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  1. Ivan Vladimirovich Tsvetaev (Russian: Ива́н Влади́мирович Цвета́ев; 16 May [O. S. 4 May] 1847 – 12 September 1913) was a Russian art historian, archaeologist and Classical philologist.

  2. Ivan Vladimirovich Tsvetaev. May 4 (16), 1847 – August 30 (September 12), 1913. Russian history scholar, archaeologist, philologist and art critic, corresponding member of the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences, professor of Moscow University, privy councilor, founder and first director of Emperor Alexander III Museum of Fine Arts at the ...

  3. Ivan Tsvetaev. Foi fundado por Ivan Tsvetaev, chefe do Departamento de Teoria e História da Arte da Universidade de Moscou, que persuadiu o milionário Yuriy Nechaev-Maltsov e o arquiteto Roman Klein da necessidade de se criar um museu de belas artes em Moscou.

  4. An art museum for educational purposes, named after Ivan Tsvetaev, was opened on June 30, 1997: this subsidiary of the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts is part of the Russian State University for the Humanities. The seven galleries of this museum contain 750 casts and copies of artworks from Ancient Egypt and the Near East, Ancient Greece and ...

  5. Ancient artifacts were the core and the main components of its collection, and the Department of Antiquity was one of the three major scientific departments. Its founder and director, Ivan Tsvetaev (1847-1913), was an expert in ancient art, as were his closest associates, Vladimir Malmberg (1860-1921) and Nikolay Scherbakov (1884 ...

  6. The official website of The Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts (Moscow), wich collection of French art of the XIX – XX centuries is one of the most famous collections of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist paintings in the world.

  7. struction of the Museum of Fine Arts, a cause to which Marina’s father, Ivan Tsvetaev, professor of art history at Moscow University, dedicated two decades of his life, until his death in 1913. The inversion of (human) death and (art’s) life evident in this passage is man-ifested even more vividly in another fragment of Tsvetaeva’s memoir.