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Namespace Prefixes

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Statements

Subject Item
n5:2effbf5b-b546-5c29-ac44-dbc312481287
rdf:type
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ecrm:P65_shows_visual_item
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n2:69772c47-210b-3ac0-9562-0fd9f151e1d3
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n10:743
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n2:69772c47-210b-3ac0-9562-0fd9f151e1d3
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0.5557
Subject Item
n2:69772c47-210b-3ac0-9562-0fd9f151e1d3
rdf:type
ecrm:E22_Man-Made_Object
rdfs:label
1801 / 1850, Russia
rdfs:comment
This object is from the collection of Natalia de Shabelsky (1841-1905), a Russian noblewoman compelled to preserve what she perceived as the vanishing folk art traditions of her native country. Traveling extensively throughout Great Russia, she collected many fine examples of textile art of the wealthy peasant class. From the 1870s until moving to France in 1902, Shabelsky amassed a large collection of intricately embroidered hand-woven household textiles and opulent festival garments with rich decoration and elaborate motifs. The Brooklyn Museum holdings include many fine examples including the majority of the garments. Portions of Shabelsky's collection are also housed at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the Cleveland Art Museum, and the Russian Museum of Ethnography in St. Petersburg.The highly complex embroidery composition and technique is representative of the quality of Russian handwork. Particularly intriguing is the repeat stylized plant motif. The forms used to define it are used in both imperial eagle and goddess motifs, and could in fact be a merging of these two designs. This is a good example of how a culture's design vocabulary is filtered and changed throughout generations.
owl:sameAs
n14:158362
dc:identifier
2009.300.3425
ecrm:P3_has_note
This object is from the collection of Natalia de Shabelsky (1841-1905), a Russian noblewoman compelled to preserve what she perceived as the vanishing folk art traditions of her native country. Traveling extensively throughout Great Russia, she collected many fine examples of textile art of the wealthy peasant class. From the 1870s until moving to France in 1902, Shabelsky amassed a large collection of intricately embroidered hand-woven household textiles and opulent festival garments with rich decoration and elaborate motifs. The Brooklyn Museum holdings include many fine examples including the majority of the garments. Portions of Shabelsky's collection are also housed at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the Cleveland Art Museum, and the Russian Museum of Ethnography in St. Petersburg.The highly complex embroidery composition and technique is representative of the quality of Russian handwork. Particularly intriguing is the repeat stylized plant motif. The forms used to define it are used in both imperial eagle and goddess motifs, and could in fact be a merging of these two designs. This is a good example of how a culture's design vocabulary is filtered and changed throughout generations.
ecrm:P43_has_dimension
n4:2 n4:1
ecrm:P65_shows_visual_item
n10:743 n10:745
ecrm:P138i_has_representation
n8:9197e2f0-21e0-357f-aa12-016ccaa112d7 n8:e1d82304-4a9d-3963-968b-a4b249555f79 n8:8f5f45ab-ff63-3450-b919-93a014ec76ab
ecrm:P102_has_title
1801 / 1850, Russia