This is the last residence before Gorky's birth, before the "October Revolution" was a banker's mansion, Stalin invited Gorky to settle in the Soviet Union from Italy, so he rewarded the mansion.
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Memorial Museum-apartment of A. M. Gorky Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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This is the last residence before Gorky's birth, before the "October Revolution" was a banker's mansion, Stalin invited Gorky to settle in the Soviet Union from Italy, so he rewarded the mansion.
The museum is almost luxurious, originally built by the famous Moscow Art Nouveau architect Shiht for the banker Riabshensky, and confiscated after the revolution. In the 1930s, Stalin gave the house to the returning Gorky. Whether you are interested in his creations or not, it is always wrong to come in and see the beautiful interior of the house, let alone no tickets.
Opposite Gorky's former residence is the former residence of A-Tolstoy with Peter the Great and The History of Suffering, which is quite luxurious in comparison. The staircase is really beautiful, and the lights on the first floor of the stairs are made like stalactites. On the second floor, you can also see Gorky's paintings in traditional Chinese costumes.
The museum is a representative building of Russian art nouveau architecture, and the interior and exterior decoration are very chic. After Gorky returned to his motherland from Italy, the government allocated the residence to him, which was undoubtedly a holy place for Soviet literature. Gorky is a proletarian writer in the former Soviet Union, the founder of socialist realism literature, and his works include "The Bottom" and "Mother". This is where Gorky lived in his later years, once the private house of Russian rich man Riabshensky, designed and built by Fedor Schefdri. Out of Gorky's former residence, through a low iron fence, came the former residence of A Tolstoy, the author of "The History of Suffering." There is also another Gorky museum nearby.
Revolutionary confiscation in exchange for visiting places! Gorky spent his later years here, but life is still very simple and thought-provoking