p. 420. Turgenev Letter to K.K. Sluchevsky, 26/14 April 1862. Sobr. Soch. 1958, 339-41 O. Vishnyakova Her most recently published paper is "Russian Nihilism: The Cultural Legacy of the Conflict Between Fathers and Sons", Comparative & Continental Philosophy Journal (Equinox Publishing, London), Vol. 3, Number 1 (2011). Turgenev (Pisma IV, 380) IN Turgenev's Fathers and Sons, Woodward, J. page 30. http://www1.umn.edu/lol-russ/Other/Fathers.pdf) (Jahn, 197) Bialyi, G.A., V. Arkhipov protiv Turgeneva, Novyi mir, XXXIV:8 (1958), 225-9, Roman Turgeneva Ottsyi i deti, 2nd edn. (Moscow-Leningrad, 1968) Sukhikh, I.N Roman I.S Turgeneva, Ottsy i deti v russkoi kritike (Leningrad 1971), 108-19. Dunaev, M.M Ivan Turgenev: Zhizn i tvorchestvo (Moscow 1983) Uroki urgeneva in I.S ottsY I DETI (Moscow 1991), 5-16 To be read: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00806767108600570 http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/saburova-paper.pdf http://thelectern
like Bernardo Strozzi and Francesco Trevisani. An important part of the collection belongs to the Russian portrait painting from the 18th-19th centuries, represented by such masters like Dmitri Levitsky, Vladimir Borovikovsky, Vasily Tropinin, and Giovanni Battista Lampi who worked in Russia in the 18th century. The representatives of Russian academic realist painting from the second half of the 19th century are Ivan Shishkin, Ivan Aivazovsky, Ilya Repin. The works by Abram Arkhipov, Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin, Konstantin Korovin are examples of Russian Modernism from the first decades of the 20th century. The museum has also a small collection of Finnish painting from the beginning of the 20th century. The works by Alvar Cawén, Tyko Sallinen and Väinö Kunnas could be of interest as examples of Nordic painting culture. The museum has a remarkable collection of over 100 miniature portraits, painted by 17th-