Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, many Russian icons have been repatriated via direct purchase by Russian museums, private Russian collectors, or as was the case of Pope John Paul II giving an 18th-century copy of the famous Our Lady of Kazan icon to the Russian Orthodox Church, returned to Russia in good faith.
Russian Empire | Russian language | Russian Academy of Sciences | Russian Orthodox Church | Russian Civil War | Russian Revolution | Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic | Imperial Russian Navy | Russian Far East | Russian Revolution (1917) | Russian Navy | Russian Air Force | Imperial Russian Army | Russian literature | Russian ruble | Russian Academy of Theatre Arts | Communist Party of the Russian Federation | Russian Provisional Government | Russian Museum | russian language | Russian Airborne Troops | Russian avant-garde | Russian Ark | Russian-American Company | White Russian | Russian Turkestan | Russian battleship Rostislav | Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War | Russian State Library | Russian nobility |
The gallery also specializes in European and American antique jewelry, 18th-century European gold snuffboxes, and antique Russian decorative arts, including silver, enamel, and porcelain, as well as Russian paintings, icons, and furniture.