![]() | Rossica 3Imperial Russian Ballet Oranienbaum: Chinoiserie a la Russe A la Russe: the Russian art of performance through the 18th and 19th centuries is celebrated in this issue, dedicated to Russia’s most famous ballets and to Catherine the Great’s personal Dacha – Oranienbaum. Rossica 16Tretyakov Gallery This issue is dedicated to the 150th anniversary of the Tretyakov Gallery, Russia’s most famous art museum which contains the national collection of Russian art. Rossica 15Interpreting Russia This issue is dedicated to the short-listed finalists and the Winner of the first Rossica Prize. Rossica 12/13Rumiantsev’s Arc – Library of a Nation If the book lies at the heart of Russian culture, then the most vital, life-preserving institution in Russian culture is the library. This issue of ROSSICA focuses on the remarkable history and collections of Russia’s largest library: originally called the Rumiantsev Museum, later the Lenin Library (Leninka) it is now the Russian State Library. Rossica 10/11St Petersburg – 300 This special issue, with a foreword by Her Majesty The Queen, celebrates the Tercentenary of Russia’s imperial capital, known as the Venice of the North and one of the world’s most enigmatic cities – St Petersburg. Rossica 6Russian Nights ‘Russian Nights’ Festival is the largest, most ambitious and most varied festival of Russian culture ever to be staged in London. It brings a remarkable range of music and theatre, painting and poetry, photography and architecture to the capital. Rossica 5The Seductions of Europe Prince Yusupov and his Arkhangelskoe This issue is dedicated to Prince Nikolai Yusupov and his magnificent estate Arkhangelskoe near Moscow. Prince Yusupov was one of the outstanding figures of the Age of Enlightenment. Rossica 4Moscow – The Third Rome, Stalin’s Capital, Global City This issue focuses on Russia’s capital city as myth, as physical history, and as the future. Rossica 3Imperial Russian Ballet Oranienbaum: Chinoiserie a la Russe A la Russe: the Russian art of performance through the 18th and 19th centuries is celebrated in this issue, dedicated to Russia’s most famous ballets and to Catherine the Great’s personal Dacha – Oranienbaum. Rossica 4Moscow – The Third Rome, Stalin’s Capital, Global City This issue focuses on Russia’s capital city as myth, as physical history, and as the future. Rossica 5The Seductions of Europe Prince Yusupov and his Arkhangelskoe This issue is dedicated to Prince Nikolai Yusupov and his magnificent estate Arkhangelskoe near Moscow. Prince Yusupov was one of the outstanding figures of the Age of Enlightenment. Rossica 6Russian Nights ‘Russian Nights’ Festival is the largest, most ambitious and most varied festival of Russian culture ever to be staged in London. It brings a remarkable range of music and theatre, painting and poetry, photography and architecture to the capital. Rossica 10/11St Petersburg – 300 This special issue, with a foreword by Her Majesty The Queen, celebrates the Tercentenary of Russia’s imperial capital, known as the Venice of the North and one of the world’s most enigmatic cities – St Petersburg. Rossica 12/13Rumiantsev’s Arc – Library of a Nation If the book lies at the heart of Russian culture, then the most vital, life-preserving institution in Russian culture is the library. This issue of ROSSICA focuses on the remarkable history and collections of Russia’s largest library: originally called the Rumiantsev Museum, later the Lenin Library (Leninka) it is now the Russian State Library. Rossica 15Interpreting Russia This issue is dedicated to the short-listed finalists and the Winner of the first Rossica Prize. Rossica 16Tretyakov Gallery This issue is dedicated to the 150th anniversary of the Tretyakov Gallery, Russia’s most famous art museum which contains the national collection of Russian art. |