Fabergé Museum in Saint Petersburg, Russia

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Fabergé Museum in Saint Petersburg, Russia
Музей Фаберже в Санкт-Петербурге
Established 19 November 2013 (2013-11-19)
Location Saint Petersburg, Russian Federation
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Collection size more than 4,000 items
Founder Viktor Vekselberg
Director Vladimir Voronchenko
Owner The Link of Times cultural-historical foundation
Website fabergemuseum.ru

The Fabergé Museum in Saint Petersburg, Russia, is a privately owned museum, founded by the Link of Times foundation in order to repatriate lost cultural valuables to Russia.[1] The museum is located in the very center of St. Petersburg — in Shuvalov Palace (21, Fontanka Embankment) on the Fontanka River.[2] The museum's collection contains more than 4,000 works of decorative applied and fine arts, including gold and silver items, paintings, porcelain and bronze. A highlight of the museum's collection is the group of nine Imperial Easter eggs created by Fabergé for the last two Russian Tsars.

The history of the museum

The idea of creating a special museum devoted to the creative work of the great Russian jeweler Carl Fabergé came to the Link of Times foundation after the purchase by Viktor Vekselberg in 2004 of a unique collection of Fabergé masterpieces that had been owned by the late Malcolm Forbes.[3] Since then, the Link of Times foundation began building a collection of Russian decorative applied and fine arts, which contains more than 4,000 works. All of the Imperial Easter eggs in the museum's collection are connected to the rule and personal life of the last two Russian emperors — Alexander III and Nicolas II.

The Link of Times foundation began restoring the 18th-century Shuvalov Palace (which is rented by the foundation) in St. Petersburg in 2006, with the goal of opening the museum in the palace.[4] An enormous amount of work was done over seven years to recreate the historical appearance of the palace. This was the first full-fledged restoration of the palace in its entire 200-year history. The official opening ceremony of the Fabergé Museum took place on 19 November 2013.[5]

The museum's collection

The Fabergé Museum's collection has nine Imperial Easter eggs that were made to the order of the last two Romanov Tsars — the Emperors Alexander III and Nicolas II. The eggs were bought by Vekselberg in 2004 from the newspaper magnate Malcolm Forbes. He bought it wholesale - even before the opening of the auction, paying $ 100 million for the entire collection.[6]

In total, there are fifteen Fabergé eggs in the Blue Room of Shuvalov Palace, as well as a miniature picture frame in the form of a heart — the surprise from the lost Mauve egg of 1897.[7]

List of Imperial Easter eggs

List of other Fabergé eggs

Gallery of Fabergé eggs

References

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External links