Rossii s drevneishikh vremen). (In Russian)

35. Backerra, Charlotte. “Personal union, composite monarchy and ‘multiple rule’”. In The Routledge History of Monarchy, ed. by E. Woodacre, L. H. S. Dean, Ch. Jones, R. E. Martin, Z. E. Rohr, 89–111. London: Routledge, 2019. (The Routledge History).

36. Vivandi, Corrado. “Henry IV, the Gallic Hercules”. Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 30 (1967): 176–97.

37. Bußmann, Klaus, und Heinz Schilling, Hrsg. 1648. Krieg und Frieden in Europa. Münster, Osnabrück 24.10.1998–17.01.1999. Katalog zur 26. Europaratsausstellung. Katalog und 2 Bände. Münster: Veranstaltungsgesellschaft 350 Jahre Westfälischer Friede, 1998.

38. Pruszyński, Michał. “Scottish ‘Sobiesciana’ (A Communique)”. Studia Wilanowskie XI (1985): 85–6.

39. Yonan, Michael Elia. Empress Maria Theresa and the Politics of Habsburg Imperial Art. University Park, PA: The Pennsylvania State University, 2011.

40. Mraz, Gerda, und Gottfried Mraz. Maria Theresia. Ihr Leben und Ihre Zeit in Bildern und Dokumenten. München: Süddeutscher Verlag, 1979.

41. Alberti, Giorgio. Catalogo della mostra “Maria Teresa e il Settecento goriziano”: Gorizia, Palazzo Attems: 12 dicembre 1981 — 18 febbraio 1982. Gorizia: Provincia di Gorizia, 1982.

42. Elfriede, Iby, Mutschlechner, Martin, Telesko, Werner, und Vocelka, Karl, Hrsg. Maria Theresia, 1717–1780. Strategerin, Mutter, Reformerin. Vienna: Amalthea, 2017.

43. Strunck, Christina. “L’imperatrice Maria Teresa modello per Caterina la Grande? Una gara artistica fra San Pietroburgo e Vienna”. In La storia e le immagini della storia. Prospettive, metodi, ricerche, a cura di Matteo Provasi e Cecilia Vicentini, 269–80. Rome: I libri di Viella, 2015.

44. Strunck, Christina. “The ‘Two Bodies’ of the Female Sovereign: Awkward Hierarchies in Images of Empress Maria Theresia, Catherine the Great of Russia and their Male Consorts”. In Queens Consorts, Cultural Transfer and European Politics, c. 1500–1800, ed. by Helen Watanabe-O’Kelly and Adam Morton, 64–83. London: Routledge, 2017.

45. Bobrovnitskaia, Irina. “The Monomachos Crown”. In Federal’noe gos. biudzhetnoe uchrezhdenie kul’tury “Gos. istoriko-kul’turnyi muzei-zapovednik ‘Moskovskii Kreml’’”. Venchaniia na tsarstvo i koronatsii v Moskovskom Kremle, comp. by Svetlana Amelehina et al., 58–9. 2 parts. Moscow: OOO “Azbuka” Publ., 2013, pt. 1: XVI–XVII veka. (In Russian)

46. Bekker, Seimur. “Russia and the Concept of the Empire”. In Novaia imperskaia istoriia postsovetskogo prostranstva, ed. and comp. by Il’ia Gerasimov, 67–80. Kazan’: Tsentr issledovaniia natsionalizma i imperii Publ., 2004. (Biblioteka zhurnala Ab Imperio). (In Russian)

47. Sakharova, Irina. Aleksei Petrovich Antropov, 1716–1795. Moscow: Iskusstvo Publ., 1974. (In Russian)


Sources

I. Malinovskii, Konstantin, transl. Notes of Jacob Stählin on Fine Arts in Russia. 2 vols. Moscow: Iskusstvo Publ., 1990, vol. 1. (In Russian)

II. Petrov, Petr, comp. Catalogue of Exhibition of Russian Portraits of Distinguished Persons of the 16–18th Centuries Arranged by the Society for the Encouragment of Arts. St. Petersburg: Tip. A. Transhelia Publ., 1870. (In Russian)

III. Vrangel, Nikolai. “Foreign Artists of the 18th Century in Russia”. Starye gody (July — September, 1911): 5–71. (In Russian)

IV. “11.590. 2nd July. The Form of Titles of Empress Catherine II”. In Polnoe sobranie zakonov Rossiiskoi imperii s 1649 goda, 6–7. 45 vols. St. Petersburg: Tip. II Otdeleniia Sobstvennoi Ego Imperatorskogo Velichestva Kantseliarii Publ., 1830, vol. 16: S 28 iiunia 1762 po 1765. (In Russian)

V. “Regalia of Russian Tsars”. Museums of Moscow Kremlin. Accessed July 29, 2019. https://www.kreml.ru/exhibitions/virtual-exhibitions.drevnosti-gosudarstva-rossiyskogo-v-tvorchestve-fg-solntseva/gosudarstvennye-regalii/. (In Russian)

VI. “Paintings for the Decoration of Triumphal Arch in Miasnitskaia Street for Entrance to Moscow for Coronation of Her Imperial Majesty”. In Tiukhmeneva, Ekaterina. Iskusstvo triumfal’nykh vrat v Rossii pervoi poloviny XVIII veka: problemy panegiricheskogo napravleniia, 231–4. Moscow: Progress-Traditsiia Publ., 2005. (In Russian)

VII. “Emblems and Symbos for the Triumphal Arch for Coronation of his Imperial Majesty Peter II After the Invention of Theophan Archbishop of Novgorod”. In Tiukhmeneva, Ekaterina. Iskusstvo triumfal’nykh vrat v Rossii pervoi poloviny XVIII veka: problemy panegiricheskogo napravleniia, 235–42. Moscow: Progress-Traditsiia Publ., 2005. (In Russian)

VIII. Berk, Karl Reinhold. “Travel Notes About Russia”. In Bespiatykh, Iurii. Peterburg Anny Ioannovny v inostrannykh opisaniiakh. Vvedenie. Teksty. Kommentarii, 111–302. St. Petersburg: Russko-Baltiiskii informatsionnyi tsentr “Blits” Publ., 1997. (In Russian)

IX. Nauchno-bibliograficheskii arkhiv Rossiiskoi Akademii khudozhestv. F. 11. Op. 2. Ed. khr. 5378 [Saint-Petersburg. Scientific-bibliographical Archive of the Russian Academy of Fine Arts. Stock 11. Inventory 2. Record 5378]. (In Russian)

X. Uspenskii, Aleksandr. Dictionary of Artists of the 18th Century Who Decorated Imperial Palaces. Moscow: Pech. A. I. Snegirevoi Publ., 1913. (In Russian)

XI. “Description of Moscow Triumphal Arch of 1742 Dedicated to Coronation Fests of Elizaveta Petrovna”. In Tiukhmeneva, Ekaterina. Iskusstvo triumfal’nykh vrat v Rossii pervoi poloviny XVIII veka: problemy panegiricheskogo napravleniia, 247–58. Moscow: Progress-Traditsiia Publ., 2005. (In Russian)

XII. Description of Coronation of Her Imperial Majesty Ekaterina Alekseevna Solemnly Celebrated in the Tsar City of Moscow on the 7th of May of 1724. St. Petersburg: Tip. pri Senate Publ., 1724. (In Russian)

XIII. Description of Coronation of Her Imperial Majesty Anna Ioannovna Solemnly Celebrated in the Tsar City of Moscow on 28th of April of 1730. Moscow: Tip. pri Senate Publ, 1730. (In Russian)

XIV. Elaborate Description of Solemn Order of Virtuous Entrance in Tsar City of Moscow and Sacred Coronation Her August Imperial Majesty Elizaveta Petrovna on 25th of April 1742. St. Petersburg: Pech. pri Imperatorskoi Akademii Nauk Publ., 1744. (In Russian)

XV. Elaborate Description of Solemn Order of Virtuous Entrance in Tsar City of Moscow and Sacred Coronation Her August Imperial Majesty Catherine II, Mother and Salvator of Fatherland, on 22nd of September 1762. St. Petersrbug: [s. n.], [s. d.]. (In Russian)

XVI. Compositions of Catherine II Based on Original Manuscripts and Accompanied with Explanatory Comments by Academician A. N. Pypin. 12 vols. St. Petersburg: Tip. Imperatorskoi Akademii Nauk Publ., 1907, vol. 12: Autobiographical Notes. (In Russian)

XVII. “Renold Elstrack (1570 — c. 1625). [Engraved Frontispiece to Edward Grimstone’s The Estates, Empires & Principalities of the World (1615)], 1615”. Royal Collection Trust. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://www.rct.uk/collection/search#/21/collection/601414/engraved-frontispiece-toedward-grimstones-the-estates-empires-amp-principalities.

XVIII. “L’ordre maniere et sceance de sa maieste britanique avec les seigneurs spirituelz et temporelz dans le hault parlement c. 1630–50”. Royal Collection Trust. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://www.rct.uk/collection/search#/71/collection/601916/lordre-maniere-et-sceance-de-sa-maieste-britaniqueavec-les-seigneurs-spirituelz.

XIX. “Sir Peter Paul Rubens (1577–1640) and Studio. The Union of the Crowns of England and Scotland c. 1632–4”. Royal Collection Trust. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://www.rct.uk/collection/search#/4/collection/408417/the-union-of-the-crowns-of-england-and-scotland.

XX. “Peter Stent (Active c. 1637–1665): London. Charles II with the Royal Oak c. 1660”. Royal Collection Trust. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://www.rct.uk/collection/602671/charles-ii-with-the-royaloak.

XXI. “Peter Stent (Active c. 1637–1665): London. [Charles II in the Royal Oak] c. 1730–70s”. Royal Collection Trust. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://www.rct.uk/collection/search#/61/collection/602672/charles-ii-in-the-royal-oak.

XXII. “Carol’ Secund: DG Mag Bri: Fra: et Hib: Rex: c. 1660–85”. Royal Collection Trust. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://www.rct.uk/collection/search#/7/collection/602442/carol-secund-dgmag-bri-fra-et-hib-rex.

XXIII. “[Charles II] c. 1660–1685”. Royal Collection Trust. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://www.rct.uk/collection/search#/7/collection/602489/charles-ii.

XXIV. “Agostino Masucci”. National Galleries Scotland. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://www.nationalgalleries.org/art-and-artists/8211/solemnisation-marriage-james-iii-and-mariaclementina-sobieska.

XXV. “Georgius I. c. 1714–1741”. Royal Collection Trust. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://www.rct.uk/collection/search#/16/collection/603696/georgius-i.

XXVI. “Georgius I. D. G. Magnae Britanniae Franciae Et Hiberniae c. 1714–1727”. Royal Collection Trust. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://www.rct.uk/collection/search#/14/collection/603703/georgivs-i-d-g-magnae-britanniae-franciae-et-hiberniae.

XXVII. “[George I] c. 1714–27”. Royal Collection Trust. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://www.rct.uk/collection/search#/16/collection/603763/george-i.

XXVIII. “[George II] c. 1727–60”. Royal Collection Trust. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://www.rct.uk/collection/search#/4/collection/603844/george-ii.

XXIX. “[August II]”. Muzeum Narodowe w Krakowie. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://zbiory.mnk.pl/en/search-result/catalog/494923.

XXX. “[Plaster cast of the medal reverse from the reign of Augustus III the Saxon, King of Poland]”. Muzeum Narodowe w Krakowie. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://zbiory.mnk.pl/en/search-result/catalog/429549.

XXXI. “[Fridericus Augustus]”. Muzeum Narodowe w Krakowie. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://zbiory.mnk.pl/en/search-result/catalog/501539.

XXXII. “[König August II. von Polen (1670–1733)]”. Gemäldegalerie Alte Meister, Dresden. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://skd-online-collection.skd.museum/Details/Index/185714.

XXXIII. “[Portret Augusta III Sasa (1696–1763), króla Polski]”. Muzeum Narodowe w Krakowie. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://zbiory.mnk.pl/en/search-result/catalog/239778.

XXXIV. “17th and 18th Centuries”. National Gallery of Slovenia. January 21, 2020. https://www.ng-slo.si/en/301/empress-maria-theresa-martin-van-meytens-the-younger?workId=2012.

XXXV. “Maria Theresia (1717–1780) als Erzherzogin von Österreich und Königin von Böhmen und Ungarn”. Lemo. Lebendiges Museum on-line. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://www.dhm.de/lemo/bestand/objekt/maria-theresia-um-1745.html.

XXXVI. “The Crown of Monomakh”. Muzei Moskovskogo Kremlia. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://www.kreml.ru/exhibitions/virtual-exhibitions.regalii-russkikh-tsarey/shapka-monomakha/.

XXXVII. “Coronation of Tsarevich Ivan and Tsarevich Petr”. Muzei Moskovskogo Kremlia. Accessed January 21, 2020. https://www.kreml.ru/exhibitions/virtual-exhibitions.venchaniya-na-tsarstvo-vmoskovskom-kremle/venchanie-na-tsarstvo-tsarevichey-ivana-i-petra/.

Downloads

Published

2020-06-16

How to Cite

Skvortcova, E. A. (2020). Stephano Torelli’s “Coronation Portrait of Catherine II”: Crowns as a Visual Formula of the Lands of the Russian Empire. Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Arts, 10(2), 274–299. https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu15.2020.206

Issue

Section

Visual arts