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Art critic Andrew Graham-Dixon finds out how royal collecting has changed since the days of Queen Victoria.

In this programme Art critic Andrew Graham-Dixon finds out how royal collecting has changed since the days of Queen Victoria. This is a story of the British monarchy's remarkable survival, while elsewhere the crown heads of Europe crumbled in the face of world wars and revolutions. But it is also an age when women took charge of royal collecting; from Victoria to Elizabeth II, queens and queen consorts have used art to steady the ship of monarchy during this uncertain age. It's one of the curiosities of the Royal Collection that as the monarchy's power diminished, so too did the objects they collected. Gone were epic canvases, instead came objects of exquisite, delicate and intimate beauty. Andrew marvels at a selection of the royal family's collection of Faberge jewellery - one of the greatest in the world - that includes the Mosaic Egg from 1914. So taken were Edward VII and his wife Queen Alexandria with the works of Peter Carl Faberge, that the jeweller opened a London shop to service the demands of royal clientele. And then there's Queen Mary's Dolls' House - presented to George V's queen to thank her for her steadfastness during the first world war, the Dolls' House is an astonishing artistic collaboration by over 1,500 people and companies, replete with books containing new stories by authors like Arthur Conan Doyle, tiny champagne bottles filled with real champagne and even mini shotguns that can be broken, loaded and fired. More than just a dolls' house, this is a three-dimensional archive of a vanished artistic age.

23 minutes

Last on

Fri 20 Aug 2021 07:30GMT

Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter Andrew Graham-Dixon
Expert Caroline de Guitaut
Expert Sophie Gordon
Expert Kathryn Jones
Expert Kajal Meghani
Expert Rosie Razzall
Interviewed Guest Jonathan Marsden
Interviewed Guest HRH The Prince of Wales
Executive Producer Judith Winnan
Series Producer Sebastian Barfield
Director Sebastian Barfield
Editor Stuart Davies
Editor Natasha Martin
Production Manager Kate Horvath
Production Manager J Ruth Stevens
Production Coordinator Sam Haines
Colourist Blair Wallace
On-line editing Jon Ramsey

Broadcasts