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Treasures into Tractors Anne Odom

Treasures into Tractors By Anne Odom

Treasures into Tractors by Anne Odom


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Summary

Explores the fate of Russian art collections and libraries following the Russian Revolution in 1917, the institutions and individuals responsible for their sale, and the prominent collectors, libraries, and museums that acquired them. This title reveals the extent of the Soviet government's voluntary realization ' of Russia's cultural patrimony.

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Treasures into Tractors Summary

Treasures into Tractors: The Selling of Russia's Cultural Heritage, 1918-1938 by Anne Odom

Sixteen scholars from Russia, Vienna, and the United States explore the fate of Russian art collections and libraries following the Russian Revolution in 1917, the institutions and individuals responsible for their sale, and the prominent collectors, libraries, and museums that acquired them. Unlike the widely publicized controversy surrounding Soviet-Nazi war loot and its restitution, the sales of the interwar period are not well known outside a small scholarly community. This volume reveals the extent of the Soviet government's voluntary realization of Russia's cultural patrimony between 1918 and 1938 and its consequences for both the international art market and the perception of Russian art.

The imperial Easter eggs by Faberge and Old-Master paintings purchased by Andrew Mellon from the State Hermitage and now in the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. are the most celebrated works that changed hands. Equally significant are the bibliographic rarities from imperial libraries, icons and liturgical art from churches and monasteries, and antiques, furnishings and fine art from estates, palaces, and private homes.

See the review in the New York Times: http://www.nytimes.com/gift-guide/holiday-2009/ggantiques/list.html

Treasures into Tractors Reviews

For the first time readers can really see what Russia lost as a result of the Soviet drive to generate foreign currency: magnificent works of imperial porcelain; paintings by van Eyck, Titian, Rembrandt, and Rubens; Faberge eggs; the furniture of David Roentgen; icons and illuminated manuscripts.

* Slavic and East European Journal *

Odom and Salmond have performed a tremendously valuable public service in assembling so much important scholarship in one place, and in a book so attractively presented that it is sure to win attention... It may be too late for many of Russia's dispossessed (and their relatives) to reclaim even a fraction of their stolen property- but at least the world is beginning slowly to recognize what was lost.

* The Soviet and Post-Soviet Review *

Treasures into Tractors is a long overdue and highly significant publication.

* The Art Newspaper *

More proof that antiques can tell vivid stories of wartime devastation can be found in TREASURES INTO TRACTORS. . . Eighteen scholars, about half of them Russian, contributed essays about how Soviet officials stripped aristocrats' estates, shipped the 'foul bourgeois' contents to museum storerooms and then traded much of the booty for hard currency through galleries or auctions in the West. White Russian exiles futilely protested; their jewelry, paintings, furniture and books ended up at many institutions, including the Louvre, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Library of Congress.

-- Eve M. Kahn * The New York Times (ANTIQUES; New Books for Lovers of Old Stuff, November 27, 2009.) *

About Anne Odom

Anne Odom is curator emerita at Hillwood Estate, Museum, and Gardens in Washington, D.C. Wendy R. Salmond is professor of art history at Chapman University in Orange, California.

Table of Contents

Director's Note / Frederick J. FisherForeword /Robert C. WilliamsPreface / Anne Odom and Wendy R. SalmondAcknowledgmentsIntroduction / Anne Odom and Wendy R. Salmond

Part I: Soviet Culture after the Revolution1. The Fate of Russia's Estate Houses and Their Contents, 1917-1930 / Priscilla Roosevelt2. With Patriarch Tikhon's Blessing: Protecting and Restoring Works of Early Paintings / Irena Kyzlasova3. A Soviet Museum Experiment / Natalia Semenova4. Operation Duveen / Elena A. Osokina

Part II: Soviet Museums and the First Five-Year Plan5. The Hermitage, Gosmuzeifond, and Antikvariat / Elena Solomakha6. Sales of Works from the Leningrad Palace Museums, 1926-1934 / Rifat Gafifullin7. On the Third Front: The Soviet Museum and Its Public during the Cultural Revolution / Konstantin Akinsha and Adam Jolles

Part III: Sales in Europe and the United States8. Soviet Art Sales to Europe, 1919-1936 / Waltraud Bayer9. Gone with the Wind: The Selling of Furniture by David Roentgen and Other Decorative Arts / Wolfram Koeppe10. Russian Icons and American Money, 1928-1938 / Wendy R. Salmond11. American Collectors of Russian Decorative Art / Anne Odom

Part IV: Imperial Libraries and Archives12. Behind the Stacks: American Acquisitions of Imperial Libraries / Kristen Regina13. Books for Tractors? Interwar Dispersal and Sales of Russian Imperial Palace Books / Patricia Kennedy Grimsted14. The Tsar's Library: Books from Russian Imperial Palaces at the Library of Congress / Harold M. Leich15. Book Dealers, Collectors, and Librarians: Major Acquisitions of Russian Imperial Books at Harvard, 1920s-1950s / Irina Tarsis16. Romanov and Elite Provenance Materials in the New York Public Library / Robert H. Davis Jr. and Edward Kasinec

AbbreviationsContributorsBibliographyIndex

Additional information

CIN1931485070G
9781931485074
1931485070
Treasures into Tractors: The Selling of Russia's Cultural Heritage, 1918-1938 by Anne Odom
Used - Good
Paperback
Hillwood Museum & Gardens
20090612
448
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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