Two Centuries of Imperial Russian Arts Are Coming to The Reading Public Museum

  • READING, Pennsylvania
  • /
  • January 18, 2016

  • Email
The Durnovo Casket Silver gilt, enamel and lapis lazuli 1889 Firm of Ovchinnikov, Russia © Giovanni Lundardi Photography
International Arts & Artists

The Reading Public Museum (Penn.) will host The Tsars’ Cabinet, which highlights two hundred years of decorative arts under the Romanovs, from the time of Peter the Great in the early eighteenth century to that of Nicholas II in the early twentieth century. Many of the more than 230 objects in the nationally touring exhibition were designed for public or private use of the tsars or other Romanovs. Others illustrate the styles that were prominent during their reigns. The Tsars’ Cabinet is on view at RPM from January 22, 2016 through April 17, 2016 in the Second Floor Temporary Galleries. This exhibition is presented locally by the Marlin and Ginger Miller Exhibition Endowment.

Porcelain, glass, enamel, silver gilt and other alluring materials make this extensive exhibition dazzle. The items demonstrate the evolution of style from the European Classicism of the court of Catherine the Great, to the rich oriental motifs of mid-nineteenth century Russian Historicism of the Kremlin and Grand Duke Constantine Nicholaevich services and the enamel work of Fedor Ruckert and the firm of Ovchinnikov.

The exhibition includes many pieces from significant porcelain services made by the Imperial Porcelain Factory, from the reign of Empress Elizabeth and Catherine the Great to Nicholas and Alexandra. Visitors will see items featured at state banquets at the Kremlin and other Imperial Palaces, as well as items designed for the tsars’ private use aboard the Imperial yachts. Among the rare items are two pieces from a service Catherine the Great ordered for her grandson, Grand Duke Constantine Pavlovich, as well as pieces from services presented by Augustus III of Saxony and Frederick the Great to the eighteenth century Russian tsarinas.

The exhibition also features two hundred years of glassware, from a beaker from the time of Peter the Great to a vase made by the Imperial Glass Factory that the Dowager Empress Maria Fedorovna kept on her desk in Denmark after the Russian Revolution. Russian enamels from the late nineteenth century include a major jewel casket made by the Ovchinnikov firm and presented to Tsar Alexander III’s Minister of the Interior, as well as the work of Fedor Ruckert and the work masters of the Faberge firm.

The objects exhibited provide a rare, intimate glimpse into the everyday lives of the tsars. The collection brings together a political and social timeline tied to an understanding of Russian culture. In viewing The Tsars’ Cabinet, one is transported to a majestic era of progressive politics and dynamic social change.

The Tsars’ Cabinet is developed from the Kathleen Durdin Collection and is organized by the Muscarelle Museum of Art at the College of William & Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, in collaboration with International Arts & Artists, Washington, DC.

The Reading Public Museum is supported in part by grants from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and is located at 500 Museum Road, Reading, Pa. Admission per day is: $10 adults (18-64), $6 children/seniors/college students (w/ID) and free to Members and children three years old and under. The Museum is open daily 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.  Web: www.readingpublicmuseum.org

Contact:
Emily Moore
Reading Public Museum
610-371-5850 x231
emily.moore@readingpublicmuseum.org

Reading Public Museum
500 Museum Road
Reading, Pennsylvania
michael.anderson@readingpublicmuseum.org
610-371-5850 x231
http://www.readingpublicmuseum.org
About Reading Public Museum

The Reading Public Museum is located at 500 Museum Road, Reading, PA 19611. Hours are Sunday - Monday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission to The Museum is: $10 adults (18-59), $6 children/seniors/students (w/ID) and free to Members and children three years old and under. Web: www.readingpublicmuseum.org


  • Email

Related Press Releases