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Winter 2009-2010
Nestled among live oak trees - green despite the harsh winter’s cold - is the Houston Museum of Natural Science, a bustling place with exciting things to see and do. On a recent 24-hour visit I sampled the year-around butterfly house watched over by an iguana named Charro. I sat beneath the gigantic dinosaurs appearing to supervise the docent volunteers polishing and faceting stones for the enjoyment and education of visiting school groups and this visitor from Alabama. I was dazzled by the mineral collection complete with an enormous gem vault, but why was I really there? I wanted to feast my eyes on the Artie and Dorothy McFerrin Fabergé Collection being shown for the first time publicly. I am delighted to report the exhibition will have new pieces added shortly and is extended until July 25, 2010. An object in the main exhibition room caught my fancy - a wooden frame (A.) with an autographed photograph of Tsar Nicholas II and his consort Alexandra Feodorovna. The signed photograph dated '1897' has a dedication in Russian. Is it perhaps a clue to an event in the lives of the Imperial pair? A little further detective work in my library revealed the photographer to be A. Pasetti. There are doubts in my mind that this photograph was actually taken in 1897, since it is the year the couple’s second daughter Tatiana was born on May 29 (Old Style)/June 10 (New Style), and the Tsarina does not look much older than her 1894 engagement pictures. In Houston, six spectacular pieces out of more than 100 in the McFerrin Collection are displayed in an adjoining darkened room with walk-around cases. In this review, they are presented under the artists responsible for their creation. Mikhail Perkhin (1860-1903), a senior Fabergé workmaster, is represented in the McFerrin Collection with a blue wedding clock (B.) purchased by Tsar Nicholas II and his wife Alexander Feodorovna for 275 rubles in 1895. They had married in November 1894. On December 4, 1901, the Imperial couple added a pink triangular clock (C.), also by Perkhin, for 215 rubles. A historical photo from the 1902 Exhibition of Objets d’Art and Miniatures held in the von Dervis Mansion in St. Petersburg, Russia, further authenticates this charming piece. The von Dervis exhibition included some twenty eggs, 16 of them made by this workshop. The accompanying Houston Museum text panel features an archival photograph of the five Imperial children next to a table with the clock on it. The Bourgeois Presentation Box (D.) with a Perkhin mark was presented in 1902 by Tsar Nicholas II to the French politician and statesman Léon Bourgeois (1851-1925), who served as President of the Chamber of Deputies in the administration of French president Émile Loubet. Bourgeois was one of 90 foreigners to receive a snuffbox with the Emperor’s cipher, usually reserved for Russian senior politicians. This particular Fabergé presentation box was ‘transformed and embellished’ with more and larger jewels by the Russian jeweler Hahn to become a more fitting presentation piece. Interestingly enough, it was common practice for recipients, or heirs of the recipients, to return these gifts to the Imperial cabinet for a cash equivalent. Dr. Ulla Tillander-Godenhielm in The Russian Imperial Reward System, 1894-1917 (2005) states it was not ungracious to return the gift, since the gift itself was considered a subtle form of financial reward for worthy service. Obviously, the Bourgeois Presentation Box was not returned, like most gifts presented to foreigners, and therefore can be admired in Houston, Texas. Henrik Wigström (1862-1923) inherited the Perkhin workshop after the death of his friend, and became the third and last senior workmaster responsible for most of the Tsar Imperial Easter eggs for the years 1904-1917. In the McFerrin Collection the Wigström workshop is represented by a two-sided Louis XVI Fire-Screen Frame (E.) with photographs of Tsar Nicholas and the Tsarina Alexandra Feodorovna of a later vintage. Different colored golds depict the floral motives. The various colors are made through the addition of copper, silver, zinc, iron, etc., to form an alloy, for example, green gold is 75 parts of pure gold to 25 parts of silver. Further details on the alloys used by Fabergé can be gleaned from Lowes & McCanless, Fabergé Eggs: A Retrospective Encyclopedia (2001), 275. August Holmström (1829-1903) and his workshop created the Fabergé copies of the Imperial regalia in a one- to ten-scale miniatures. The history of the tiara in the McFerrin Collection has an interesting historical connection dating back to ca. 1810 and involves the Holmström workshop ca. 1890. Offered at auction in 2007 by Princess Marie Gabriella of Savoy, 67, the daughter of King Umberto II, the last king of Italy, and Marie-José, who is known as The May Queen since her husband the King only reigned for 27 days. Two more tiaras with a flower theme from this same workshop, after 1903 owned by August’s son Albert, are illustrated below. Provenance: Queen Marie-José (a Belgian princess who married Umberto, the crown prince of Italy) inherited the tiara from her brother Prince Charles Theodore (1903 -1983). In his will, this exceptional jewel is referred to as 'The Empress Josephine Tiara' because the briolette-cut diamonds in the tiara were a gift from Tsar Alexander I of Russia (1777-1825) to Empress Josephine (1763-1814). The Tsar used to bring presents for Josephine when he visited her at La Malmaison following her divorce from Napoleon in 1809. The tiara was purchased after World War I in Switzerland by the King of Belgium from the collection of the Dukes of Leuchtenberg, a title first granted to Eugène de Beauharnais, son of the Empress Josephine, and adopted son of Napoleon, on the occasion of his marriage to Princess Augusta Amalia, daughter of King Maximilian of Bavaria. Their youngest child, Prince Maximilian Joseph married in 1839 Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna of Russia, eldest daughter of Tsar Nicholas I. (Christie’s London, June 13, 2007, Important Jewellery, Lot 41)
In Houston the tiara is displayed so visitors bending their knees a bit can admire the tiara optically placed on their own heads. A video about the tiara narrated by Joel Bartsch is on the Houston web page. Albert Holmström (1876-1925) inherited his late father’s workshop in 1903, and thereafter maintained the same high standards in workmanship. The 1913 Imperial Winter Egg (private collection) and the 1914 Mosaic Egg (Collection of H.M. Queen Elizabeth II of England) were designed by Alma Pihl. The Nobel Ice Egg in the McFerrin Collection was designed by Alma Pihl and features the snowflake theme developed for one of Fabergé’s most prolific clients. Dr. Emanuel Nobel (1859-1932), nephew of the dynamite inventor Alfred Nobel, operated the Nobel Brothers Petroleum Production Company in Baku (now Azerbaijan), Russia, and by April 1917 employed 50,000 workers, producing one-third of Russia’s crude oil, 40% of all refined oil, and supplying two-thirds of all the total domestic consumption. Alma Pihl (1888-1976) began her career with Fabergé sketching drawings in design stock books for her uncle, Albert Holmström. Her design talent found its full expression in the snowflake theme epitomized in the Winter Egg, and therefore, scholars suggest the Nobel Ice Egg was made in the Holmström workshop between 1910 and 1914. (Lowes and McCanless, Fabergé Eggs: A Retrospective Encyclopedia [2001], 170-1, 279.) The McFerrin Collection contains several additional snowflake objects possibly given as gifts by Dr. Nobel.
During our visit my husband and I observed that the beauty and craftsmanship exhibited in the McFerrin Collection and explained so well by the docents circulating through the exhibit area appealed equally to young and old. Our thanks to Houston Museum staff members, Steven Cowan and Richard Hutting (who intrigues visitors with close-up views of Fabergé pieces through a hand-held magnifying glass), docent volunteers Jill Moffitt Rowlands and Kristin Mills (who enthusiastically pass on their knowledge of gems and minerals), and to Artie and Dorothy McFerrin for sharing their Fabergé treasures in a pleasing museum setting.
The Silver Set of Furniture from the Winter Palace (discussed in the Fabergé Newsletter - Fall 2009) was exported from the Soviet Union after the Revolution, and sold originally to four parties. At Bukowskis Helsinki (December 13-14, 2009), a 12-piece set designed in 1894 for the personal rooms of Tsar Nicholas II and his consort Alexandra Feodorovna in the Winter Palace sold for €380,000 ($550,000 with commission). Another set made up of 11 pieces was withdrawn from Bukowskis Helsinki (Spring 2009) due to litigation. A six-piece set of matching furniture offered at Hagelstam Helsinki (December 12, 2009) did not sell, and a few more tables known from original photographs of the Winter Palace have yet to surface. Uppsala Auktionskammare, Sweden (December 1, 2009), included a silver-mounted crystal vase marked Fabergé. Provenance: Knut Henrik Littorin employed by the Nobel family’s Branobel oil business, the largest oil company in Europe based in Baku (now Azerbaijan), Russia. Littorin advanced to become a member of the board of directors. A Fabergé brooch depicting the company’s most successful logistic inventions, a railway oil carriage (left) and the oil tanker Zoroaster (right) was also sold. In the middle of the brooch is a golden oil-drilling rig, topped by an oil cistern decorated with the Russian double-headed eagle, and on the reverse, a miniature portrait of Ludvig Nobel (1831-1888), who is credited with creating the Russian oil industry of the time. (Courtesy of Lars Ohlander)
April 22, 2010 Auktionshaus Dr. Jürgen Fischer, Heilbronn, Germany
December 8, 2009 - April 18, 2010 (extended) Pickett Hall in the Winter Palace, State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia Enamels of the World 1700-2000 from the Khalili Collections
The catalog edited by Haydn Williams and published by the Khalili Family Trust is both a guide to the collection and an invaluable general introduction to the art of enameling with over 400 illustrations, including a CD Rom of the entire Khalili Collection. A catalog in Russian to accompany the exhibition will also be available. November 23 - December 3, 2010 Wartski, London The Last Flowering of Court Art A Russian Private Collection of Fabergé May 10 - 20, 2011 Wartski, London Japonisme: The Goldsmith and Japan from Falize to Fabergé Lecture in New York City by Peter Schaffer of A La Vieille Russie, "Will the Real Fabergé Please Stand Up", April 14, 2010 Info: Masha Tolstoy Sarandinaki, Hermitage Museum Foundation. Fabergé Eggs - The Extraordinary Story of the Masterpieces that Outlived an Empire by Toby Faber published in 2008 is now available as an audio book, and is being reprinted in the hard cover edition. After nearly 60 years, the Ministry of Defense has vacated the Alexander Palace at Tsarskoe Selo near St. Petersburg, Russia. Plans are already underway to restore the former palace staterooms (to be ready by June 2010), and to open a Romanov museum and cultural center. The video showing the first images of the Alexander Palace staterooms is courtesy of Royal Russia News, November 2009. Paul Gilbert has announced the cessation of Gilbert’s Royal Digest to be replaced by a new magazine entitled Royal Russian Annuals. The inaugural issue, to be published in the Spring of 2010, will feature stories about the life and times of Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich and his wife Maria Pavlovna. Royal Russia is pleased to announce plans for its next tour to Russia. Imperial Palaces & Country Estates Tour is scheduled for the summer 2011.
Baltimore, Maryland
Peter Rowe, a commercial and custom jeweler, describes the process used by Fabergé. Alexander Caldwell of Vivian Alexander™ uses the process in creating modern egg purses and other gifts. He concurs with Peter Rowe that the work is slow, very tedious, the output small, and therefore, expensive.
Readers with additional illustrations on the engine turning process, especially during Fabergé’s time, are asked to contact the editors. "If winter comes, can spring be far behind?"
Percy Bysshe Shelley, English poet (1792-1822) ![]() St. Petersburg, Russia - Hermitage Museum in the Snow (Courtesy Galina Korneva)
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.
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