The Museum of Russian Icons opens the first exhibition in more than 50 years of a lost masterpiece

ARTDAILY
Romanov liturgical silver, 1877, part of the imperial dowry of Grand Duchess Maria Alexandrovna Romanova; on loan from a private collection; the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Sign, New York; NY; the Holy Transfiguration Monastery, Brookline, MA; and the Russian History Foundation, Jordanville, NY.
CLINTON, MASS.- The Museum of Russian Icons will be presenting Opulence Rediscovered: the Romanov Liturgical Silver, the first exhibition in more than 50 years of a lost masterpiece, October 19, 2018 – January 13, 2019. This extraordinary set of Russian Orthodox liturgical implements was made in 1877 as part of the imperial dowry of Grand Duchess Maria Alexandrovna Romanova (1853-1920), the only surviving daughter of Russian Emperor Alexander II, who married Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh, in 1874, and used this opulent silver set in her private chapel in the Clarence House British Royal Residence in London. Commissioned by the cabinet to the Russian Imperial Court, the Romanov silver set was based on designs by court architect David Grimm (1823 - 1898), one of the creators of the Neo-Byzantine style in Russia. [More]

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