Picture of author.

A. Kenneth Snowman (1919–2002)

Author of Carl Faberge: Goldsmith to the Imperial Court of Russia

10 Works 284 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: A. Ken Snowman, Kenneth A. Snowman

Image credit: Kenneth Snowman (r.) with Bing Crosby, from Wartski.com

Works by A. Kenneth Snowman

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1919-07-26
Date of death
2002-07-09
Gender
male
Education
St. Martin's School of Art
Byam Shaw School
Birthplace
London, England, UK
Place of death
London, England, UK
Associated Place (for map)
London, England, UK

Members

Reviews

6 reviews
This was my all time favourite in college. I was in love with what Faberge did to amalgamate artisan traditions and metallurgy from Medieval and Baroque times to achieve an advanced cosmopolitan style that captivated the imaginations of Tsars and Tsarinas and nobility for generations. I theorized though how that subjugated the once noble artisan to a systematized 'manufacturing' and retailing process and came to symbolize the tyranny of the bureaucracy against the once mighty and creative show more individual, contributing to the Marxist/Leninist experiment to fix that problem, and the ironic symbolism of Faberge for a failed narrative of the theocratically ordained imperial monarchy that had to eat its own breakfast after 2 millennia. I wrote my senior thesis on that for Art History. Loved every minute of it. show less
This book has plenty of interesting information in the text, particularly if you're looking for something on the more technical side of things, but it's real value is in the pictures. While sometimes the captions described an interior I wished I could see but couldn't and the scale was often hard to establish, there is still a gluttony of fantastic workmanship to feast your eyes on and seeing these pieces does more to illustrate the material wealth and decadence of Imperialist Russia than show more any amount of textbook passages or facts and figures could. show less
The pictures are wonderful but sometimes wish that they were larger or more detailed. That being said the text is good and the author goes into very great detail in regards to each of the items pictured. If your looking for very detailed information on pieces this would be a good book, for just reading not as much. Great to just flip through and look at the pictures though.
This book covers the biographies and describes the workshops of famous jewelers including Castellani, Lalique, Tiffany, Verdura, Boucheron and Bulgari whose stunning works were sought after by the rich and famous. The only but significant disappointment was the photography and layout style - dark backgrounds on full page photos gave this book a heavy ponderous look.

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Statistics

Works
10
Members
284
Popularity
#82,066
Rating
4.1
Reviews
5
ISBNs
15
Languages
2

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