Foundation of the collection Archaeologist and public figure Victor Ivanovich Goshkevich founded an archaeological museum in Kherson in 1890. In 1909, Goshkevych gave the museum as a gift to the city, a gift that comprised both the original Goshkevych museum building and a collection that included numismatic and archaeological finds as well as paintings and icons. In 1912, on the initiative of local patron Prince Mykola Antonovych Gedroits, a museum of fine arts was opened on the lower floor of the Goshkevych museum building, and the museum expanded its collections with works of painting, sculpture, porcelain, crystal and engraving. Additions during this period included paintings by
Oleksy P. Bogolyubov, I. F. Kolesnikov,
Kirill V. Lemokh,
Vladimir E.Makovsky, V. D. Polenova,
Mykola K. Pymonenko, S. S. Yegornov, and V. I. Zarubin, and works by sculptors I. Ya. Ginzburg and B.W. Edwards.
Soviet period In the period of the 20s and 30s following
World War I, the collection museum was replenished with works by Russian and Western European masters. On the eve of
World War II, the museum's holdings numbered about 700 exhibits. During the years of fascist occupation, the Nazis took most of the museum's valuables, including a collection of works of art, from Kherson to sites in Germany and
Romania. After the liberation of the city in March 1944, attempts were made to repatriate items from the original collection, but it was not until 1966 with the art department was opened.
Modern opening and reestablishment In 1976, the city inherited the collection of Leningrad native M.I. Kornilovskaya, which included 500 works of fine art and a unique collection of books. The current Kherson Art Museum was created in 1978 on the basis of the art department of the Museum of Local History and the Leningrad collection. In the first days of creation, a significant number of exhibits from the funds of the Ministries of Culture of the USSR and Ukraine, Unions of Artists of the USSR and Ukraine were transferred to the museum collection. In 1981, O. V. Shovkunenko, the wife of Ukrainian People's Artist of the USSR
Oleksii O. Shovkunenko, donated more than 100 works of her husband to the museum. == Museum building ==