Roll-top desk, Neuwied,
Germany, circa 1770. Abraham and David Roentgen. Wood,
marquetry, mother-of-pearl.
WASHINGTON, D.C. - Hillwood Museum and Gardens, the former estate
of visionary collector, philanthropist and businesswoman Marjorie
Merriweather Post, has recently reopened, following an extensive
three-year renovation of the museum. The revitalized estate now
provides a superior showcase for Hillwood's world-class
collections, including an improved museum-quality environment,
renewed plantings and restored sculpture in the surrounding
gardens and enhanced public facilities.
One of the premier house museums in this country, Hillwood is the
legacy of Postum Cereal Company heiress Marjorie Merriweather
Post (1887-1973) and features her renowned personal collection of
fine and decorative arts. The museum includes the most
comprehensive collection of Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century
Russian imperial art outside of Russia, as well as one of the
world's most important collection of Eighteenth Century French
decorative arts.
The newly renovated museum also features several important new
acquisitions, including a Vienna, Du Paquier Period cup and
saucer set (1730-1735) from the "Tsar's Service," which served as
a model for the designers at the Imperial Porcelain Factory in
the following decades and was one of the earliest truly European
styles of decorating porcelain. Also acquired were three
elaborately embroidered miters (Nineteenth and Twentieth Century)
worn by bishops when performing the holy liturgy; a 1930s
inkstand from Natalia Dan'ko's Discussion of the Draft Stalin
Constitution in Uzbekistan desk set, which is among the most
significant and monumental of the artist's desk sets and was
designed and produced in the years Post lived in Russia; and a
major collection of 300 rare Russian books devoted to the history
of decorative arts in the context of Russian imperial culture; in
particular icon painting, which demonstrates the scope of art
historical scholarship in pre-Revolutionary Russia.
Post was a pioneering collector who assembled Russian imperial
works of art long before they were widely recognized or
appreciated in the West, and she acquired the nucleus of her
superb collection while living in Russia in the late 1930s. The
care and passion with which she selected each piece demonstrate
her insight as well as her great love and enthusiasm for Russian,
as well as French culture. She was especially interested in the
decorative and applied arts, including porcelain, glass, jeweled
objects, textiles and furniture selected for their beauty, superb
craftsmanship, historical importance and overall contribution to
the context of the collection.
Nuptial crown worn by Empress Alexandra in her wedding to Tsar
Nicholas II, St Petersburg, 1884. Silver, diamonds, velvet.
"Marjorie Merriweather Post was one of America's great collectors
of fine and decorative arts who chose to create a museum out of
her home, like Isabella Stewart Gardener, Henry C. Frick or Henry
du Pont," said Frederick J. Fisher, director of the Hillwood
Museum and Gardens. "Mrs Post, who was schooled early in her
collecting career by leading art dealers including Sir Joseph
Duveen, was a knowledgeable and passionate collector and
philanthropist who devoted her life to sharing her treasures and
good fortune with others."
Highlights of the Russian collection at Hillwood include an 1884
diamond crown worn by Empress Alexandra at her marriage to
Nicholas II; a comprehensive collection of approximately 80 works
by Carl Faberge, including two imperial Easter eggs; a gold
chalice with diamonds and carved stones by I.W. Buch; delicate
imperial porcelain and ormolu vases depicting painted scenes in a
contemporary Western style; and a selection of ornate Russian
Orthodox icons and religious objects.
The museum also features an extensive collection of French
furnishings, tapestries and porcelain, primarily from the
Eighteenth Century, including furniture by such masters as
Jean-Henri Riesener and David Roetgen; numerous pieces of famed
Sevres porcelain spanning the early years of manufacture at
Vincennes to the time of the French Revolution; objets d'art by
Louis Cartier; and spectacular Beauvais tapestries designed by
Francois Boucher that later inspired works by Faberge and Sevres.
Among the most notable paintings at Hillwood are "The Duchess of
Parma and Her Daughter Isabelle" (1750) by French portrait
painter Jean-Marc Nattier; the monumental "Portrait of Catherine
II" (circa 1788) attributed to Dmitrii Grigor'evich Levitskii;
"Portrait of Empress Eugenie" (1857) by the German royal court
painter Franz Xavier Winterhalter; "La Nuit" (1883) by the
renowned Parisian academic artist William Adolphe Bougeureau and
Konstantin Makovskii's "A Boyar Wedding Feast" (1883), which
depicts the wedding of two families of the politically powerful
boyar class.
Catherine the Great Easter egg, St Petersburg, 1914. Carl
Faberge.
The renovation of Hillwood and improvements to the facilities
will serve to further enhance, emphasize and protect the
world-class collections carefully assembled by Post and will
enable Hillwood to meet the requirements of a modern-day museum.
Removal of the works from the house has enabled conservators and
curators to examine the interior finishes in detail to study
their history, and the majority of the surfaces have been
restored rather than replaced to respect the integrity of the
mansion. In addition, Hillwood's 12-acres of landscaped gardens
also have been improved, including new walkways that are fully
accessible to visitors with disabilities.
Marjorie Merriweather Post, Collector
Pioneer collector Marjorie Merriweather Post was the only child
of cereal magnate C.W. Post. She inherited the Postum Company in
1814 and began collecting art - primarily Sevres porcelain and
French furniture and tapestries - in the 1920s after her marriage
to financier Edward F. Hutton. In furnishing her 54-room
Manhattan apartment, she adopted her taste for French
Neo-classicism that was then fashionable in New York society.
Post became interested in Russian art when husband Joseph E.
Davies served as ambassador to the Soviet Union in the late
1930s. During these years, the Soviet government was selling many
of the treasures it had appropriated from the church, the
imperial family and the aristocracy in an effort to finance the
new government's industrialization plan. She acquired the nucleus
of her holding at this time, but she continued to collect French
and Russian art for the rest of her life, eventually amassing the
most comprehensive Russian imperial collection in the West.
Post bought Hillwood in 1955 and immediately decided her home
would be a museum that would educate and inspire the public.
Originally designed by John Diebert in 1926, the mansion was
extensively enlarged and redesigned in the mid 1950s by New York
architect Alexander McIlvaine and the New York design firms of
McMillen, Inc. and French and Company. Post lived at Hillwood,
named after a Long Island residence she owned for many years,
until she died in 1973.
The Hillwood Rooms
As Post intended, Hillwood's collections are exhibited and
enjoyed within the environment of historic Georgian-style estate,
while 25-acres of landscaped gardens and natural woodlands
provide an outdoor setting that complement the European manner of
the interior of the house. Throughout the 36 rooms of Hillwood,
Russian, French and other European objects are elegantly and
naturally displayed together.
The entry hall, for example, reflects the two great collecting
passions of Post. A large French chandelier or rock crystal is
surrounded by several portraits of Russian tsars and tsarinas,
including the stately portrait of Catherine the Great, attributed
to Levitzskii, as well as paintings by German artist Franz
Kruger. Two French wood marquetry, bronze and marble commodes
attributed to Riesener (circa 1775) are adorned with Russian
porcelain, including a pair of Nineteenth Century Imperial
Porcelain Factory vases decorated with brightly colored pigeons.
The adjacent Russian porcelain room is equipped with lighted wall
cabinets that feature pullout labels, underscoring Post's
interest in designing Hillwood as a future museum. On display are
special services commissioned for three of the Russian imperial
orders, porcelain dating back to 1744, an important Russian gilt
bronze chandelier, selections from the Imperial Glass Factory and
an inlaid marquetry floor made of 45 different varieties of
colors of wood.
The French drawing room, in the Louis XVI style, reflects Post's
first collecting passion. Prominently featured are three Beauvais
tapestries designed by Boucher, including the large "Italian
Festivals," along with two major portrait paintings - Nattier's
"The Duchess of Parma and Her Daughter of Parma and Her Daughter
Isabelle" and Winterhalter's "Portrait of Empress Eugenie." Also
on view are a fine selection of Sevres porcelain, vitrine filled
with ornate boxes and brooches by leading West European
goldsmiths, and an intricate roll-top desk by the German master
cabinetmaker David Roentgen, which includes secret drawers and
extending candle holders.
Bejeweled treasures of gold and silver are exhibited in the
hexagonal Icon Room, which is certainly Post's collector's
cabinet and the very heart of her collection. In the center of
the room, in a specially designed Faberge case, is the
magnificent diamond wedding crown worn by Alexandra Fedorovna,
Empress of Russia. Also displayed are Post's extensive collection
of works by Faberge, renowned jeweler to the last court of
Russia, including the large Catherine the Great enamel Easter egg
in gold, diamonds and pearls, which depicts allegorical scenes of
the arts and sciences based on paintings by Boucher, and an
Easter egg in gold and blue enamel with twelve diamond-studded
monograms that Nicholas II presented to his mother. The Icon Room
also features religious icons dating back to the Sixteenth
Century and an ebonized wood chest from St. Petersburg featuring
lavishly decorated gilt bronze panels inlaid with lapis lazuli.
The Pavilion, where Post once screened movies and held lively
square dancing parties for her guests, houses two important
Russian paintings - Makovskii's "A Boyar Wedding Feast" and Karl
Briullov's "Countess Samoilova and her Foster Daughter" (1832) -
that together depict two divergent streams of artistic production
and Russia's struggle for identity in the Nineteenth Century.
The former painting reflects Russia's nostalgia for traditions
favored before Peter the Great's westernization of the country
while the latter represents the major French influence on Russian
artistic style, which expressed Russia's desire to be a part of
the European mainstream.
The Pavilion also includes Italian mosaic tabletops and Russian
porcelain. The library, with newly restored carved paneling and
an Eighteenth Century Italian marble mantel, features
predominately English furniture and paintings, including
portraits of Post's father, C.W. Post, and mother Ella Letitia
Merriweather Post, as well as several Nineteenth Century English
coaching scenes.
In the French Regency style, the dining room is the showcase for
a dining table commissioned by Post for Mar-a-Lago (her former
home in Palm Beach) in 1927 from the mosaic works in Florence,
Italy. The table has six leaves and a mosaic top of 11 different
stones. On the wall are four large canvases depicting hunt scenes
by the Dutch master Dirk Langendijk. In the breakfast room, which
overlooks the gardens, hangs a chandelier in green glass and gilt
bronze, designed by Charles Cameron presumably for the Catherine
Palace at Tsarskoe Selo, where Catherine the Great resided.
Ecclesiastical objects in the newly named Russian Church
exhibition room - a former Post staff dining room - include
ornate robes of metallic brocade worn by priests and deacons of
the Russian Orthodox Church, embroidered altar cloths and the
recently acquired miters, candlesticks, several large icons, and
a gold chalice with diamonds and carved stones from a liturgical
set made by Iver Windfeldt Buch in 1791 and commissioned by
Catherine the Great.
Upstairs in Post's bedroom, also decorated in Louis XVI style, is
a large unfinished portrait of Post by Douglas Chandor, several
objects made of bloodstone (Post's birthstone) and a roll-top
mahogany and gilt-top desk stamped by Conrad Mauter. In the
dressing area adjacent to the bedroom, several of Post's elegant
ball gowns, hats, evening bags, and personal jewelry made of
diamonds and other precious stones will be displayed.
The second floor also includes the Adam Bedroom featuring
Wedgwood jasperware, the Second floor library with a whimsical
Chippendale card table and the English bedroom with a grand
Chippendale canopied bed.
Additionally, the Hillwood estate includes a Dacha designed like
a Russian peasant home, which holds a Russian art collection
donated by Madame Augusto Rosso in memory of her husband who was
the Italian ambassador to the Soviet Union in the 1930s, as well
as an Adirondack building with a collection of Native American
artifacts, which was bequeathed to the Smithsonian Institution by
Post and is on long-term loan.
Mansion and Garden Restoration and Renovation
During the renovation and restoration of the Hillwood mansion,
many works from the collection toured the United States, allowing
more than 250,000 visitors at eight museums across the country to
enjoy the collection. The remainder of the collection was
carefully stored on the estate to facilitate study and treatment
of all the chandeliers and picture frames, and the conservation
of select tapestries and furniture.
Extensive research was conducted to faithfully match damaged
fabrics with new replacements specially woven for the Pavilion
and the Icon Room, namely the wall covering by the renowned
designer Scalamandre that was meticulously recreated from the
original. The Front Hall's wall surface was treated to bring back
its original brilliant interior, and the Library's wood paneling
was cleaned to reveal the fine detail that had become obscured
over the years. A team of specialized craftsmen also restored the
mansion's intricately carved marquetry floors.
French drawing room.
In addition, a state-of-the-art lighting system was recessed into
the ceilings of several rooms; a new heating, cooling and
ventilation system and an enhanced security system were
installed; and the mansion's underground walls were waterproofed
to protect the foundation. Future plans also entail converting
the former museum shop, originally the residence of the head
butler, into an additional exhibition gallery.
Hillwood's landscaped gardens also have been restored, in
particular the elegant French parterre originally designed for
Post by the renowned landscape architects Umberto Innocenti and
Richard Webel. The parterre showed severe signs of degradation
and had to be rebuilt from the foundation up - a process that
involved countless hours of research, interview and excavations
of the existing garden.
The original Italian glass tile in the pool was replaced and the
graceful swan fountain was replicated in a more durable pink
marble rendered by noted local sculptor Constantine Seferlis.
Also, new limestone features and a drainage system were
installed, and the four parterres were replanted with the
original hedging boxwood and the same variety of azaleas, arbor
vitea, juniper and yew. In addition, various works of sculpture
and furniture throughout the gardens were refurbished or
recreated, including mahogany furniture custom made for Post that
was faithfully rebuilt and replaced. Additional plans are
underway to restore the Japanese style garden on the grounds.
Throughout the renovation process, the horticulture staff has
carefully maintained and rejuvenated all the trees and plantings,
taking great care to protect them from construction, particularly
the American elms on the south side of the house. Because many of
the specimens were planted more than 40 years ago, the staff has
implemented an ongoing preservation plan to renew old plant
specimens and restore botanical collections.
Hillwood Museum and Gardens is on 4155 Linnean Avenue. The
museum is open in January and from March through December on
Tuesdays through Saturdays, from 9 am to 5 pm and on select
evenings and Sundays. Admission is by reservation only. For
information, call 877/HILLWOOD or 202/686-8500. For reservations,
call 202/686-5807.