CHICHERIN
Patriarch’s Palace
Exhibition Hall of the
AND THE SOVIET
DIPLOMACY
2023
08.01.
2022
07.10.
ru
en
the
USSR
100th
:
Anniversary of the
CHICHERIN
Patriarch’s Palace
Exhibition Hall of the
AND THE SOVIET
DIPLOMACY
the 100th anniversary of the USSR:
2023
08.01.
2022
07.10.
ru
en
exhibition
exhibition
The exhibition, marking two important anniversaries – the 100th Anniversary of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and the 150th Anniversary of the brilliant diplomat, the first People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs of the USSR, Georgy Vasilievich Chicherin – brings together over eighty unique objects, most of which are presented to the public for the first time. The central place in the display is given to historical rarities from the collection of Moscow Kremlin Museums – the Red Army uniforms and presents from foreign delegations, which belonged to the legendary commissar identified as such as a result of recent research. Memorial items, as well as documents and photographs provided by the leading Russian archives, phaleristics artifacts, remarkable samples of agitation porcelain with revolutionary slogans, paintings, graphics and artistic metal from the Russian museum collections, tell about the life and work of G.V. Chicherin and about the turbulent and controversial era in which he was entrusted to be the leader of the Soviet Foreign Office. G.V. Chicherin is considered and rightly so as one of the founders of the modern Russian diplomacy. He was the People's Commissar for foreign affairs of the RSFSR and the USSR for twelve years (from 1918 to 1930) and took all the necessary steps to bring the young Soviet state out of political and economic isolation and to get it recognized by the world powers. It was G.V. Chicherin who participated in the Brest-Litovsk and Rapallo negotiations and in the work of the Genoa and Lausanne conferences, who had the honour of being the first to put his signature on behalf of the Soviet Union under the most important international documents.
On the 100th Anniversary of the USSR, it is worth remembering that G.V. Chicherin, who was a consistent advocate of the centralized model of foreign policy management, played a significant role in establishing the all-union People's Commissariat for Foreign Affairs. The letter of 1923 signed by Stalin – presented at the exhibition – makes a point of the direct and active participation of G.V. Chicherin in "working out" the first USSR Constitution as well.
It is indicative that the basic goals and guidelines of the Foreign Office, formulated by G. V. Chicherin in the Regulations on the People's Commissariat for Foreign Affairs of the USSR dated 12 November 1923, remained relevant throughout the existence of the Soviet Union, being replaced by the Regulations on the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs only at the very end of the 20th century.
which contemporaries could hardly imagine the Commissar was his briefcase for documents. Visitors will be the first to see G.V. Chicherin's black calico briefcase, which dates back to the pre-revolutionary period when the future Commissar lived in exile in Western Europe. We can assume that in 1922, in a similar briefcase, the head of the Soviet delegation brought the text of the keynote speech to the Genoa Conference, which he read in French and English in the hall of the Palazzo San Giorgio and which made a deep impression on the participants of the international forum. It was the first time the representative of the new Soviet government, addressing the global political elites, put forward the principle of peaceful coexistence and mutually beneficial economic cooperation between states with different social systems and declared the need for an overall reduction of armaments. One of the items on display is the draft of G.V. Chicherin's speech in Russian, along with photographs taken during the Soviet diplomats' trip to Genoa. As a joke Georgy Vasilievich Chicherin was referred to as "the head of the Orient faction in the People's Commissariat". The new foreign policy of the Soviet country indeed reckoned for active diplomatic relations with its Asian neighbours. In this connection, a special place is given to the group of oriental garments presented to G. V. Chicherin by the Asian delegations. Those gifts included a Bukhara robe, which the head of the People's Commissariat for Foreign Affairs wore during the official reception given for the delegation from Bukhara in 1924, and a Mongolian national robe, which replenished the Commissar's closet after he signed the agreement with the Mongolian People's Republic in 1921. In these fanciful oriental robes G.V. Chicherin appears on the photographs and rare documentary footage which are also on display. In the first post-revolutionary years, G.V. Chicherin succeeded in virtually re-forming the office of the People's Commissariat for Foreign Affairs and introduced into its activities both – the rich diplomatic experience of the past and new principles and approaches aimed at ensuring the security of the Soviet Union and protecting its interests.
On the 100th Anniversary of the USSR, it is worth remembering that G.V. Chicherin, who was a consistent advocate of the centralized model of foreign policy management, played a significant role in establishing the all-union People's Commissariat for Foreign Affairs. The letter of 1923 signed by Stalin – presented at the exhibition – makes a point of the direct and active participation of G.V. Chicherin in "working out" the first USSR Constitution as well. It is for the first time when the Moscow Kremlin Museums will show sets of uniforms of 1922-1924 model belonging to G.V. Chicherin: two soldier blouses, galifé pants and a greatcoat with sew-on buckle strips on chest. The great value of these items is due both to their commemorative significance and almost perfect condition, for only a few genuine examples of the Red Army uniform of the early 1920s have survived to this day. During official receptions in the Kremlin, the military uniform became a worthy alternative to the tails, tuxedo and top hat, which were stipulated by the norms of international protocol, but in Soviet Russia were associated with a hostile "bourgeoisie". Another indispensable attribute without
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The exhibition, marking two important anniversaries – the 100th Anniversary of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and the 150th Anniversary of the brilliant diplomat, the first People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs of the USSR, Georgy Vasilievich Chicherin – brings together over eighty unique objects, most of which are presented to the public for the first time. The central place in the display is given to historical rarities from the collection of Moscow Kremlin Museums – the Red Army uniforms and presents from foreign delegations, which belonged to the legendary commissar identified as such as a result of recent research.
Memorial items, as well as documents and photographs provided by the leading Russian archives, phaleristics artifacts, remarkable samples of agitation porcelain with revolutionary slogans, paintings, graphics and artistic metal from the Russian museum collections, tell about the life and work of G.V. Chicherin and about the turbulent and controversial era in which he was entrusted to be the leader of the Soviet Foreign Office.
PHOTo gallery
PHOTo gallery
Portrait of G.V. Chicherin
Portrait of G.V. Chicherin
Moscow (?), 1926. Artist – F.A. Modorov. Oil of cardboard. @State Tretiakov Gallery
Parade of the Red Army
Parade of the Red Army
1923. Artist – K.F. Yuon. Oil on canvas. @State Tretiakov Gallery
Order of Labour of Khoresm People's Soviet Republic
Order of Labour of Khoresm People's Soviet Republic
Khoresm People's Soviet Republic, 1922. Silver; enamel, stamp, engraving, gilding. Belonged to V.I. Lenin. @State Historical Museum
Greatcoat of an honoured cadet of the Higher Economic School of the Red Army
Greatcoat of an honoured cadet of the Higher Economic School of the Red Army
USSR, Moscow, 1922-24. Cloth, velvet, sateen, silver-gilt threads, silk threads; weaving, embroidery, appliqué. Belonged to the People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs of the USSR G.V. Chicherin. @The Moscow Kremlin Museums
Chess
Chess "The Red and the White"
USSR, Petrograd (St. Petersburg), State Porcelain Factory, 1923 (after the 1922 model). Author – N.Ya. Danko; painter – A.A. Skvortsov. Porcelain; casting, overglaze painting. Belonged to M.I. Kalinin. @State Central Museum of Contemporary History of Russia
Sculpture
Sculpture "Appeal from the East"
RSFSR, Petrograd (St. Peterburg), State Porcelain Factory, 1922 (after the 1920 model). Author of the model – N.Ya. Danko Porcelain; overglaze painting, gilding, burnishing with agate. @State Historical Museum
Cigarette case
Cigarette case
USSR, Moscow Platinum Factory, 1924. Silver; stamp, chasing, gilding. @The Moscow Kremlin Museums
Crape band on the occasion of V.I. Lenin's death
Crape band on the occasion of V.I. Lenin's death
USSR, Moscow, 1924. Cotton, paint; weaving, stencil screen printing. @State Central Museum of Contemporary History of Russia
Half-watt lamp of 1000 candle-power with a glow filament shaped as V.I. Lenin's silhouette
Half-watt lamp of 1000 candle-power with a glow filament shaped as V.I. Lenin's silhouette
RSFSR, Moscow, 1922. Glass, metal; blowing, mounting. @State Central Museum of Contemporary History of Russia
Robe
Robe
Khanate of Bukhara, Bukhara, early 20th c. Bekasab, cotton fabric, ribbon; weaving, printing. Presented to the People's Commissar for Foreign Affairs of the USSR G.V. Chicherin from the Bukhara delegation in 1921.
Telegraph printer of Morse system #66225
Telegraph printer of Morse system #66225
Russian Empire, Joint-stock Company of Russian Electrotechnical Plants of "Siemens and Halske", 1914. Wood, metal, glass, paint, varnish; casting, stamp. A telegram from K.E. Voroshilov to V.I. Lenin about taking Ekaterinoslav City was transmitted via this device on 30 December 1918. @State Central Museum of Contemporary History of Russia
Plate with the inscription No Work is No Food and V.I. Lenin's portrait
Plate with the inscription No Work is No Food and V.I. Lenin's portrait
RSFSR, Petrograd (St. Petersburg), State Porcelain Factory, 1922; porcelain – Russian Empire, St. Petersburg, Imperial Porcelain Factory, 1904. Author of the composition – M.M. Adamovich. V.I. Lenin’s portrait made after the drawing of I.I. Altman. Porcelain; overglaze painting, gilding. @The Moscow Kremlin Museums
G.V. Chicherin and the People’s Commissariat for Foreign Affairs staff and representatives of the Kremlin Commandant's Office at the entrance to the Grand Kremlin Palace
G.V. Chicherin and the People’s Commissariat for Foreign Affairs staff and representatives of the Kremlin Commandant's Office at the entrance to the Grand Kremlin Palace
Photograph (inverse image) Moscow, 1920s. Film; silver gelatin emulsion. @Russian State Documentary Film and Photo Archive
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books and souvenirs
books and souvenirs
The edition is timed to the exhibition in the Moscow Kremlin Museums ‘The 100th Anniversary of the USSR: G. V. Chicherin and the Soviet Diplomacy’. It includes over eighty items, most part of which is published for the first time. The exhibition project is dedicated to Georgy Vasilievich Chicherin – brilliant diplomat and statesman, who leaded the Foreign Office of the RSFSR and the USSR in the most complicated period of the post-revolutionary history of the country. Genuine rarities – personal belongings such as the 1922-1924 model year Red Army uniforms and robes presented by the delegations from Asian countries, as well as documents and photographs, phaleristics artifacts, remarkable samples of agitation porcelain, paintings, graphics, and artistic metal from Russian museum collections tell about the life and work of G.V. Chicherin.
The catalogue is on sale at the Museum shops opposite the Patriarch's Palace, in the Alexander Garden and Armoury Chamber.
Price - 1600 RUB
The edition is timed to the exhibition in the Moscow Kremlin Museums ‘The 100th Anniversary of the USSR: G. V. Chicherin and the Soviet Diplomacy’. It includes over eighty items, most part of which is published for the first time. The exhibition project is dedicated to Georgy Vasilievich Chicherin – brilliant diplomat and statesman, who leaded the Foreign Office of the RSFSR and the USSR in the most complicated period of the post-revolutionary history of the country. Genuine rarities – personal belongings such as the 1922-1924 model year Red Army uniforms and robes presented by the delegations from Asian countries, as well as documents and photographs, phaleristics artifacts, remarkable samples of agitation porcelain, paintings, graphics, and artistic metal from Russian museum collections tell about the life and work of G.V. Chicherin.
Price - 1600 RUB
The catalogue is on sale at the Museum shops opposite the Patriarch's Palace, in the Alexander Garden and Armoury Chamber.
VISIT US
VISIT US
ticket price
getting here
openning hours
Exhibition tickets. Available online, at the museum ticket office and via touch-sensitive terminals.
The admission is organized in sessions every half hour from 10:00 to 16:00.
ticket price
Exhibition tickets. Available online, at the museum ticket office and via touch-sensitive terminals.
The admission is organized in sessions every half hour from 10:00 to 16:00.
Ticket and Guided Tours Office in the Alexander Garden
Kutafiya Tower
Exhibition Hall of the Patriarch’s Palace
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2
3
1
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getting here
Ticket and Guided Tours Office in the Alexander Garden
Kutafiya Tower
Exhibition Hall of the Patriarch’s Palace
1
2
3
1
2
3
10:00 to 17:00
Ticket office: 09:30 to 16:00
Day off ‒ Thursday
Left luggage office:
9:00 to 18:30
Guided tours office:
+7 (495) 695-41-46
+7 (495) 697-03-49
openning hours
10:00 to 17:00
Ticket office: 09:30 to 16:00
Day off ‒ Thursday
Left luggage office:
9:00 to 18:30
Guided tours office:
+7 (495) 695-41-46
+7 (495) 697-03-49
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