I shipped one box of winter clothes and papers to China. Put everything else in PDF form. Gave away and donated a bunch of clothes and am moving to China with one big and one small backpack! |
Travel companion? The one and only DD. My backpack on the left, hers on the right. |
We landed in St. Petersburg at 145AM and we were up and ready to go for a 9AM tour of the city and an 1140AM appointment at the famed Hermitage museum. |
If you ever wanted to know the address of the Hermitage......it's housed in The Winter Palace of Peter I (aka Peter the Great). |
DD and I entering on the grand entrance to the Hermitage. |
This sepulchre is made ENTIRELY of Silver. It was built for Alexander Nevitsky, who defended the city and is now, essentially, the patron saint of the City of St. Petersburg. |
To give you an idea of how grand The Winter Palace is.....take a look at this doorknob. |
This is his second wife, a Lithuanian peasant woman, who because Catherine I. She ruled from 1725 to 1727. |
After 3 of her siblings ruled for 14 years, Catherine and Peter's daughter, Elizabeth ruled from 1741 to 1762. She is the ruler who built The Winter Palace. |
However, Peter III was already married to a German, who grew to LOVE Russia and was Catherine II, aka Catherine the Great. She ruled Russia from 1762 to 1796. |
This clock marks the time that the provisional government of Russia ended. |
The throne of the Tsar/Tsarina of Russia |
Now, onto some art. This is The Hermitage's only Michaelangelo. A crouching figure. |
I love the purple marble, porphyry. But this is my new favorite material, malachite. Throughout the Hermitage, you find columns of items made of this beautiful green colored marble. |
Our guide Elena was pretty amused at my gushing and excitement about Canova. |
Psyche and Cupid |
Here's DD explaining to us, the myth of Orpheus. |
This isn't a Canova, but I just like the iconography, Pan and Satyr. |
Inside the courtyard of the Winter Palace/Hermitage. |
The Hermitage Museum Building was the only one to actually be built for the purposes of being a museum. |
Tradition states that newlyweds come and touch the foot of one of the twelve Hercules for strength in their marriage. Here it is in action! |
No comments:
Post a Comment