



Danish Palaces
Egg
Gold, enamel, sapphire, emeralds, diamonds, velvet, watercolour on
mother-of-pearl; h. 10.2, d. 6.7 cm
by House of Fabergé, Mikhail Perkhin, and Konstantin Krijitski,
1890
Metropolitan Museum of Art (Matilda Geddings Gray Foundation)
Photograph by
James Petts, 2019
This egg was given by Tsar Alexander III to his wife, Empress Maria
Feodorovna. Its exterior design features a pink-mauve enamelled
gold divided into twelve sections, adorned with rose-cut diamonds
and emeralds. Its surprise is a ten-panel folding gold screen made
of multicolour gold with watercolours on
mother-of-pearl, depicting
Danish palaces and royal yachts, and serving as a sentimental reminder
of her pre-marital life in Denmark. Originally part of the Imperial
collection, the egg's ownership shifted through various hands. It
was discovered amongst the collection of Matilda Geddings Gray in
1972, a year after her death in Louisiana, and it became part of the
Matilda Geddings Gray Foundation. In 1980, the egg, amongst others,
was stolen from an exhibition in Wisconsin, but was recovered soon
after. The egg is currently on long-term loan at the Metropolitan
Museum of Art.
