20
May 2027

The Imperial Easter Eggs of Carl Fabergé - After the Revolution

Welcome to The Arts Society Stirling and Forth Valley
Thursday, May 20, 2027 - 10:45 to 12:15
Albert Halls, Albert Place
Dumbarton Road Stirling FK8 2LQ
Online Event

This lecture charts the story of Faberge Imperial Eggs.

Follows the story of the Fabergé Imperial Easter Eggs from their disappearance in the Revolution and subsequent deep unfashionability to their current status as one of the world's great collectables.

Between 1885 and 1916, Carl Fabergé made fifty jewelled eggs – Easter presents from Russia’s last two emperors to their wives. Since the brutal murder of the last tsar and his family in a Siberian basement, these eggs have become the most famous surviving symbols of the Romanov Empire: both supreme examples of the jeweller’s art and the vulgar playthings of a decadent court. 

THE ARTS SOCIETY ACCREDITED LECTURER

Mr Toby Faber

Toby is an experienced lecturer and public speaker who has been accredited by The Arts Society since 2012. His career began with Natural Sciences at Cambridge and has been through investment banking, management consulting and five years as managing director of the publishing company founded by his grandfather, Faber and Faber, where he remains on the board. He is also non-executive Chairman of its sister company, Faber Music and a director of Liverpool University Press.

Toby has written three narrative histories: Stradivarius – Five Violins, One Cello and a GeniusFaberge’s Eggs; and Faber & Faber – The Untold Story, as well as a novel, Close to the Edge. Of these, only the obvious one is published by the family firm.