The Dutch House. Dreams of Peter the Great by Kvorning
Biennale of Museum Design presents The Dutch House. Dreams of Peter the Great designed by Kvorning Design & Communication
“The Dutch House. Dreams of Peter the Great” invites you to enter Peter the Great’s assumed dream about the Netherlands. Surreal images based on the collection of the Peterhof State Museum “pin” the events and objects that the great reformer could have dreamt of. They were embodied in the real life of the Emperor, becoming a phenomenon of cultural import and a part of Peterhof history.
The exhibition is designed by Arne Kvorning, Kvorning Design & Communication (Denmark), and prepared in cooperation with the Peterhof museum, “Pro Arte” Foundation as part of St. Petersburg Biennale of Museum Design and supported by the St. Petersburg Committee for Culture, Consulate General of the Netherlands in St. Petersburg and Danish Cultural Institute.
The Dutch House. Dreams of Peter the Great runs from December 1st, 2018 to March 31st, 2019
The Dreams of Peter the Great
Peter the First had a habit of writing down his dreams or dictating them to his secretary. The great reformer’s dreams were odd, dramatic, and full of emblems and allegories, the key to them being the baroque culture and the philosophies of the early 18th century. They are so far from today’s realities, sentiment and the modern way of thinking, that one is unlikely to have them in our day. But, more importantly, behind the night visions one can guess the outlines of the aspirations of awake Peter, the nature of his intentions and the scale of his imagination.
In the string of Tsar’s dreams with intricately woven plots there are Dutch themes and the images of Amsterdam. Tsar’s unconscious “return” to the Netherlands is not an accident. The Dutch impressions can be traced in almost all Peter’s endeavors regardless of their nature and direction. The practical, pragmatic country won his heart back when he was young. Much of what Peter the Great saw and learned in the Netherlands was reproduced in Peterhof, the main summer residence of the Russian Emperor.
Monplaisir Palace was built in the style of the 18th century Dutch architecture. Dutch principles of palace layout and interior design, collections of European and Oriental art brought by the royal couriers from the Netherlands, the finest specimens of art industry, and finally, majestic gardens and parks largely gratified the Dutch tastes of the Tsar — all of them make an integral part of the many faces of Peterhof.