5242 x 3493 px | 44,4 x 29,6 cm | 17,5 x 11,6 inches | 300dpi
Date de la prise de vue:
23 juillet 2008
Lieu:
Kuskovo Estate, Moscow, Moscow Region, Russia, Eastern Europe
Informations supplémentaires:
A traditional brick Dutch house was constructed in the 1750s on a small pond near the Palace. the house has kitchen on the ground floor decorated from floor to ceiling with tiles from Delft. Meals were served to guests in the kitchen, though they were actually prepared at another kitchen in the woods nearby and carried by servants to the house. The upper floor is furnished with simple, solid Dutch furniture and highly decorated with Delft tiles. Kuskovo is an extensive estate, or manor, of the Sheremetev family, originally situated several miles to the east of Moscow but now forming a part of the East District of that city. It is a favourite place of recreation for Muscovites, and one of the few 18th-century suburban residences preserved in the Russian capital. Kuskovo passed to the Sheremetev family in the 17th century, and was chosen as a summer residence by Boris Petrovich Sheremetev, the premier Russian Field Marshal and Count. The earliest surviving structure is the Saviour church, built in 1737-39 in a Petrine baroque style and formerly decorated with marble statues. The neoclassical bell-tower was added much later, in 1792. Two curious two-storied structures were erected in Kuskovo by Count Petr Borisovich Sheremetev during the Elizabethan epoch - the Dutch and Italian houses. They combine elements of the fashionable Rastrelliesque baroque with the ideas of classicism, which started to spread in Europe at that time. The Kuskovo palace was constructed near one of the ponds in 1769-65 in a fine Neoclassical style. Commissioned by Count Nikolai Petrovich Sheremetev, the structure was apparently designed by a group of his serfs, including Feodor Argunov, Aleksey Mironov, and Grigory Dikushin, although another tradition ascribes it to Charles de Wailly. The palace interiors, as completed in 1779, represent a transitional stage between baroque and neoclassicism. This palace houses the most precious collection of Western porcelain in Eastern Europe.