Peter Carl Fabergé, original name Karl Gustavovich Fabergé, (born May 30, 1846, St. Petersburg, Russia, died September 24, 1920, Lausanne, Switzerland), one of the greatest goldsmiths, jewelers, and designers in Western decorative art and jeweler to the Russian imperial court.
Of Huguenot descent and a son of a St. Petersburg jeweler, Fabergé was trained in St. Petersburg, Frankfurt, and Dresden, and he absorbed influences across western Europe with travels to Paris and London. He inherited his father’s business in 1870 and continued to manufacture jewelry and decorative objects while expanding the firm’s concentration to include furniture, functional objects, and, famously, objects of fancy.
Much of his work was inspired by the decorative arts executed under King Louis XVI of France, but the firm also drew from influences that included the traditional arts of Russia and Renaissance Italy as well as from the Rococo style. Some later pieces reflected the emerging Art Nouveau style. Fabergé’s workshop soon became famous for expertly crafted works including flowers, figure groups, bibelots, animals, and, above all, the celebrated imperial Easter eggs. His works were displayed in Moscow’s Pan-Russian Exhibition (1882), where he was awarded a gold medal, that helped to establish his reputation among Russian nobility. In 1885 Fabergé was appointed jeweler and goldsmith to the Russian imperial court. In all, 50 eggs were produced for the imperial family, and each included an element of surprise.
Between 1885 and 1917, Peter Carl Fabergé created a limited number of exclusive jeweled eggs for the Russian Tsars Alexander III and Nicholas II as gifts for their wives and mothers.
In the Christian faith, eggs symbolize the empty tomb and resurrection of Jesus—celebrating new life and new beginnings. The Hen Egg was an extravagant extension of the tradition of exchanging decorated eggs for Russian Orthodox Easter.
Today, I would like to tell about my top 10 favorite Faberge Eggs.
The Imperial Coronation Fabergé egg
2. The Catherine the Great Fabergé egg
3. The Renaissance Imperial Fabergé Egg
4. The Third Imperial Fabergé Egg
5. The Peter the Great Fabergé egg
6. The Bouquet of Lilies Clock Fabergé egg
7. The Rose Trellis Fabergé egg
8. The Diamond Trellis Fabergé egg
9. The Gatchina Palace Fabergé egg
10. The Rothschild Faberge Clock-Egg
Of the 50 Imperial eggs, only 43 are known to have survived. Five are believed to have been destroyed, while the whereabouts of the remaining two is unknown. In 2014 the existence of the long-lost Third Imperial Egg was publicly announced.