- National
- Czech & Slovak
- Museum & Library
- Cedar Rapids, Iowa
- Media Kit:
- Bohemian Garnets:
- Exquisite Artistry from the National Museum in Prague.
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
- February 18, 2005
- CONTACT: Jan Stoffer, National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library, 30 - 16th Ave. SW, Cedar Rapids, IA 52404. 319-362-8500 or jan@NCSML.org
Bohemian Garnets Have a Long, Sentimental History for Local Czechs
CEDAR RAPIDS, IAFor their current special exhibition, Bohemian Garnets: Exquisite Artistry from the National Museum in Prague, the National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library decided to include an American touch. Museum members, volunteers, and supporters were invited to include their heirloom garnet pieces by loaning them to the museum for the exhibition.
Among the most unusual pieces submitted was a garnet pin in the shape of a beetle. The owner, Anne Naibert Buchacek remembers that her Aunt Viola Naibert Elesenbast wore this "ugly pin" constantly when Anne was a child. Years later, as an adult, Anne learned that the pin had been given to Viola in 1909, when she was 2-years-old. Her father, Wencel Frank Naibert, bought the pin in Bohemia for his young daughter. According to Buchacek, little Violas mother was "furious that he had selected such a gift for a little girl."
Another story is that of a very special garnet necklace smuggled into the United States by Marie Hanefel Mishak. Afraid someone would steal it, she kept it safely hidden in her bra during her 1892 ocean voyage. Marie and her family arrived in Cedar Rapids, where Maries father went on to work at the Sinclair Packinghouse. Maries daughter, Antionette Misak Rozek, had earrings made from the necklace. She is remembered for wearing the set on very special occasions and Christmas Day. Referred to by the lender as the "family jewels," the earrings were passed from mother to daughter. They now belong to Maries great-granddaughter Joan Mosel.
All of these garnets, along with 370 garnet encrusted pieces, may be seen at the National Czech & Slovak Museum & Librarys special exhibition, Bohemian Garnets: Exquisite Artistry from the National Museum in Prague from March 4 September 25, 2005. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Sunday, noon to 4:00 p.m. After May 1st, the exhibit will also be open on Mondays, 9:30 4:00.
The National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library is the leading United States institution collecting, exhibiting, preserving, and interpreting Czech and Slovak history and culture. The National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library is located at 30 16th Avenue SW, Cedar Rapids, IA. For more information, call (319) 362-8500 or visit the museum web site, www.NCSML.org.
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
- February 17, 2005
- CONTACT: Jan Stoffer, National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library, 30 - 16th Ave. SW, Cedar Rapids, IA 52404. 319-362-8500 or jan@NCSML.org
Bohemian Garnets Long and Rich Mythical History
CEDAR RAPIDS, IA The latest blockbuster exhibition at the National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library, Bohemian Garnets: Exquisite Artistry from the National Museum in Prague, chronicles the history of the Bohemian garnet, starting with its first mention during the era of the Migration of Peoples in the early Middle Ages (roughly 500 to 1450).
Cut gemstones first appeared in Prague in the late-Gothic period (late 1500s). The Bohemian garnet found its way into stone-carving and jewelry-making due to its alleged healing properties. In the Roman Catholic Church, garnets symbolized the drops of blood of holy martyrs. These examples of the mythology are especially associated with the early items made of Bohemian garnets. They are also found in rustic homemade, religious jewelry such as amulets related to folk healing and for christening and pilgrimage souvenirs and rosaries, and in sentimental jewelry, like medallions with portraits of the owners loved ones.
This is the first exhibition of garnets to travel abroad from the National Museum in Prague. It features over 370 Bohemian garnet-adorned objects spanning six centuries - the 16th to 21st century. The once-in-a-lifetime exhibition features thousands of garnets set in jewelry, personal accessories, religious objects, souvenirs, and sentimental objects, accompanied by period paintings, drawings, prints, statues and period clothing.
The oldest items on exhibit are garnet rosaries and penitential crosses, with scenes of the Passion of Christ in garnets. Designed and hand-made by monks, these objects demonstrate a high level of goldsmithing and craftsmanship. Among the rare pieces included in the exhibit is a Renaissance period (1450-1600) garnet-embroidered chasuble, which is a sleeveless outer garment worn by priests for important church ceremonies, religious chalices, and two rare medallion-clasps with silver-filigreed garnets from Jesuit coats from the Baroque period (1600-1750).
The core of the exhibition consists of groups of jewelry (both sets and individual pieces) and personal accessories, such as combs, picture frames and medallions dating from the late 18th century to the 19th century. In this time period, the numerous domestic mining companies and grinding plants in central Bohemia led to the first boom of the garnet-processing industry. The jewelry they produced included multiple strands of garnet beads, bracelets, crosses, earrings, combs with diadems, and finger rings, featuring fine quality-cut garnets, often set with rock crystals, citrines, agates, lapis lazuli or pearls.
The rustic artisan-made garnet jewelry of the 1800s was worn by rural inhabitants and less affluent townsfolk alike. Frames for coins, medals, medallions and lockets, chains, crosses and rings, jewels affixed to clothing accessories (bonnets, clasps, hooks, buckles and buttons) and other fancy goods worn and used by these people may also be found in the exhibition.
In the 1880s, garnet jewelry became a mass-production industry, and a broad choice of designs was required for its commercial success. The manufacture and distribution of garnet jewelry was found in large companies employing dozens of men and women, using machine-pressed metal settings for the garnets. New designs and some old designs were placed on the market for even as long as fifty years, like brooches and medallions that hold a photographic portrait.
The exhibition also features the modernist, avant-garde and retrospective styles of the 20th century. Unlike the ornate settings of traditional pieces, avant-garde jewelry designs used simple of geometric forms and cut stones. These patterns have been modified and adapted to fit changing fashion taste, and are still used today. Two contemporary pieces were designed and loaned by Vladimir Komnacky, one of the top Czech jewelers today.
The National Czech & Slovak Museum & Librarys special exhibition, Bohemian Garnets: Exquisite Artistry from the National Museum in Prague from March 4 September 25, 2005. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Sunday, noon to 4:00 p.m. After May 1st, the exhibit will also be open on Mondays, 9:30 4:00 p.m. The National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library is the leading United States institution collecting, exhibiting, preserving, and interpreting Czech and Slovak history and culture. The National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library is located at 30 16th Avenue SW, Cedar Rapids, IA. For more information, call (319) 362-8500 or visit the museum web site, www.NCSML.org.
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
- February 1, 2005
- CONTACT: Jan Stoffer, National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library, 30 - 16th Ave. SW, Cedar Rapids, IA 52404. 319-362-8500 or jan@NCSML.org
- The Exquisite Artistry of Bohemian Garnets Seen Exclusively at the National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library
- Cedar Rapids, Iowa -- The National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library in Cedar Rapids, Iowa is proud to present the exclusive American showing of the stunning exhibition Bohemian Garnets: Exquisite Artistry from the National Museum in Prague. This is the first exhibition of garnets to travel abroad from the National Museum of the Czech Republic, whose collection is renowned as the largest and most comprehensive in the world.
- The once-in-a-lifetime exhibition features thousands of garnets set in 370 pieces of jewelry, personal accessories, religious objects, souvenirs, and sentimental objects, accompanied by period paintings, drawings, prints, statues and period clothing.
- Garnets mined in Bohemia are of the variety called pyrope (from the Greek words pyr for "fire" and ops for "eye"). Of a rare high quality found in Central Bohemia in the north of the Czech Republic, the Bohemian garnets color ranges from fiery-red to ruby-red, and its deep coloring is not lost even in the smallest, two-millimeter grains. This semi-precious gem is well known as the January birthstone.
- The most valuable and rare object in the exhibition is on loan from the Archbishop of Prague. A sensational discovery from the vaults of St. Nicholas Church in Prague, it is a Baroque monstrance made around 1722 that is encrusted with 386 garnets, 19 diamonds, and 135 rock crystals.
- Thanks to restoration funded by the National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library, the monstrance, which is used in special Roman Catholic ceremonies, will be on display to the public for the first time since the National Slavonic Exhibition in Prague in 1895. At nearly one meter tall, the curator from the National Museum, Dr. Dana Stehlíková (Stehlikova), believes it is quite likely the largest existing object decorated with Bohemian garnets. National Museum goldsmith Vladimir Cizkovsky completed the restoration work in Prague.
- In addition, the NCSML is planning a related exhibition of heirloom garnets owned by members and friends of the museum, as well as educational programming for the duration of the exhibition.
- The exhibition opens to the public on March 4, 2005 and closes on September 25, 2005. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Sunday, noon to 4:00 p.m. After May 1st, the exhibit will also be open on Mondays, 9:30 4:00. The National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library is the leading United States institution collecting, exhibiting, preserving, and interpreting Czech and Slovak history and culture. The National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library is located at 30 16th Avenue SW, Cedar Rapids, IA. For more information, call (319) 362-8500 or visit the museum web site, www.NCSML.org.
- Note to editors: Vladimir Cizkovsky, the goldsmith who restored the monstrance will be here to install the exhibition with curator Dana Stehlíková from the National Museum in Prague. To arrange an interview, please call Jan at (319) 362-8500.
Image Gallery - Bohemian Garnets: Exquisite Artistry from the National Museum in Prague
For a high-resolution image, go here.
Bracelet with Almandines, Circa 1920 After the end of World War I, modern trends were rapidly introduced into jewelry production. These tendencies were evoked by the altered lifestyle and joyful, carefree way of living in a thriving economic context. Afternoon social gatherings such as cocktail parties called for appropriate attire and jewelry. Whereas evening gatherings demanded refined elegance, afternoon parties featured exuberant colors and forms of adornment. Cocktail jewelry frequently displayed prominent central stones or cluster jewels, often in sparkling pastel colors.
For a high-resolution image, go here.
Brooch from the late 19th Century This brooch dates from the third quarter of the 19th century. Garnet jewelry was essentially mass-produced by this time and a broad choice of designs were required for commercial success. From the 1880s the manufacture and distribution of such jewelry was predominately concentrated in large enterprises employing dozens of men and women workers. This created mass-produced machine pressed metal settings and garnets.
For a high-resolution image, go here.
- Brooch with Pearls, late 19th Century
- Another example of the mass produced items typical of the Bohemian garnet. The appearance of such articles in northern Italian or German collections may well have been the result of foreign trade activities of Czech garnet dealers who annually showed their products at European trade fairs and branches abroad.
For a high-resolution image, go here.
Earrings 1910 This Art Nouveau style first appeared in individual creations of designers rather than in industrial mass production. This type of manufacture was somewhat delayed, but the Art Nouveau mass produced designs were perpetuated that much longer, for example, in picture frames.
For a high-resolution image, go here.
Fan Brooch In the late 19th and Early 20th century, genre type animal figurines and attributes of daily life and civilization penetrated into garnet jewelry production. The garnet company owned by father and son Maxmilian and Moses Kersch in Prague, with branches in Carlsbad and Vienna, excelled in fashioning of such thematic ornaments. These items, boasting outstanding craftsmanship, were typically offered for sale to spa visitors as souvenirs. Its trademark KER attesting to the products exceptional mastery was stamped on every article. The firms activities came to a tragic end with Moses deportation to Terezín concentration camp in 1942.
For a high-resolution image, go here.
Mirror and Brush This mirror and brush demonstrate how everyday objects could easily be decorated with garnets. This brush set is wood inlaid with mother of pearl and garnets.
For a high-resolution image, go here.
Monstrance
- The most valuable and rare object in the exhibition is on loan from the Archbishop of Prague. A sensational discovery from the vaults of St. Nicholas Church in Prague, it is a Baroque monstrance made around 1722 that is encrusted with 386 garnets, 19 diamonds, and 135 rock crystals.
- Thanks to restoration funded by the National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library, the monstrance, which is used in special Roman Catholic ceremonies, will be on display to the public for the first time since the National Slavonic Exhibition in Prague in 1895. At nearly one meter tall, the curator from the National Museum, Dr. Dana Stehlíková (Stehlikova), believes it is quite likely the largest existing object decorated with Bohemian garnets. National Museum goldsmith Vladimir Cizkovsky completed the restoration work in Prague.
For a high-resolution image, go here.
Necklace, N and V Company 1910-1914 The last two decades prior to the establishment of an independent Czechoslovakia were characterized in a jewelry and medal-making, apart from Art Nouveau motifs, by themes of Czech national symbols, most often linden leaves, the Bohemian royal crown, and laurel sprigs entwined by the tricolor. The creators of this necklace opted for a modest design with simple forms. Although their names have not been established with certainty, the quality of craftsmanship and the period in which this piece was made brings to mind two master artists, Josef Ladislav Nemec and Pavel Vávra, as possible artists.
For a high-resolution image, go here.
Round Brooches Late 19th Century These two brooches, one featuring a comet and the other an Easter egg were made in the third quarter of the 19th century. The star of Bethlehem became a popular garnet jewelry emblem in the late 19th century. The garnets fiery color and luster evoke the brilliance of a flying comet. In the early 20th century, Halleys Comet excited the world and became popular in the garnet industry.
For a high-resolution image, go here.
Three Pectoral Crosses, 1830-c. 1910 Together with medallions, garnet crosses were among the most popular garnet inlaid ornaments of the latter half of the 18th century and throughout the 19th century. These adornments were not worn only by elderly women and widows. In a painting by Josef Mánes, a cross is depicted on the neck of Veruna Cudová, the artists model from the Haná region. A cross may be seen in the décolletage of a gown worn by Austrian Empress Elisabeth, not to mention the larger-sized relic crosses suspended on the chests of priests as their official insignia. The Roman Catholics formed the majority of Czech society, and by means of their garnet crosses they expressed their piety, as well as a high degree of aesthetic taste.
For a high-resolution image, go here.
Writing Set This set of writing implements was given to attorney and national revivalist J. L. Rieger, Prague in 1898.
For a high-resolution image, go here.
Bracelet On loan from an anonymous lender.
For a high-resolution image, go here.
Butterfly Pin On loan from an anonymous lender.
For a high-resolution image, go here.
Cross On loan from an anonymous lender.
For a high-resolution image, go here.
Crown Pin On loan from an anonymous lender.
- Exhibit Hours
- November 1 April 30
- Tuesday Saturday: 9:30 4:00
- Sunday: Noon - 4:00
- Monday: Closed
- Exhibit Admission
- Admission is FREE to members!
- $7.00 for adults, $6.00 for seniors and large groups, $2.00 for children 5-16 years old. Children under 5 with an adult companion are admitted free. All children free on Sundays when accompanied by an adult.
- Reservations are encouraged for groups of ten or more. Call 319-362-8500 to make reservations.
- Accessibility
- The museum is handicapped accessible and has convenient, free parking.
Bohemian Garnet Sponsors
The National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library recognizes the generosity of those donors who made Bohemian Garnets: Exquisite Artistry from the National Museum in Prague possible.
Gold Level
Rockwell Collins
Linn County Board of Supervisors - Witwer Trust
Silver Level
CRST International Inc, (Donor Advised Fund of the Greater Cedar Rapids Community Foundation)
Leora Zahorik
Bronze Level
Elaine Heral Andre, in memory of her parents, Milo & Lillian Heral
Lloyd and Joan Baird
David H. & Rose Marie (Dryml) Burke
Bernard & Shirley Drahozal
Don & Irene Naxera Hamous
David & Chris Kubicek
Marlene Miller Schrimper, in memory of Vernon L. Schrimper
Donald & Esther Vorel
Crystal Level
Blanche Bartizal Babcock and Henrietta Bartizal Pons, in memory of their mother Henrietta Skala Bartizal
Lenore Filip
Terry & Carey Downs Gibson
George and Louise Kalous
E. Wayne & Ann Scott
Robert and Rita Tomanek, in memory of George, Blanche, and Edward Svoboda
- The National Czech & Slovak Museum & Library
- 30 - 16th Avenue SW, Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52404-5904
- Phone: 319-362-8500 · Fax: 319-363-2209
- This page was updated July 31, 2007