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Hardcover Faberge: Fantasies & Treasures Book

ISBN: 0789300192

ISBN13: 9780789300195

Faberge: Fantasies & Treasures

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

An introduction to the House of Faberge features fifty-four of his most celebrated works, including Easter eggs, jewelry, silver, and objects of fantasy. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

A Treasure in Itself

This is a companion book to the catalog of the traveling Faberge exhibit, written by the exhibit's curator who is also a Faberge expert. It shows Faberge art in American collections, acquired over the past 100 years.Part of the focus is on Faberge's famous Easter eggs, the majority of which belong to American collectors, but the book also presents gold, enamel, and hardstone pieces by the artist-jeweler.Carl Faberge joined his father's jewelry business in St. Petersburg, Russia. During the last quarter of the 19th century, an archaeological revival in jewelry was in fashion. Carl copied antique Greek jewelry and exhibited it, under the patronage of Czar Alexander III. This was a great success, and afterwards he branched out from making conventional French-style jewelry to making art pieces (such as enameled gold snuffboxes and the first of his Easter eggs). He gained international fame and more honors were bestowed on him. His workshops produced an endless stream of objects of incredible beauty and workmanship.A total of 56 of Faberge's eggs were made: 44 survive and two are known only from photos. Most were made for the royal family of Russia. The preparation alone to make an egg could last as long as two years. Despite the fame of his Easter eggs, they were just a minute part of what Faberge produced. His 500 craftsmen designed and made over 150,000 pieces of jewelry and other art objects. Most of the jewelry was destroyed after the Revolution - only smaller objects survived this purge. The silver objects that survived were mostly functional ones - others were melted down.Fantasy objects, many made of gold and "hardstones", brought Faberge his greatest fame. His most zealously guarded secret was the process used to make his enamels.Faberge fled Russia in 1918 and died in Switzerland two years later.I learned so much from this little book...well worth reading!

Delightful

This is a delightful little book to brouse and enjoy. The chapters give a brief overview of many Faberge subjects. I love the stories about the pieces - especially about who owned them.
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