ScriptoriaSlavica

Medieval Slavic Manuscripts and Culture

Tag: Hillwood Museum

More on the Romanov Coronation Albums Exhibit at Hillwood Museum, Washington, D.C.

 

The local Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) affiliate in Washington, D.C., WETA, produced a brief promotional video on the Romanov Coronation Albums Exhibit at the Hillwood Museum in Washington. ScriptoriaSlavica posted on this exhibit on April 1st: “Romanov Coronation Albums on Exhibit at the Hillwood Museum, Washington, D.C.”

Promotional digital image for the Hillwood exhibit "Pageant of the Tsars"

See the WETA video on youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=igKhEdlmQ-s&list=UUE1-vZE15MgRM9qlNIab1pA&index=6

 

Image and link source:
Kristen Regina, Curator of Pageant of the Tsars Exhibit
Head of Research Collections & Archivist
Hillwood Estate, Museum & Gardens
Washington, D.C.

www.hillwoodmuseum.org

 

Romanov Coronation Albums on Exhibit at the Hillwood Museum, Washington, D.C.

Russian Liturgical Gallery, Hillwood Mansion, Washington, D.C.

Russian Liturgical Gallery, Hillwood Mansion, Washington, D.C.

 

“Pageant of the Tsars” is an exhibit of Coronation Albums of seven of the Romanov rulers on display in the “Dacha” at the Hillwood Estate, Museum and Gardens in Washington, DC, through June 8, 2013.

Download the free digital versions of the albums from the iTunes store.

The Albums were printed on the occasion of the coronations of Catherine I (1724), the second wife of Peter the Great; Anna Ioannovna (1730), daughter of Ivan V and niece of Peter I ; Elizabeth Petrovna (1742), daughter of Peter I and Catherine I; Nicholas I (1826), brother of Alexander I and son of Paul I; Alexander II (1856), son of Nicholas I; Alexander III (1883), son of Alexander II; and Nicholas II (1896), son of Alexander III.

2): Silver, velvet, paper

Hillwood Russian Gospels (1702): Silver, velvet, paper

From the exhibit brochure:

“These coronation albums offer unique perspectives of the Romanov dynasty and also trace the development of printmaking in Russia through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. While progressing through the exhibition, one can observe how the black-and-white etchings of the eighteenth century give way to the vibrant color images of the late nineteenth century. For more information about these techniques, please visit www.hillwoodmuseum.org/pageant.”

Note that the cover of Nicholas II’s coronation album is in the style of Art Nouveau.

 

Royal Doors of an Iconostasis (16th cent.), Hillwood Mansion, Washington, D.C.

Royal Doors of an Iconostasis (16th cent.), Hillwood Mansion, Washington, D.C.

 

 

Sources: Exhibit brochure for Pageant of the Tsars, visit to the exhibit, and the Hillwood Estate, Museum and Gardens website.

Image Sources: Photographs taken in the Hillwood Estate Mansion, March 7, 2013.