Background
Brailovskaya was daughter of a general.
Brailovskaya was daughter of a general.
She was a participant of the Russian apostolate in Diaspora. In 1900 she taught art at Stroganov Moscow State University of Arts and Industry. In 1918 the Brailovsky family emigrated, first to Constantinople and then to Belgrade.
From 1925 they were settled in Rome.
The couple were close to the bishops Michel d"Herbigny, Alexander Evreinov and Andrei Katkov. In 1933 she participated in the creation of the Museum of Russian religious art at the Congregation for the Oriental Churches in the Vatican, where they exposed Brailovsky"s paintings from the series "Visions of Old Russia." From 1920 to 1940, her paintings were exhibited in Russicum, where she taught Russian language, this time talking with the poet Vyacheslav Ivanov, Archpriest Alexander Sipagin and Tatyana Sukhotina-Tolstaya.
Brailovskaya was buried in the Russian part of the Roman Catholic cemetery of Campo Verano.