Author Topic: Help ID-ing various rooms  (Read 135634 times)

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Offline Joanna

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Re: Help ID-ing various rooms
« Reply #105 on: February 25, 2008, 07:17:43 PM »
Although #16-17 was remodeled in 1916, I still do not think that Alexandra would have had the sickroom near to Alexei's bedroom which would have been in that corner area c1913 when Tatiana had typhus. I believe Gleb your idea of #60 is a possibility. Benckendorf had a suite in the Lyceum and would have used it as a waiting-room. It would have been an oft experienced process for palace servants to convert a room for a short timeframe and then to revert to its normal use.

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Offline Joanna

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Re: Is this the playroom?
« Reply #106 on: August 04, 2008, 03:46:02 PM »
Interesting article on the discovery of the puppets theatre belonging to Alexei. The inventory numbers were the initial clue and then close examination of the puppets:

 http://stanislavsky.ng.ru/object/2007-10-01/42_dolls.html

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Offline nena

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Re: Is this the playroom?
« Reply #107 on: August 04, 2008, 04:20:11 PM »
Joanna, it is very interesting find--thanks! Never seen these dolls.  :-*
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Offline Clemence

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Re: Help ID-ing various rooms
« Reply #108 on: August 18, 2009, 03:05:18 PM »
None of Alexandra's furniture came from Maples.  This is a myth that started when people confused the Maple Room with work an architect-decorator who worked for Maples in St. Petersburg did in the English suite of rooms in the right-hand wing.  he had formarly worked for Grand Duke Boris in Tsarskoe Selo and this is how Alexandra found him.

Even though there are no records I have seen that Alexandra bought any furniture from Maples in London they did buy furniture when they traveled abroad.  We know Nicholas purchased the Empire bed for their bedroom at the Winter Palace in England and that they made purchases of furniture in the Trier department store in Darmstadt.

Generally all the furiniture in their rooms eiither came from existing pieces in palaces or it was custom made by firmns like that run by Roman Meltzer's family in St. Petersburg.  Kiots and other religious oriented furniture was made by various masters who secialised in this craft.

There was other store bought furniture in the rooms.  The girls often received furniture as gifts from their relatives such as screens and sofas for their rooms.

I think Gregg King in his book on Alix remarked how she got much of her furniture from Maples in London ... but it's ages since I last read the book so maybe I'm wrong on this?
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Offline EmmyLee

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Re: Help ID-ing various rooms
« Reply #109 on: September 13, 2013, 02:46:52 PM »
Any idea what room this is and what palace it was located in?


Offline Michael HR

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Re: Help ID-ing various rooms
« Reply #110 on: September 14, 2013, 05:46:55 AM »
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And what about this room ?

Could it possibly be Vyrubova's house?

I think this is the Mauve room as it had a piano at an angle to the door through to the bedrooms
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Re: Help ID-ing various rooms
« Reply #111 on: September 14, 2013, 08:59:21 AM »
Any idea what room this is and what palace it was located in?



Catherine Palace.

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Re: Help ID-ing various rooms
« Reply #112 on: September 14, 2013, 09:01:15 AM »
None of Alexandra's furniture came from Maples.  This is a myth that started when people confused the Maple Room with work an architect-decorator who worked for Maples in St. Petersburg did in the English suite of rooms in the right-hand wing.  he had formarly worked for Grand Duke Boris in Tsarskoe Selo and this is how Alexandra found him.

Even though there are no records I have seen that Alexandra bought any furniture from Maples in London they did buy furniture when they traveled abroad.  We know Nicholas purchased the Empire bed for their bedroom at the Winter Palace in England and that they made purchases of furniture in the Trier department store in Darmstadt.

Generally all the furiniture in their rooms eiither came from existing pieces in palaces or it was custom made by firmns like that run by Roman Meltzer's family in St. Petersburg.  Kiots and other religious oriented furniture was made by various masters who secialised in this craft.

There was other store bought furniture in the rooms.  The girls often received furniture as gifts from their relatives such as screens and sofas for their rooms.

I think Gregg King in his book on Alix remarked how she got much of her furniture from Maples in London ... but it's ages since I last read the book so maybe I'm wrong on this?

We have been in contact with the Maple Firm archives.  Bob is still quite correct.  The only room in the Alexander Palace which had Maple's furniture (and designed by them) was the "English Suite".

Offline Joanna

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Re: Help ID-ing various rooms
« Reply #113 on: September 14, 2013, 01:25:27 PM »

My thoughts - as the photo is part of the Hessen Staatsarchiv, the room was probably in Bialowieza when GD Ernst visited Poland c1903. Skierniewice’s décor was classical from period of GD Konstantin Pavlovich 1820s and Spala had a simpler hunting lodge interior.

The wainscoting is similar to Nicholas’ rooms in Bialowieza when Tsarevich. Another clue to the time frame is the painting of Alexandra. Nicholas loved it and most likely had it replicated to hang in Bialowieza similar to Franz Kruger’s paintings of AI and NI that were distributed to various palaces, etc. The furniture style feels “hunting lodge”.

It would be fantastic to see the photo albums belonging to the Imperial Family for the year 1903.

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Offline Katya_C

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Re: Help ID-ing various rooms
« Reply #114 on: September 14, 2013, 01:36:55 PM »
Quote
And what about this room ?

Could it possibly be Vyrubova's house?

I think this is the Mauve room as it had a piano at an angle to the door through to the bedrooms

Empress Alexandra playing the piano in her reception room in the Lower Dacha, Peterhof, 1910

Katya

Offline EmmyLee

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Re: Help ID-ing various rooms
« Reply #115 on: September 16, 2013, 10:28:24 PM »
Interesting to have differing opinions on the photo I posted. Thanks for your input, FA and Joanna. I agree that the furniture seems more fitted to a hunting lodge than the Catherine Palace, at least the furniture I've seen from the palace.

Offline Helen

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Re: Help ID-ing various rooms
« Reply #116 on: September 22, 2013, 07:49:12 AM »
According to the database of the State Archive in Darmstadt, the photo shows a room at the Garde-Kavallerie Klub in Berlin.
(The 2nd Guards Dragoons of the 3rd Guards Cavalry Brigade of the German Empire was the regiment of Empress Alexandra of Russia.)
"The Correspondence of the Empress Alexandra of Russia with Ernst Ludwig and Eleonore, Grand Duke and Duchess of Hesse. 1878-1916"
"Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig and Princess Alix of Hesse and by Rhine in Italy - 1893"
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Offline EmmyLee

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Re: Help ID-ing various rooms
« Reply #117 on: September 22, 2013, 10:21:37 PM »
That would explain her portrait then!

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Re: Help ID-ing various rooms
« Reply #118 on: October 11, 2014, 06:28:53 PM »
Does anyone know?


Offline Sarushka

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Re: Help ID-ing various rooms
« Reply #119 on: October 12, 2014, 07:52:16 AM »
My best guess is the Maple room. Or the Palisander room. The upholstery looks most like the Maple room to me, but I can't match that sofa with known furniture in either room. There are a number of photos of Alexandra posing in the Maple room in that dress.
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