| Home | Auctions | Audio-Visuals | Authentic | Bibliography | Collectors | Dealers | Eggs | Exhibitions | Newsletters | Recent Discoveries | Workmasters |
Fabergé Research Site
|
|---|
Special Edition Summer 2011 Over 50 Fabergé enthusiasts from Finland, Great Britain, Holland, Russia, Switzerland, and from various part of the United States met at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts early in July to participate in the opening events of the Fabergé Revealed exhibition in Richmond. It was a rare opportunity for collectors, Fabergé admirers, and scholars to meet – often for the first time – and to exchange information. Dr. Géza von Habsburg, guest curator for the Virginia collection, in his talk to the attendees shared anecdotes from his association with Fabergé objects as an auctioneer, exhibition curator, and author of more than a dozen books on the subject. In his work with the Virginia Collection for two years he studied each object and authenticated the Fabergé objects, identified those made by other makers, and added editorial notes to forgeries and objects with uncertain origins. The New York Times (July 1, 2011, C25) headlined its story about the venue, A Fabergé Exhibition without Fauxbergés. In it the author mentions the shameless way Armand Hammer used “Fabergé hallmarking tools to reattribute early 1900’s pieces made by other Russian goldsmiths or their French archrival Cartier.” Romanov portraits clipped from postcards and newspapers were inserted into frames sold by Hammer, and most objects were advertised with an imperial provenance. Fabergé Revealed at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, an easy-to-read and informative scholarly catalog, by Dr. von Habsburg and five Fabergé scholars is illustrated with stunning new photographs. Collecting Fabergé Today: The Hodges Family Collection and its accompanying catalog (Keefe, et al. Fabergé: The Hodges Family Collection, 2009) complement the Fabergé Revealed exhibition. All in all more than 500 objects, including the five Pratt Imperial eggs, the Napoleonic Egg from the Gray Collection, and the Nobel Egg and the Fabergé tiara from the McFerrin Collection, can be seen by museum visitors until October 2, 2011. After this date the Virginia Collection will be installed in a new permanent location in the museum and the Hodges Collection moves on the Frick Art and Historical Center in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The Fabergé enthusiasts group traveled to the Hillwood Estate, Museum, and Gardens in Washington (DC) for a guided tour of the permanent Marjorie Merriweather Post Collection with two Fabergé eggs and an extensive collection of Russian decorative art objects. Selected highlights from the lively discussions and the information sharing among Fabergé enthusiasts are summarized below. The editors hope this special edition of the Fabergé Newsletter will bring forth additional research discoveries and/or questions we can share with our readers. We invite you to participate! Discovery of a Photograph for the Missing 1887 Egg
Pelican Egg Fabergé Frames
Variations of a theme by the Perkhin workshop prior to 1899:
An upright nephrite frame in the Pratt collection was originally a thermometer (Fabergé Revealed, 190). The source for the photo, a later addition to the frame, has been found: a staircase style photo of the five children of Nicholas II taken on board the Imperial Yacht Standart in 1907 by Court Photographer von Hahn. An identical photo, autographed by the children and given to the Standart’s Watch Officer Nikolaï Vasilevich Sablin, can be seen in the book Десять лет на императорской яхте Штандарт (Ten Years on Board the Imperial Yacht Standart, 2008). This book reprints Sablin's memoirs, which had already been published in emigration, and presents a large collection of documents and photos belonging to Sablin and now held at the Russian State Naval Archives. Before becoming the Standart’s Aide-de-Camp, N. V. Sablin (unrelated to Standart’s Senior Captain Nikolaï Petrovich Sablin) had been attached to Grand Duchess Tatiana (each grand duchess had an officer in attendance, especially when they went ashore). Having served on the Standart from 1906 to 1916, Guards Equipage Captain N. V. Sablin became quite intimate with the Imperial Family and saw the imperial children grow up, as his photo collection shows. (Research by Daniel Brière)
Flowers
Hardstone Figure
Bismarck Imperial Presentation Box
The dark-green tunic retained the same red piping and gold oak leaf pattern of embroideries the previous uniform had. With their new tunic, generals wore baggy dark-blue trousers, with wide red stripes tucked into knee-high boots, and the new Russian type pill-box-shaped black astrakhan wool cap with a red cloth top and gold lace. His epaulettes show he had attained the top rank for a general officer (no stars). On his epaulettes, and the tips of his aiguillettes, silver monograms indicate that he was Aide-de-Camp General to his late father Tsar Alexander II (1818-1881). At the collar, he wears the rarely awarded 2nd class Cross of the Russian Order of St. George he received in 1877 during the Russo-Turkish War. The Prussian Order Pour le Mérite can partially be seen on his right breast from under the blue sash of the Russian Order of St. Andrew. As historian Richard S. Wortman put it: “His general’s uniform, the Cross of St. George always in prominent view, was his favorite attire for important celebrations.” Therefore, it is not surprising that this uniform would have been chosen to adorn the Bismarck Imperial Presentation Box. Folding Fans with Fabergé Montures
General News Jeffrey Eger Auction Catalogues has out-of-print Fabergé books and a few of the 1887 missing egg auction catalogs for sale. First come, first served! Publications Royal Fabergé, an exhibition being held at the Queen's Gallery, Buckingham Palace, is on view from July 23 - October 3, 2011. The accompanying exhibition catalog with the same name by Caroline de Guitaut gives an insight into many Faberge masterpieces, including three Imperial Easter Eggs, and how they were aquired by six generations of the British Royal Family. Tillander-Godenhielm, Ulla. Fabergén suomalaiset mestarit (Fabergé’s Finnish Workmasters), 2011. Revised edition with more in-depth research of a 2008 numbered edition with the title, Fabergé ja hänen suomalaiset mestarinsa (Fabergé and His Finnish Workmasters). In Finnish. The text gives biographical details on the workmasters from local archives, family collections, etc., and information about their work and their lives. Beautifully illustrated and with selections from the memoirs of workmaster Hjalmar Armfelt, recently discovered. The book may be obtained from the Academic Bookshop in Helsinki. Work in Progress: ____________________ Our thanks to Alex Nyerges, Director of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, and his wonderful staff, and Dr. Géza von Habsburg, guest curator, for making the visit for the Fabergé Enthusiasts so special. Many of you suggested we do this again soon – what a compliment to our hosts ... we thank our readers for sharing their snapshots.
Left: Annemiek Wintraecken and Christel McCanless, Newsletter Co-editors, with Frequent Contributors Tatiana Cheboksarova and Galina Korneva from St. Petersburg, Russia. Right: Tim Adams from California and Irina Polynina from Moscow are shown in this 1989 photo examining the Madonna Lily Clock Egg at the San Diego Museum of Art, when 27 Fabergé eggs were exhibited at one time. Twenty-one years later the Fabergé enthusiasts became reacquainted in Richmond. Christel Ludewig McCanless and Annemiek Wintraecken updated: September 25, 2011
Disclaimer: Every effort is made to ensure the accuracy of the information at the time it is posted, but due to the changing nature of the Internet the accuracy cannot be guaranteed.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||