Exhibition at the Georgia Museum of Art focuses on the reigns of the last two Romanov rulers

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Exhibition at the Georgia Museum of Art focuses on the reigns of the last two Romanov rulers
(Left) Imperial Russian Easter egg with double-headed eagle in center and yellow ribbon, ca. 1900 Porcelain, over-glaze polychrome printing and silk 5 x 4 (diameter) inches Georgia Museum of Art, University of Georgia; Promised gift from the Parker Collection (right) Imperial Russian Easter Egg with crowned cypher of Nicholas II, 1915– 16 Porcelain with gilding 3 x 2 (diameter) inches Georgia Museum of Art, University of Georgia; Promised gift from the Parker Collection.



ATHENS, GA.- What happens when an emperor doesn’t want to be an emperor? That was true for Nicholas II of Russia, the last ruler of the 300-year-long Romanov dynasty and the subject of the exhibition “The Reluctant Autocrat: Tsar Nicholas II,” organized by the Georgia Museum of Art at the University of Georgia and on view there December 22 through March 17.

The museum has been building a collection of Russian art for several years and has developed several exhibitions from the gifts that make up that collection. The majority of objects in “The Reluctant Autocrat” come from the Parker Collection, assembled over more than four decades and including more than 2,200 separate objects. Asen Kirin, Parker Curator of Russian Art at the museum and professor of art history at UGA’s Lamar Dodd School of Art, focused this exhibition on objects related to Nicholas II and his father, Alexander III. The year 2018 marks the centennial of the end of World War I and the fall of the Romanov dynasty during the Russian Revolution, which also meant the murder of Nicholas, his wife Alexandra and their five children. As such, it presents a unique opportunity to consider the relationship between the villains and heroes of history and the reality of their individual human lives.

Kirin tells the story of Nicholas’ life, from his childhood as tsarevich (crown prince) to his ill-fated military command during World War I, through objects including military and court costumes, medals and orders of chivalry, lithographs, porcelain, devotional icons and the then young technology of photography. As visitors move through the galleries, they can draw connections among these items and begin to assemble a picture of the world at the time, caught between the ancient idea of the ruler as God’s representative on earth and the new, modern age.

Objects from Bob Jones University Museum & Gallery and from the gift of Princess Marina Belosselsky-Belozersky Kasarda help round out that picture. The latter also make up the exhibition “One Heart, One Way: The Journey of a Princely Art Collection,” on view at the museum through February 10. Kirin was even able to attribute one icon borrowed from Bob Jones to a famed 15th-century painter, Theophrastos, by interpreting its signature.

Kirin’s labels and wall texts bring out the human nature of the royal family, pointing out, for example, that Alexander III and his wife prepared their own simple breakfast of bread, butter, boiled eggs and coffee every morning. At the same time, they unpack the layers of meaning in objects like a copper bowl made by Fabergé as a gift (the simpler material signified frugality at the beginning of the world war) or the importance of military regiments as social networks. The result is a rich and complex portrait of a world undergoing massive change.










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