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Art, Nationhood, and Display: Zinaida Volkonskaia and Russia's Quest for a National Museum of Art

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 January 2017

Abstract

In 1831, the journal Teleskop published Princess Zinaida Volkonskaia's proposal for a national art museum in Moscow. Volkonskaia's project was progressive to a degree (Russia had no such museum at the time), yet the model she proposed was highly traditional. She excluded Russian art entirely, despite her support of modern Russian artists. Instead, Volkonskaia privileged classical and more recent western European art, underlining the deference to western practice that influenced cultural politics even as Russia moved toward a stronger national sense of self. Volkonskaia's project marks an important juncture in Russia's cultural history: the intersection of aristocratic female patronage and the institutionalization of academic procedure. It also provides a platform from which to consider Russia's self-image vis-à-vis Europe in the aftermath of the Napoleonic campaigns. By tracing an intricate dialogue in which national pride developed alongside continuing admiration for neoclassical ideals, Rosalind P. Blakesley addresses the paradoxes of Volkonskaia's project, and the difficulties of conceptualizing a “national” space of artistic display. Volkonskaia's project poses significant interpretive problems and her exclusion of Russian art prefigures the segregation of Russian and western art in Russian museums today, which has marginalized Russian art even within Russia itself. Volkonskaia's project thus has wide resonance, for the question of whether and how museums encapsulate national cultural identities remains an issue of great intellectual concern.

Type
Displaying the Nation and Modernity in Russia: Directions in Russian Museum Studies
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies. 2008

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References

I would like to thank Alessandra Tosi, Gitta Hammarberg, Michelle Lamarche Marrese, and other participants in the panel “Russian Women and European Culture in the Early Nineteenth Century” at the National Convention of the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, Boston, 2004, for providing a stimulating forum in which to test my ideas. My attendance at that conference was funded by the British Academy, to whom I am deeply grateful. I am also indebted to Patrick Blakesley and Mark D. Steinberg for their excellent observations and enthusiastic support. Finally, my sincere thanks to two anonymous readers for their highly thoughtful and constructive critique of earlier versions of this text. Theirs was an example of anonymous reviewing at its very best.

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16. For an early appreciation of the Villa Volkonsky, which later became the official residence of the British ambassador in Rome, see O. I. Buslaev, “Rimskaia villa kn. Z. A. Volkonskoi,” VestnikEvropy 1 (January 1896): 5-32.

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21. S. M. Volkonskii, Vospominanie o Dekabristakh po semeinim vospominaniam (Moscow, 1994), quoted in Fairweather, Pilgrim Princess, 230.

22. Volkonskaia, Z. A., “Proekt Esteticheskogo muzeia pri imperatorskom Moskovskom universiteta,Teleskop 3 (1831): 385-86Google Scholar. While these were Volkonskaia's prime reasons for founding a museum, she also hoped that it would be used to good purpose by those teaching at Moscow University, provide stage and costume designers with suitable models, and inspire the artists of the theatrical world in tiieir quest for style and “grace” (386).

23. See, for example, Duncan, Civilizing Rituals, 14, in which the author argues that “the rise of the art museum is a corollary to the philosophical invention of the aesthetic and moral power of art objects.“

24. Duncan, Carol and Wallach, Alan, “The Universal Survey Museum,Art History 3, no. 4 (December 1980): 448-69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

25. Bazin, Museum Age, 6.

26. Specifically, these first sections were to contain Egyptian and Etruscan art; works illustrating the transition from Egyptian to Greek sculpture; statues of classical gods, goddesses, and heroes (a section Volkonskaia termed “Olympus“); group statues focusing on human emotion; and portrait statues and busts.

27. Volkonskaia, “Proekt Esteticheskogo muzeia,” 387-96.

28. Ibid., 389.

29. See Potts, Alex, Flesh and the Ideal: Winckelmann and the Origins of Art History (New Haven, 1994), 1146 Google Scholar. For the Grand Tour, see Andrew Wilton and Ilaria Bignamini, Grand Tour: The Lure of Italy in the Eighteenth Century (London, 1996); and Jeremy Black, Italy and the Grand Tour (New Haven, 2003).

30. Volkonskaia, “Proekt Esteticheskogo muzeia,” 385-87.

31. Ibid., 388.

32. Ibid., 387.

33. According to a contemporary, Volkonskaia “decorated her house with originals and copies of the most famous works of painting and sculpture. She painted the walls of her house, a real museum, with frescoes in the style of various periods.” Murav'ev, ed., V tsarstve muz, 11. For details of Volkonskaia's collection, see Polunina, N. and Frolov, A., Kollektsionery staroi Moskvy: Illiustrirovannyi biograficheskii slovar’ (Moscow, 1997), 108-9Google Scholar. The fortunes and eventual dispersal of Volkonskaia's collection after her death are discussed on p. 110.

34. Volkonskaia, Z., letter published in Galateia 5 (1829): 2131 Google Scholar, quoted in Belozerskaia, “Kniaginia Zinaida Aleksandrovna Volkonskaia,” 139.

35. Thorvaldsen carried out commissions for members of the Russian aristocracy, including busts of Alexander I and Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna. For his involvement with the Russian artistic community in Rome, see R. Giuliani, “Thorvaldsen e la colonia romana degli artisti russi,” in Kragelund, P. and Nykjaer, M., eds., Thorvaldsen: L'ambiente, I'influsso, ilmito (Rome, 1991), 131-43.Google Scholar

36. For the text of Chaadaev's letter, see Chaadaev, P. la., Stat'i i pis'ma (Moscow, 1989), 3856 Google Scholar. The full text in English is available in Marc Raeff, ed., Russian Intellectual History: An Anthology (New York, 1966; reprint, Atlantic Highlands, N.J., 1978), 160-73. For a commentary on the invective it contained, see Andrzej Walicki, A History of Russian Thought from the Enlightenment to Marxism, trans. Hilda Andrews-Rusiecka (Oxford, 1980), 81-91.

37. According to some sources, Volkonskaia first came to Russia as late as 1805. See Polunina, N. M., Kto est’ kto v hollektsionirovanii staroi Rossii: Novyi biograficheskii slovar’ (Moscow, 2003), 99.Google Scholar

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39. Volkonskaia outlined these aims in a letter to the Society of Russian History and Antiquities on 28 April 1827. See Belozerskaia, “Kniaginia Zinaida Aleksandrovna Volkonskaia,“ 133.

40. On Volkonskaia's conversion to Catholicism, see Gorodetzky, Nadejda, “Zinaida Volkonsky as a Catholic,Slavonic and East European Review 39 (December 1960): 3143 Google Scholar; and A. Mazon, “Zénéide Volkonskaja la Catholique,” in W. Steinitz, P. N. Berkov, B. Suchodolski, and J. Dolanský, eds., Ost und West in der Geschichte des Denkens und der kulturellen Beziehungen: Festschrift für Eduard Winter zum 70 Geburtstag (Berlin, 1966), 579-90. On the rapprochement, see Bayara Aroutunova, Lives in Letters: Princess Zinaida Volkonskaya and Her Correspondence (Columbus, Ohio, 1994), 32.

41. Dun can, Civilizing Rituals, 8—9.

42. Volkonskaia, “Proekt Esteticheskogo muzeia,” 385.

43. Duncan, Civilizing Rituals, 38.

44. For recent thinking on Russian artistic patronage, see Boele, Vincent, Phillips, Catherine, and Rudge, John, eds., Collectors in St. Petersburg (Aldershot, Eng., 2007 Google Scholar).

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47. For the copying of works in the Hermitage, see Mikats, O. V., Kopirovanie v Ermitazhe kak shkola masterstva russkikh khudozhnikov XWII-XfX w. (St. Petersburg, 1996).Google Scholar

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54. See Carol Adlam, “Realist Aesthetics in Nineteenth-Century Russian Art Writing,“ Slavonic and East European Review 83, no. 4 (October 2005): 638-63. This paragraph of my text is indebted to Carol Adlam's research.

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59. The National Gallery in London admitted the general public from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. from Monday to Thursday and was open by special arrangement to art students on Fridays and Saturdays. See Pomeroy, “Creating a National Collection,” 47.

60. Volkonskaia, “Proekt Esteticheskogo muzeia,” 397.

61. Ibid., 397.

62. I. Tsvetaev, “Pamiati kniagini Z. A. Volkonskoi,” Moskovskie vedomosti 84 (1898): 4.

63. Ibid., 4.

64. For the celebrated collections of the Russian diplomat Anatolii Nikolaevich Demidov at his villa of San Donato near Florence, see Francis Haskell and Robert Wenley, Analole Demidoff, Prince of San Donato (1812-70) (London, 1994). It is unclear whether this was the Anatolii Demidov whom Volkonskaia approached.

65. Quoted in Belozerskaia, “Kniaginia Zinaida Aleksandrovna Volkonskaia,” 144.

66. Quoted ibid., 144-45.

67. Tsvetaev, “Pamiati kniagini Z. A. Volkonskoi,” 4.

68. Quoted in Belozerskaia, “Kniaginia Zinaida Aleksandrovna Volkonskaia,” 143.

69. Quoted in Tsvetaev, “Pamiati kniagini Z. A. Volkonskoi,” 4.

70. For early accounts of the Rumiantsev Museum and its move from St. Petersburg to Moscow, see Lisovskii, N. M., “Opisanie Rumiantsevskogo muzeia,Rossiiskaia bibliografiia 86 (1881)Google Scholar; and Stasov, V V., “Rumiantsevskii muzei: Istoriia ego perevoda iz Peterburga v Moskvu,Russkaia starina 37 (1883): 87116 Google Scholar. For the rise of public galleries in Russia in general, see Gray, Russian Genre Painting, 24-41.

71. Tsvetaev believed the first practical outcome of Volkonskaia's project was the sculpture department at Moscow University, which was established when Professor P. M. Leont'ev bought various busts and plaster casts for the university in the mid-1850s. The Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts, however, was the fullest realization of Volkonskaia's idea. See Tsvetaev, “Pamiati kniagini Z. A. Volkonskoi,” 4.

72. For the development of Tret'iakov's collection of Russian paindng, which he began in 1856 and donated to the city of Moscow in 1892, see S. N. Gol'dshtein, “P. M. Tret'iakov i ego sobiratel'skaia deiatel'nost',” in Bruk, ed., Gosudarstvennaia Tret'iakovskaia galereia, 57-122; Griaznov, A., Pochetnyi grazhdanin Moskvy: Stranitsy zhizni Pavla Mikhaibvicha Tret'iakova (Moscow, 1982)Google Scholar; Nenarokomova, I. S., Pavel Tret'iakov i ego galereia (Moscow, 1994)Google Scholar; Botldna, A. P., Pavel Mikhailovich Tret'iakov v zhizni iiskusstve (Moscow, 1995)Google Scholar; John O. Norman, “Pavel Tredakov (1832-98): Merchant Patronage and the Russian Realists” (PhD diss., Indiana University, 1989); and John O. Norman, “Pavel Tredakov and Merchant Art Patronage, 1850-1900,” in Edith Clowes, W., Kassow, Samuel D., and West, James L., eds., Between Tsar and People: Educated Society and the Quest for Public Identity in Late Imperial Russia (Princeton, 1991), 93107.Google Scholar

73. John Eisner and Roger Cardinal, eds., The Cultures of Collecting (London, 1994), 2.

74. Duncan and Wallach, “The Universal Survey Museum,” 64.

75. Dianina, “The Museum and the Nation,” 42.

76. See Vazquez, Oscar E., Inventing the Art Collection: Patrons, Markets, and the State in Nineteenth-Century Spain (University Park, 2001), 6.Google Scholar

77. Here I am indebted to Peter Vergo's observations in The New Museology, in which he writes: “Museums make certain choices determined by judgements as to value, significance or monetary worth, judgements which may derive in part from the system of values peculiar to the institution itself, but which in a more profound sense are also rooted in our education, our upbringing, our prejudices… . Every acquisition …, every juxtaposition or arrangement of an object or work of art… means placing a certain construction upon history.” See Vergo, “Introduction,” in Vergo, ed., The New Museology, 2-3.