Fabergé Notebook at Holyroodhouse

Posted: Sunday, 18-03-2012

Edinburgh, Scotland - A Fabergé notebook in which Queen Victoria recorded guests who attended her Diamond Jubilee celebrations is to go on display in the exhibition Treasures from The Queen’s Palaces at The Queen’s Gallery, Palace of Holyroodhouse from 16th March. Savvy art collectors of ArtKabinett network recommend this tour to any member visiting the close-by summer Olympics.

The Queen signed and dated the notebook herself. On every other page are the signatures of her guests, who included crowned heads of Europe. Many had attended the dinner at Buckingham Palace on the evening before the official Jubilee commemoration on 22 June 1897.

Queen Victoria later described that evening in her journal:

"The dinner was in the Supper Room…All the family, foreign Royalties, special Ambassadors & Envoys were invited. I sat between the Arch Duke Franz Ferdinand & the Pce of Naples."

The exhibition Treasures from The Queen’s Palaces reflects the tastes of monarchs and other members of the royal family who have shaped the Royal Collection over the past five centuries.

The selection of 100 outstanding works has been made across the entire breadth of the Collection and from nine royal residences. It includes paintings, drawings, miniatures, watercolours, manuscripts, furniture, sculpture, ceramics and jewelry.

The notebook is one of more than 20 pieces of Fabergé to go on display in the exhibition, which marks Her Majesty The Queen’s Diamond Jubilee in Scotland.

Queen Victoria and Queen Elizabeth II are the only two sovereigns in the history of the British Monarchy to have reached this milestone. Most items will be shown in Scotland for the first time.

The notebook was purchased in St Petersburg in December 1896 for 250 rubles and given to Queen Victoria as a Christmas present by Tsar Nicholas II and his wife, Alexandra Feodorovna, after their visit to Balmoral Castle, in Scotland, earlier that year.

It is inscribed by the Tsar and Tsarina, ‘For Dearest Grandmama from Nicky and Alix… Xmas 1896’.

The Queen wrote fondly of their visit, ‘It seems quite like a dream having dear Alicky & Nicky here.’ During the visit the Tsarina showed Queen Victoria some of her jewels, many of which were supplied by Fabergé. Victoria wrote, ‘Alix showed me her beautiful jewels, of which she has quantities, all her own private property.’

Although a highly practical object, the notebook displays the finest techniques employed by Carl Fabergé, the great jeweler and goldsmith of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The silver-gilt case is engine-turned with geometric and sunburst patterns and enameled in red and oyster – an outstanding example of Fabergé’s famous revival of guilloche enameling. The surface is embellished with silver-gilt laurel wreaths, stylized flowers and foliage. The pencil, concealed in the hinge, is set with cabochon moonstones at either end.

Successive generations of the Royal Family created the royal collection of works by Fabergé, which today is unparalleled in size, range and quality.

Two of Fabergé’s Imperial Easter Eggs will also be on display in the exhibition. They include the Mosaic Egg, one of the most sophisticated and extraordinary of the Russian master’s works.

Inside it holds a ‘surprise’ in the form of a medallion painted with the portraits of the five children of Tsar Nicholas II and his wife. The Egg was the Tsar’s Easter gift to his wife in 1914 and was among the many treasures confiscated after their deaths. It was purchased by King George V in 1933, probably for Queen Mary’s birthday on 26 May.

Founded as a monastery in 1128, the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh is The Queen's official residence in Scotland. Situated at the end of the Royal Mile, the Palace of Holyroodhouse is closely associated with Scotland's turbulent past, including Mary, Queen of Scots, who lived here between 1561 and 1567. Successive kings and queens have made the Palace of Holyroodhouse the premier royal residence in Scotland.

Today, the Palace is the setting for State ceremonies and official entertaining. During The Queen's Holyrood week, which usually runs from the end of June to the beginning of July, Her Majesty carries out a wide range of official engagements in Scotland.


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