Your selection
Clear selectionLeave the work to our dedicated Account Managers.
Find Your Perfect Match The top results are exact matches, while the rest are visually similar images curated from our archive.
Drag file here
Upload
Processing search results
Waiting for update..
Error:
Searching for a particular field
| Field | Search term | Example |
| Asset title | title: | title:pony |
| Asset title and keywords | ~ | ~pony |
| Asset description text | description: | description:london |
| Agency prefix | prfx: or $ | prfx:lal or $LAL |
| Asset id | imageid: or # | imageid:250297 or imageid:[2500 TO 4000] or #1551 |
| Agency name | coll: | coll:history |
| Medium | medium: | medium:oil |
| Century | century: | century:20th |
| Keywords | kw: | kw:dog |
| Artist name | artist: or ? | artist:monet or ?monet |
| Artist nationality | nat: | nat:French |
| Creator ID | creatorid: | creatorid:37 |
| Location | loc: or @ | loc:exeter or @exeter |
| Classification | class: | class:57 or #57. Use # for unclassified assets |
| Year | year: | year:1850 or year:[1700 TO 1800] |
Mikhail Grigorevich Rojter was born in Vinnitse in Ukraine (1916) and received his first education in fine art at the RabFak section of the Kiev Art Institute which provided education for the children of workers. From his early student years, his preferred media was graphics, Indian ink and watercolour, and prints, mainly etching and engraving, lithography and monotype, and occasionally linocut. From the late 1950s, he developed a passion for depicting sports, both in strong expressive prints, and in wonderful soft impressionistic watercolours. He was considered one of the leading artists work Mikhail Grigorevich Rojter was born in Vinnitse in Ukraine (1916) and received his first education in fine art at the RabFak section of the Kiev Art Institute which provided education for the children of workers. From his early student years, his preferred media was graphics, Indian ink and watercolour, and prints, mainly etching and engraving, lithography and monotype, and occasionally linocut. From the late 1950s, he developed a passion for depicting sports, both in strong expressive prints, and in wonderful soft impressionistic watercolours. He was considered one of the leading artists working in the sports genre. Another favourite theme of his was the Soviet Youth: Students, Komsomols and Pioneers, Siberian youth, young workers and sports-youth populate his genre works of the 1950s and 1960s. From the late 1970s onwards, he concentrated on watercolours, showing the changing faces of the cities of Moscow and St. Petersburg and other provincial cities during a time of major architectural changes. He painted large impressionistic cityscapes of the disappearing Moscow, and the new city emerging, as well as Dostoevsky’s St. Petersburg which held a special place in his heart. Rotjer died in 1993. ...
We partner with the world's leading museums, galleries and artists, so you have access to the highest-quality imagery.
Our teams can help you find the perfect content and take care of all of the copyright and licensing requirements.
Bridgeman Images
77 Sands Street, 6th Floor
Brooklyn, NY 11201
United States
T: +1 212 828 1238
© Copyright 2026 Bridgeman Art Library Limited. Registered in England and Wales as company number 01056394.