-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Restoration work at the Nabokov Museum
Date: Wed, 11 Mar 2009 01:22:12 -0400
From: rqueneau@netscape.net
To: nabokv-l@utk.edu, nabokv-l@holycross.edu

http://news.ntv.ru/spb/152345/


Attached is a link to an NTV video (with accompanying transcript) covering the restoration work currently underway at the Nabokov Museum. The work is be being performed by students from the Faculty of Philology and Arts at St. Petersburg University. The university runs the museum.

One of the areas targeted for restoration is the Green Sitting Room, which will be closed to the public while the work is being done. In Speak, Memory Nabokov is refering to this room when he describes "the huge Christmas tree that touched with its star the pale-green ceiling of our prettiest drawing room." This original ceiling, with "pale-green clouds" (a detail lacking in Speak, Memory but mentioned in Drugie berega), was recently discovered when a portion of the current ceiling was removed. The description in Drugie berega runs: "… гигантская елка  касалась  своей  нежной звездой высокого, бледно-7елеными облаками расписанного, потолка в одной  из  нижних  зал  нашего
дома."

Congratulations should be extended to St. Petersburg University and the museum staff for their rescue of the museum from financial ruin a years ago and for their unfailing commitment to making this institution a fitting tribute to Nabokov's legacy. I have followed the development of the museum since its inception, and I remain amazed that so few have accomplished so much despite enormous bureaucratic hurdles and a lack of proper funding. If you truly love Nabokov, you should treat yourself to a St. Petersburg vacation and observe the Nabokov Museum firsthand. It will be one of those experiences you always remember.
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