Russian Icons: The Oleg Kushnirskiy Collection
A beautifully and lavishly illustrated book on an important private collection of late Russian icons written by distinguished art historians.

The artistic quality and historical significance of Russian icons - religious paintings of characters and scenes from the Eastern Orthodox Bible - have been of a consistently high order ever since they first emerged in that country in the eleventh century CE. Less constant, however, have been the care with which these works have been treated and their commercial value. Russian icons were at various times encouraged, then vandalized, then exported, then banned from export; during the worst privations under the Tsars and the Bolsheviks, people felt forced to use them as bartering counters and even sometimes as firewood.

After the collapse of Communism and the disintegration of the Soviet Union in the 1990s, Oleg Kushnirskiy (born 1960) came to the West and set about assembling a collection of Russian icons in the United States, where they would be well protected from physical decay and safe from further religious and political upheavals. Acquired from a variety of sources - ecclesiastical, civic, and domestic - the Kushnirskiy Collection is now stored in New York and exhibited periodically in universities, galleries, and museums in numerous locations, thus fulfilling the collector's ambition to bring these masterpieces to a wider audience than ever before.

This complete catalog features sixty works, the oldest created in the mid-seventeenth century, the most recent in the early twentieth. Accompanying the images are insightful analytical commentaries by distinguished art historians.

  • A clear conspectus of 300 years of Russian religious art
  • Beautifully illustrated throughout with over 400 photographs of complete icons and details
  • Readable text that explains the artistic processes and the historical context
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Russian Icons: The Oleg Kushnirskiy Collection
A beautifully and lavishly illustrated book on an important private collection of late Russian icons written by distinguished art historians.

The artistic quality and historical significance of Russian icons - religious paintings of characters and scenes from the Eastern Orthodox Bible - have been of a consistently high order ever since they first emerged in that country in the eleventh century CE. Less constant, however, have been the care with which these works have been treated and their commercial value. Russian icons were at various times encouraged, then vandalized, then exported, then banned from export; during the worst privations under the Tsars and the Bolsheviks, people felt forced to use them as bartering counters and even sometimes as firewood.

After the collapse of Communism and the disintegration of the Soviet Union in the 1990s, Oleg Kushnirskiy (born 1960) came to the West and set about assembling a collection of Russian icons in the United States, where they would be well protected from physical decay and safe from further religious and political upheavals. Acquired from a variety of sources - ecclesiastical, civic, and domestic - the Kushnirskiy Collection is now stored in New York and exhibited periodically in universities, galleries, and museums in numerous locations, thus fulfilling the collector's ambition to bring these masterpieces to a wider audience than ever before.

This complete catalog features sixty works, the oldest created in the mid-seventeenth century, the most recent in the early twentieth. Accompanying the images are insightful analytical commentaries by distinguished art historians.

  • A clear conspectus of 300 years of Russian religious art
  • Beautifully illustrated throughout with over 400 photographs of complete icons and details
  • Readable text that explains the artistic processes and the historical context
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Overview

A beautifully and lavishly illustrated book on an important private collection of late Russian icons written by distinguished art historians.

The artistic quality and historical significance of Russian icons - religious paintings of characters and scenes from the Eastern Orthodox Bible - have been of a consistently high order ever since they first emerged in that country in the eleventh century CE. Less constant, however, have been the care with which these works have been treated and their commercial value. Russian icons were at various times encouraged, then vandalized, then exported, then banned from export; during the worst privations under the Tsars and the Bolsheviks, people felt forced to use them as bartering counters and even sometimes as firewood.

After the collapse of Communism and the disintegration of the Soviet Union in the 1990s, Oleg Kushnirskiy (born 1960) came to the West and set about assembling a collection of Russian icons in the United States, where they would be well protected from physical decay and safe from further religious and political upheavals. Acquired from a variety of sources - ecclesiastical, civic, and domestic - the Kushnirskiy Collection is now stored in New York and exhibited periodically in universities, galleries, and museums in numerous locations, thus fulfilling the collector's ambition to bring these masterpieces to a wider audience than ever before.

This complete catalog features sixty works, the oldest created in the mid-seventeenth century, the most recent in the early twentieth. Accompanying the images are insightful analytical commentaries by distinguished art historians.

  • A clear conspectus of 300 years of Russian religious art
  • Beautifully illustrated throughout with over 400 photographs of complete icons and details
  • Readable text that explains the artistic processes and the historical context

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781858947242
Publisher: Merrell Publishers, LTD
Publication date: 09/30/2025
Pages: 324
Product dimensions: 10.25(w) x 13.00(h) x 1.50(d)

About the Author

Anna Ivannikova graduated from St. Petersburg State Universityin 2006. She began her career at the State Russian Museum's Department of Old Russian Art, where she worked from 2002 to 2007. From 2007 until 2017, she contributed significantly to the conceptual development and acquisition of collections at the Museum of Russian Icons in Moscow. Since 2017, she has curated late icon painting at the State Hermitage Museum's Department of History of Russian Culture. She is also a certified expert of the Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation.


Dr. Wendy R. Salmond received her Ph.D. at the University of Texas at Austin (1989). She has been a visiting curator at Hillwood Estate, Museum & Gardens in Washington, DC. Dr. Salmond is now Professor of Art History in the Department of Art at Chapman University, Orange, California. She is also the editor of the Journal of Icon Studies, published by the Icon Museum + Study Center in Clinton, Massachusetts.


Dr. Alex D. Epstein is a sociologist of culture and politics and has written over 200 academic articles and 40 books. He received his Ph.D. at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (2001). His professional experience includes teaching at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Open University of Israel, Moscow Lomonosov State University, and the Moscow School of Social and Economic Sciences. Dr. Epstein currently serves as the curator of the Moshe Castel Museum of Art in Ma'ale Adumim, Israel.

Dr. Clemena Antonova received her Ph.D. from the University of Oxford. She has held research positions at various institutions, most recently CAPAS, the University of Heidelberg, the University of Aix-Marseille, and the University of Cologne. Currently, she is the Research Director of The World in Pieces program at the Insititute for Human Sciences in Vienna, Austria. She is working on her third monograph, IKONA: The Modernist Invention of the Russian Icon, to be published by Bloomsbury. 



Anastasia Likhenko is a graduate of the Department of Theory and History of Art at Moscow State University. She worked at the largest museums in Moscow dealing with Russian medieval and Byzantine art (the Mikhail Abramov Museum of Russian Icons, 2017-2019; the Central Andrey Rublev Museum of Ancient Russian Culture and Art, 2019-2021).  Since 2021, she has served as the Curator of Museum Objects at the Department of Old Russian Art at the State Tretyakov Gallery.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • The Path of the Russian Icon to America: The Oleg Kushnirskiy Collection
  • Icons in the Modern Age: The Collection of Oleg Kushnirskiy
  • Preserving Russian Legacy Abroad: Oleg Kushnirskiy and the Formation of His Collection of Russian Religious Art (17th-Early 20th Centuries)
  • Oleg Kushnirskiy' Storytelling Pictures: The Global Icon in the Twenty-First Century
  • The Oleg Kushnirskiy Collection of Russian Icons
  • List of Works in the Collection
  • Bibliography
  • Authors' Biographies
  • Index
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