Saint Petersburg

The young czar, feeling oppressed by the medieval traditions and ecclesiastical patriarchy of seventeenth-century Moscow, wanted to Westernize Russia in a hurry, defying the sluggish pace of history.
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Ewer and basin (lavabo set), Chisinau Court Workshop, Silver, partially gilded, Moldovan
Chisinau Court Workshop
ca. 1680–85
Settee, Andrei Nikiforovich Voronikhin  Russian, Light colored hardwood, carved, gilded and painted; light blue silk show cover (later), Russian, St. Petersburg
Multiple artists/makers
made between early March and end of April 1803
Alexander Danilovich Menshikov (1673–1729), Unknown Artist, Swiss, Austrian, or German, active Russia ca. 1703–4, Red pine (pinus sylvestris), with wrought-iron clips, Russian, St. Petersburg
Unknown
probably shortly before 1704
Ewer, Samuel Margas Jr.  British, Silver gilt, British, London
Samuel Margas Jr.
ca. 1721
The Empress Elizabeth of Russia (1709–1762) on Horseback, Attended by a Page, Georg Christoph Grooth  German, Oil on canvas
Georg Christoph Grooth
after 1743–49
Table snuffbox, Jacques de Lajoüe , published in Paris 1736 French, Green Turban snail shell; gilded, matted, punched, and engraved silver; niello, Russian, probably Velikiy Ustyug
Jacques de Lajoüe
ca. 1745–50
Voltaire (François-Marie Arouet) (1694–1778), Jean Antoine Houdon  French, Marble, on grey marble socle, French, Paris
Jean Antoine Houdon
1778
Plate, Imperial Porcelain Manufactory, St. Petersburg  Russian, Hard-paste porcelain, Russian, St. Petersburg
Imperial Porcelain Manufactory, St. Petersburg
1755–60
Cup with cover and saucer, Imperial Porcelain Manufactory, St. Petersburg  Russian, Hard-paste porcelain, Russian, St. Petersburg
Imperial Porcelain Manufactory, St. Petersburg
ca. 1760
Two bottle coolers, Zacharias Deichman the Elder, Silver, Russian, St. Petersburg
Zacharias Deichman the Elder
1766
Catherine II The Great, Empress of Russia, Jean-Baptiste Nini  Italian, Medallion: cast terracotta (terre de Chaumont); frame: gilt wood, French, Chaumont-sur-Loire
Jean-Baptiste Nini
1771
Coffee service, Johan Henrik Blom  Finish, Silver, parcel gilt, enamel, wood, Russian, St. Petersburg
Johan Henrik Blom
Pietro Rotari
1773
Tureen with cover, Vienna, Hard-paste porcelain, Austrian, Vienna
Vienna
Claudius Innocentius Du Paquier period
ca. 1735
Tureen with cover and stand, Jacques-Nicolas Roettiers, Silver, French, Paris
Jacques-Nicolas Roettiers
1770–71
Snuffbox, Pierre-François-Mathis de Beaulieu (for Jean Georges), Gold, enamel, French, Paris
Pierre-François-Mathis de Beaulieu
1764–65
Pair of scallop-shell dishes, Jacques-Nicolas Roettiers, Silver, French, Paris
Jacques-Nicolas Roettiers
1771–73
Sugar bowl (from a tea service), Imperial Porcelain Manufactory, St. Petersburg  Russian, Hard-paste porcelain, Russian, St. Petersburg
Imperial Porcelain Manufactory, St. Petersburg
ca. 1775
Clock, David Roentgen  German, Oak, pine, and mahogany, veneered with mahogany; brass, gilt bronze and enamel, German, Neuwied am Rhein
David Roentgen
Elie Prudhomme
ca. 1780–90
Beaker and saucer, Imperial Porcelain Manufactory, St. Petersburg  Russian, Hard-paste porcelain, Russian, St. Petersburg
Imperial Porcelain Manufactory, St. Petersburg
ca. 1775
David Roentgen and Company in Saint Petersburg, Johann Friedrich Anthing  German, Cut paper with ink wash and watercolor
Johann Friedrich Anthing
ca. 1784–86
Drop-front desk (secrétaire à abattant or secrétaire en cabinet), Martin Carlin  French, Oak veneered with tulipwood, amaranth, holly, and sycamore; six Sèvres soft-paste porcelain plaques and two painted tin plaques; gilt-bronze mounts; marble shelves; moiré silk, French, Paris and Sèvres
Multiple artists/makers
ca. 1776
Pair of Flintlock Pistols of Empress Catherine the Great (1729–1796), Johan Adolph Grecke  Russian, Steel, ivory, gold, brass, Russian, Saint Petersburg
Johan Adolph Grecke
1786
Harlequin, Gardner Manufactory  Russian, Hard-paste porcelain, Russian, Verbilki
Gardner Manufactory
ca. 1770–80
Center table, Imperial Armory, Tula (south of Moscow), Russia, Steel, silver, gilt copper, gilt brass, basswood; replaced mirror glass, Russian, Tula
Imperial Armory, Tula (south of Moscow), Russia
ca. 1780–85
Female Shaman, Imperial Porcelain Manufactory, St. Petersburg  Russian, Hard-paste porcelain, Russian, St. Petersburg
Imperial Porcelain Manufactory, St. Petersburg
ca. 1780–1800
Pair of vases, Nikolai Stepanovich Vereshchagin, Walrus and elephant ivory, Russian, Archangelsk
Nikolai Stepanovich Vereshchagin
ca. 1795–1800
Jugate busts of Czarevitch Paul and Maria Feodorovna of Russia, James Tassie  British, Scottish, Cast glass, British, London
James Tassie
Empress Maria Feodorovna
1791

The Birth of Saint Petersburg
Russia, or “Muscovy” as it was often called, had rarely been considered a part of Europe before the reign of Czar Peter I (Piotr Alexeievich), known as Peter the Great (r. 1682–1725). His supremacy marked the beginning of the country’s “Westernization,” whereby the political, economic, and cultural norms of the western European monarchies would become the basis for “civilizing” Russia. A radical transformation was needed to launch Russia into the modern world, a transformation later called the Petrine Revolution. The young czar, feeling oppressed by the medieval traditions and ecclesiastical patriarchy of seventeenth-century Moscow, wanted to Westernize Russia in a hurry, defying the sluggish pace of history.

Saint Petersburg was born on May 16, 1703 (May 5 by the old Julian Russian calendar). On that day, on a small island on the north bank of the Neva River, Peter cut two pieces of turf and placed them cross-wise. The setting was inauspicious. The area was a swamp that remained frozen from early November to March, with an annual average of 104 days of rain and 74 days of snow. The army, under the command of Alexander Menshikov (), had conquered the region shortly before. To show his gratitude, the czar later appointed Menshikov the first governor-general of Saint Petersburg. The fortification of the territory kept the Swedish enemy at bay and secured for Russia permanent access to the Baltic Sea. The partially ice-free harbor would be crucial to further economic development. All buildings on the site were erected on wooden poles driven into the marshy, unstable ground. Stones were a rare commodity in Russia, and about as valuable as precious metals.

The Dutch name “Piterburkh” (later changed to the German version, “Petersburg”) embodied the czar’s fascination with Holland and its small-scale urban architecture. He disliked patriarchal court ceremony and felt at ease in the bourgeois domestic life that he experienced during his travels throughout Europe on “the Great Embassy” (1697–98). However, the primary purpose of this voyage was to acquire firsthand knowledge of shipbuilding—his personal passion—and to learn about progressive techniques and Western ideas.

The victory over the Swedish army at Poltava in June 1709 elevated Russia to the rank of a European power, no longer to be ignored. Peter triumphed: “Now with God’s help the final stone in the foundation of Saint Petersburg has been laid.” By 1717, the city’s population of about 8,000 had tripled, and grew to around 40,000 by the time of Peter’s death in 1725. Saint Petersburg had become the commercial, industrial, administrative, and residential “metropolis” of Russia. By the 1790s, it had surpassed Moscow as the empire’s largest urban vicinity and was hailed as the “Venice of the North,” an allusion to the waterway system around the local “Grand Canal,” the Neva River.

Peter the Great’s Successors
The short reign of Peter’s second wife, Empress Catherine I (r. 1725–27), who depended on her long-time favorite Menshikov, saw the reinstatement of the luxurious habits of the former imperial household. The archaic and ostentatious court display in the Byzantine tradition that Peter had so despised was now to be restored under the pretext of glorifying his legacy. Enormous sums of money were lavished on foreign luxury items, demonstrating the court’s new international status and its observance of western European manners ().

During the reigns of Empress Anna Ioannovna (r. 1730–40), niece of Peter I (), and her successor Elizabeth (Elizaveta Petrovna, r. 1741–62; ()), Peter’s daughter, Saint Petersburg was transformed into a Baroque extravaganza through the talents of architect Bartolomeo Francesco Rastrelli (1700–1771) and other Western and Russian artisans. Foreign powers began to recognize Russia’s importance and competed for closer diplomatic relations. Foreign immigrants increased much faster than the local population, as scholars, craftsmen, artisans, and specialists of all kinds flocked to the country, and especially to Saint Petersburg (); (); ().

Catherine the Great (r. 1762–96)
In a coup d’état assisted by the five Orloff brothers (); (), Catherine II overthrew her husband, the ill-fated Peter III (r. 1762) and became empress. Catherine saw herself as the political heir of Peter the Great. A German-born princess of Anhalt-Zerbst who, after her marriage, became more Russian than any native, Catherine aimed at completing Peter’s legacy (); (). Having lived in isolation in the shadow of Elizabeth I since her marriage to the grand duke in 1745, the time had come to satisfy her thirst for life and her insatiable quest for culture and international recognition. An admirer of the Enlightenment and devoted aficionada of Voltaire’s writings, Catherine stimulated his cult in Russia (). In response, the French philosopher dedicated a poem to the czarina; her reply, dated October 15, 1763, initiated a correspondence that influenced the empress on many matters until Voltaire’s death in 1778. The hothouse cultural climate of Saint Petersburg during Catherine’s reign can be compared to the artistic and intellectual ferment in New York City in the second half of the twentieth century.

Catherine’s desire to enhance her fame and her claim to the throne was immortalized by her own witty play on words in Latin: “Petro Primo / Catharina Secunda” (To Peter the First / from Catherine the Second). This she had inscribed on the vast lump of granite in the form of a wave supporting the Bronze Horseman on the banks of the Neva in front of Saint Isaac’s Cathedral in Saint Petersburg. This triple-lifesize equestrian figure of Peter the Great took the French sculptor Falconet twelve years to complete, until it was finally cast—after three attempts—in 1782.

Catherine had military expansion plans for Russia and a cultural vision for its capital Saint Petersburg. Above all, she knew how to attract devoted supporters. Only nine days after the overthrow of her husband, Catherine wrote to Denis Diderot, offering to print his famous Encyclopédie, which had been banned in France. Catherine recognized the power of art to demonstrate political and social maturity. She acquired entire collections of painting (Watteau, for example), sculpture, and objects. The empress avoided anything that could be called mediocre or small. With the help of sophisticated advisors, such as Prince Dmitrii Golitsyn, her ambassador in Paris, Denis Diderot, Falconet, and the illustrious Baron Friedrich Melchior von Grimm, the empress assembled the core of today’s State Hermitage Museum. Catherine favored luxury goods from all over Europe (); (); (). She commissioned Sèvres porcelain and Wedgwood pottery as well as hundreds of pieces of ingeniously conceived furniture from the German manufactory of David Roentgen in Neuwied (). Furthermore, she encouraged and supported Russian enterprises and craftsmen, like local silversmiths (); () and the Imperial Porcelain Manufactory (); (); (), as well as privately owned manufactories (). Catherine especially liked the sparkling decorative products of the Tula armory steel workshop (), genuine Russian art forms with a fairy-tale-like appearance, and in 1775 merged her large collection of Tula objects with the imperial crown jewels in a newly constructed gallery at the Winter Palace in Saint Petersburg.

Catherine’s son and successor Paul I (Pavel Petrovich, r. 1796–1801) disliked his mother and her aesthetic sensibility (). As grand duke, he had spent most of his time with his second wife Maria Feodorovna () outside of Saint Petersburg, in Gatchina Palace and Pavlovsk Palace. These they transformed into the finest Neoclassical architectural gems in Europe (); ().


Contributors

Wolfram Koeppe
Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts, The Metropolitan Museum of Art

October 2003


Further Reading

Cracraft, James. The Petrine Revolution in Russian Imagery. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1997.

Koeppe, Wolfram, and Marina Nudel. "An Unsuspected Bust of Alexander Menshikov." Metropolitan Museum Journal 35 (2000), pp. 161–77.

Shvidkovsky, Dmitri, and Alexander Orloff. St. Petersburg: Architecture of the Tsars. New York: Abbeville, 1995.


Citation

View Citations

Koeppe, Wolfram. “Saint Petersburg.” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/stpt/hd_stpt.htm (October 2003)