“Faberge: Jeweler to the Tsars” opens at OKCMOA

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK – More than 230 rare and storied treasures created by the House of Faberge will be celebrated in a new exhibition at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art.

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OKLAHOMA CITY, OK – More than 230 rare and storied treasures created by the House of Faberge will be celebrated in a new exhibition at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art. “Faberge: Jeweler to the Tsars” will be on view from June 20 through September 27, 2015.

“This exhibition represents a double honor for the Oklahoma City Museum of Artโ€”the opportunity to collaborate with the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts and to showcase the largest Faberge collection outside of Russia,” said E. Michael Whittington, OKCMOA President and CEO. “We are proud to present such an extraordinary collection of treasures to our community.”

From dazzling Imperial Easter eggs to delicate flower ornaments and from enchanting animal sculptures to cigarette cases, photograph frames and desk clocks, Faberge often turned the most mundane objects into miniature works of art. The success of his business was inextricably linked to the patronage of the Romanov dynasty and the close ties among the British, Danish and Russian royal families.
The “Imperial Tsesarevich Easter Egg” of 1912, which will be on view at OKCMOA, was a gift to Empress Alexandra from her husband, Emperor Nicholas II. The egg commemorates their son, Alexsei, who nearly died the previous year of hemophilia. For the shell, craftsmen joined six wedges of highly prized lapis lazuli and hid the seams with an elaborate gold filigree encasement. Inside the egg, a diamond encrusted Romanov family crest frames a two-sided portrait of the young child.

WHAT TO TAKE AWAY FROM THIS ARTICLE:

  • “This exhibition represents a double honor for the Oklahoma City Museum of Artโ€”the opportunity to collaborate with the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts and to showcase the largest Faberge collection outside of Russia,”.
  • The success of his business was inextricably linked to the patronage of the Romanov dynasty and the close ties among the British, Danish and Russian royal families.
  • More than 230 rare and storied treasures created by the House of Faberge will be celebrated in a new exhibition at the Oklahoma City Museum of Art.

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Linda Hohnholz

Editor in chief for eTurboNews based in the eTN HQ.

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