National Art Museum of Azerbaijan
Azərbaycan Milli İncəsənət Muzeyi | |
De Bure's Palace - first building of the National Art Museum of Azerbaijan | |
Established | 1936 |
---|---|
Location |
Niyazi Street 9/11, Baku, Azerbaijan |
Type | Art museum |
Collection size | 15,000 items: 3,000 items displayed (12,000 items stored) |
Public transit access | M 1 Icheri Sheher metro station |
Website | Nnationalmuseum.az |
National Art Museum of Azerbaijan (Azerbaijani: Azərbaycan Milli İncəsənət Muzeyi) is the biggest art museum of Azerbaijan.[1] It was founded in 1936 in Baku and in 1943 was named after Rustam Mustafayev,[1] a prominent Azerbaijani scenic designer and theater artist. The museum consists of two buildings standing next to each other. The museum's total collection includes over 15,000 artworks. There are over 3,000 items in 60 rooms on permanent display. About 12,000 items are kept in storage. The museum changes the exhibits periodically so that more of these artworks can be displayed temporarily.[2]
The displays
Seven of the rooms in the first building feature European art, and ten rooms feature Russian art. European art includes works of Italian (Guercino, Leandro Bassano, Francesco Solimena, Lorenzo Bartolini), French (Jules Dupré, Gaspard Dughet, Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret, Jean-Joseph Benjamin-Constant), Dutch/Flemish (Frans Hals, Michiel Jansz van Mierevelt, Adriaen Brouwer, Adriaen van Ostade, Justus Sustermans, Pieter Claesz), German (Johann Heinrich Roos, Friedrich August von Kaulbach) and Polish (Jan Styka) painters.
The second edifice built in 1885 houses Eastern art, represented particularly by Persian, Turkish, Chinese and Japanese art. Russian art is encompassed notably by paintings of Karl Briullov, Alexey Venetsianov, Vasily Vereshchagin, Isaac Levitan, Vladimir Makovsky, Valentin Serov, Vladimir Borovikovsky, Vasily Tropinin, Konstantin Korovin and Ivan Shishkin. There are also restored samples of Russian avant-garde.
Among Azerbaijani artists represented are painters Mir Mohsun Navvab, Bahruz Kangarli, Tair Salakhov, Azim Azimzade, Salam Salamzade, Vidadi Narimanbekov, Mikail Abdullayev, Togrul Narimanbekov and sculptor Omar Eldarov. The works of Sattar Bahlulzade fill one entire room.
The museum also holds easel and book miniatures of 17th-19th centuries, lacquered miniatures of 18th-19th centuries and collection of sherbet spoons, made from mulberry tree.
The first works were obtained from Saint-Petersburg, Moscow and private collections. The museum expositions were later exhibited in Canada (1966), Cuba (1967), Syria (1968), France (1969), former Czechoslovakia, Algeria (both 1970), Iraq (1971) etc.[1] The museum is open Tuesday to Sunday from 10:00 until 18:00.
Gallery
- Theotokos of Vladimir, late 16th century
- Our Lady of Kazan, late 17th century
- Bernardino Luini - St. Catherine, 16th century
- Andrea del Sarto - Madonna of the Harpies, 1517-1519
- Bartolomeo Schedoni - John the Baptist, 17th century
- Francesco Solimena - Boreas Abducting Oreithyia, Daughter of Erechteus, 1729
- Guercino - Sleeping Endymion, 17th century
- Leandro Bassano - Portrait of an Old Woman
- Balthasar Beschey - Venera and Adonis
- Pieter Claesz - Still life
- Justus Sustermans - Portrait of F. Medici, 17th century
- Michiel Jansz. van Mierevelt - Portrait of the Duke of Wallenstein, 17th century
- Frans Hals - Portrait of a man
- Jean-Joseph Benjamin-Constant - Portrait of the Empress Alexandra Fyodrovna, 19th century
- Friedrich August von Kaulbach - Portrait of Grand Duchess Elisabeth Feodorovna, 19th century
- Jean-Baptiste Greuze - Portrait of a young woman, 18th century
- Eduard Joseph d'Alton - Portrait of a woman, 19th century
- Charles Le Brun - Banishment of Iliadore
- Adriaen Brouwer - Scene at a surgeon, 17th century
- Johann Heinrich Roos - Herd, 1676
- Louis Victor Watelin - Landscape, 1873
- Gaspard Dughet - Landscape
- Ivan Aivazovsky - The road in the woods, 1857
- Ivan Shishkin - The road in the woods
- Jean-Honoré Fragonard - Pastorale
- Vasili Pukirev - Interrupted wedding
- Mirza Kadym Irevani - Portrait of sitting woman, 1870
- Ogtay Sadıgzadeh - Portrait of Khurshidbanu Natavan
See also
Notes
- 1 2 3 Azerbaijan Soviet Encyclopedia. State Publishing House of the Council of Ministers of Azerbaijan SSR. 1976. pp. 1st vol, p. 144.
- ↑ "Breathing Life Back Into Art: The National Art Museum". Azer.com. Retrieved 2008-04-06.
External links
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Coordinates: 40°21′47″N 49°49′54″E / 40.36306°N 49.83167°E