International Academic Conference
Russian Jewellery Art of the 19th and Early 20th Centuries in a Global Context
November 9–11, 2017
Fabergé Museum in St. Petersburg
Programme
November 9, 2017
9:30 Registration10:00-11:00 Fabergé Museum Guided tour
11:00 Welcoming speech of Mikhail Ovchinnikov, First Deputy Director of Fabergé Museum in St. Petersburg
Section 1. The Semiotics of Jewellery Art
Private Fabergé Objets d'Art and the Traditions of Imperial Representation
Thomas Steppan
(Innsbruck, Austria)
Professor, Art History Department, Innsbruck University
Fabergé Easter Eggs as a Statement in the Context of the Two Russian Capitals’ Opposition
Irina Gurova
(St. Petersburg, Russia)
Independent Researcher
12:00 Section 2. The Iconography of Jewellery Art
Pearls, Progress, and the Past: Negotiating Meaning in Empress Maria Alexandrovna’s Portrait by Winterhalter
John Webley
(New York, USA)
Research Assistant, Dahesh Museum of Art
Pearls, Jewels, and Brilliants in Famous Portraits of the Romanov Family
Horst Becker
(Wiesbaden, Germany)
Art Historian, Independent Researcher
Fashion and Jewellery in St. Petersburg around 1900. The Use of Aquamarine by Fabergé, His Parure for Grand Duchess Elisabeth, and the Discovery of a Commission from Fabergé for an Aquamarine Tiara in 1904
Alexander von Solodkoff
(Hemmelmark / Kiel, Germany)
Director, Mecklenburg-Schwerin Archives; Member of the Advisory Board, Fabergé Museum in St. Petersburg
Numismatic Pieces in Fabergé’s Works
Elena Yarovaya
(St. Petersburg, Russia)
Ph. D., Senior Research Fellow, Numismatics Department, The State Hermitage Museum
Dmitry Krivoshey
(Moscow, Russia)
Independent Researcher
13:30–14:30 Break
14:30 Section 3. Style in 19th- and Early 20th-Century Russian Jewellery Art
Renaissance Reminiscences in Russian and Western European Silver items
Vadim Prygov
(Moscow, Russia)
Expert in the Analytical Laboratory, Vernadsky State Geological Museum
Bracelet from the Kertch Treasures Series in the Fabergé Museum Collection and the First Successes of the House of Fabergé
Alexey Pomigalov
(St. Petersburg, Russia)
Ph. D., Curator, Fabergé Museum in St. Petersburg
Karina Pronitcheva
(St. Petersburg, Russia)
Ph. D., Curator, Fabergé Museum in St. Petersburg
Fabergé Designs in the Neo-Russian Style
Tatiana Chuzhanova
(St. Petersburg, Russia)
Assistant Professor, Applied Arts and Handicraft Department, St. Petersburg State University of Industrial Technologies and Design
“Egyptian Style” in Late 19th- and Early 20th-Century Russian Jewellery
Elena Korneychuk
(Moscow, Russia)
Independent Researcher
16:00 End of the first conference day
November 10, 2017
10:00 Section 4. Sources on the History of Russian Jewellery Art of the 19th and Early 20th Century
Crown Diamonds Inventory Books
Igor Zimin
(St. Petersburg, Russia)
Ph. D., Professor, Head of the History Department, Pavlov First State Medical University of St. Petersburg
Alexander Tillander’s Business Reports as a Source for the History of Russian Jewellery
Ulla Tillander-Godenhielm
(Helsinki, Finland)
Ph. D., Member of the Advisory Board, Fabergé Museum in St. Petersburg
Jewellery Apprenticeship in Russia in the Second Half of 19th Century and Early 20th Century. Pavel Ovchinnikov’s Manifesto
Sofia Grigoryeva
(St. Petersburg, Russia)
Ph. D., Head of Visitor Services, Fabergé Museum in St. Petersburg; Postgraduate Student, St. Petersburg State Institute of Culture
11:00 Section 5. Russian Jewellers and Their Contacts with Europe
The House of Sazikov in the context of mid-19th-Century European Jewellery Art
Evgeny Lukyanov
(Moscow, Russia)
Senior Research Fellow, The State Historical Museum
The House of Bolin and European Jewellery Art of the Late 19th and Early 20th Century
Maria Osipova
(St. Petersburg, Russia)
Doctoral Student, Faculty of Arts, St. Petersburg University of the Humanities and Social Sciences; Fabergé Museum in St. Petersburg
The European Stylistic Influence on Kievan Jewellers of the Late 19th and Early 20th Century
Natalia Sapfirova
(Kiev, Ukraine)
Doctoral Student, National Academy of Managerial Staff in Culture and Arts
12:30–13:30 Break
13:30 Section 6. Gifts and Offerings
Russian Diplomacy and the Empire of Japan. Gifts from the Cabinet of His Imperial Majesty (1881–1917)
Valentin Skurlov
(St. Petersburg, Russia)
Ph. D., Member of the Advisory Board, Fabergé Museum in St. Petersburg
Olga Krstich
(St. Petersburg, Russia)
Leading Research Fellow, Russian State Historical Archives
Icons of the Early 20th Century Given to the Imperial Family. On the Example of Icons in Silver Revetments in the State Russian Museum Collection
Irina Polyakova
(St. Petersburg, Russia)
Senior Research Fellow, The State Russian Museum
14:20 Section 7. Collections
Traditional Tartar Jewellery from the Volga-Ural Region in the Collection of the Russian Museum of Ethnography: Current Presentation Practices
Elena Kolchina
(St. Petersburg, Russia)
Head of the Ethnography of the Volga and Ural Peoples Department, The Russian Museum of Ethnography
Lidia Loyko
(St. Petersburg, Russia)
Leading Research Fellow, The Russian Museum of Ethnography
Fabergé Items from St. Petersburg Private Collections in the Mining Museum Collection
Natalia Borovkova
(St. Petersburg, Russia)
Associate Professor, Materials and Technology of Artworks Manufacturing Department, St. Petersburg Mining University, Senior Research Fellow, Mining Museum
15:00 End of the second conference day
November 11, 2017
Cultural program
10:30 St. Petersburg and the Fabergé Epoch Bus tourThe tour will proceed along the city’s famous streets and embankments: Nevsky Prospekt, Bolshaya Morskaya St., the Kryukov Canal and Moika River Embankments, and other thoroughfares, where guests will see buildings that were significant in the life of Carl Fabergé and other famous jewellers who worked in St. Petersburg in the late 19th and early 20th century. While riding along Nevsky Prospekt, you can admire its elegant architecture and see the places where the Hahn and Tillander dynasties worked before the Revolution. The tour will focus mainly on St. Petersburg’s Diamond Row, Bolshaya Morskaya St., where long ago one could find a multitude of jewellery shops, enough to satisfy any taste. There you can immerse yourself in the atmosphere of turn-of-the-century St. Petersburg and come into direct contact with the history of the jewellery firms of the era: Sazikov, Ovchinnikov, Butz, and Bolin, stone carver Denisov-Uralsky, and, of course, Fabergé.
12:00 Visit to the Diamond Room of the State Hermitage Museum
Opened to the public as part of the Imperial Hermitage in 1852, the Treasure Gallery is one of the largest museum collections of jewellery art in the world, and is comprised of two exhibitions: the Gold Room and the Diamond Room. The cultural program of the Fabergé Museum conference will include a visit to the Diamond Room, specifically the exhibits of ancient gold, items from European and Russian goldsmiths, jewellery from the collections of members of the Imperial family and private collections, religious articles, and diplomatic gifts to the Russian Emperor.
Quellennachweis:
CONF: Russian Jewellery Art (St. Petersburg, 9-11 Nov 17). In: ArtHist.net, 06.11.2017. Letzter Zugriff 20.04.2024. <https://arthist.net/archive/16666>.