Russian Baroque is a term used to describe the Baroque artistic style that emerged in the Russian Tsardom and the Russian Empire during the late 17th and early 18th centuries. This style was mainly seen in Saint Petersburg and Moscow during the reigns of Peter the Great and Elizabeth of Russia.
The building of the Kunstkamera in Saint Petersburg. 1719–1758
Naryshkin Baroque. Church of the Intercession at Fili near Moscow. 1690–1694
Golitsyn Baroque. Znamenskaya Church (Dubrovitsy). Moscow Region. 1690–1704
Golitsyn Baroque. Znamenskaya church in Perovo district 1690–1705
Siberian Baroque is an architectural style common for ambitious structures in 18th-century Siberia, where 115 stone churches in Siberia were recorded in 1803, most of which were built in this provincial variant of the Russian Baroque, influenced by the Ukrainian Baroque and in some cases even incorporating lamaist motifs. Most of the buildings were preserved in Irkutsk, Tobolsk and Tomsk. An original interior of a Siberian Baroque structure survives only in the Feast of the Cross Church in Irkutsk.
Church of Our Lady of the Sign in Tyumen (1768–86)
The Holy Trinity monastery in Tyumen is one of the first stone buildings in Siberia.
The Intercession church in Krasnoyarsk
The Trinity cathedral of Yalutorovsk in the early 20th century