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The Color of Heaven is Blue...
Cobalt on the Porcelain of On 25 December 2007, in Hall 152 (Eastern Gallery of the Winter Palace),
as part of the traditional series Christmas Gifts a new exhibition was
opened which details the history of glazed paintings in cobalt at the
famous St. Petersburg enterprise. The exposition displays the masterpieces
of imperial and Soviet porcelain and also with the work of contemporary
artists at the factory. The exhibition of the State Hermitage Museum includes approximately two hundred works which demonstrate cobalt techniques in decorative porcelain, and also the mastership of many creative artists. Among the works created before 1917 is the Vase and Lid with an Allegorical Painting in Medallions (late 1780s 1796), made in honour of Empress Catherine the Great. The vase Frost (1910) which is mentioned in the production lists of the Imperial Porcelain Factory to be brought to the Christmas celebrations of 1911 for Emperor Nicholas II and Empress Alexandra Feodorovna. The variety in the works displayed by the masters of the Soviet period bear the visiting card of the oldest porcelain factory in Russia, the dinner service Cobalt Net (1950); the Snow Maiden dinner service (1922), made to the storyline of the opera by Rimsky-Korsakov; the porcelain vase, specially made for the porcelain factory museum North Sea Route (1937), embodying the heroism of Cheluskins crew which had been trapped on Arctic ice and were heroically rescued. Among the work of contemporary artists at the factory one can draw attention to the plates from the Polar Sky series (2007), dedicated to military aviators from the anti-aircraft defense regiments (PVO) of the Leningrad Military District, which were named after the months of winter: December, January and February. In the paintings of the composition Stanza (2007) a Russian translation of a poem by Kanagaki Robun, is used to decorate the porcelain which was painted for a memorial portrait of the artist Utagawa Kuniyoshi. A coloured catalogue has been produced for the exhibition (State Hermitage Publishing House, 2007). The exhibition curator is N.L. Pavlukhina, a scientific researcher at the Department for the Museum of the Imperial Porcelain Factory attached to the State Hermitage Museum. |
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Copyright
© 2011 State Hermitage Museum |