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Tasse et sa soucoupe en agate orientale montée en or, Paris, 1732-1738

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Tasse et sa soucoupe en agate orientale montée en or, Paris, 1732-1738. Tasse : H. 4 cm ; D. 7 cm; Soucoupe : H. 5 cm ; D. 11,5 cm. Courtesy Galerie Kugel

 

Provenance : Vente Lebrun, Paris, 11 avril 1791, lot 615.

Poinçons : Sur le bord de la soucoupe et de la tasse ainsi que le pied de la tasse 
Décharge: une tête de chien, pour les menus ouvrages, Paris 1732-1738 

La tasse et sa soucoupe circulaires sont en agate présentent une très fine épaisseur qui les rend translucides. Elles sont rehaussées d’un jonc en or sur les bords de la tasse et la soucoupe et le pied de la tasse a une moulure en or. (fêles sur la tasse) 


Roberto Capucci, dress in silk taffeta, 2009

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Roberto Capucci, dress in silk taffeta, 2009

Roberto Capucci, dress in silk taffeta, 2009, courtesy Capucci Foundation. Photo Alessandro Sclauzero

Roberto Capucci, dress in silk taffeta, détail, 2009

Roberto Capucci, dress in silk taffeta, détail, 2009, courtesy Capucci Foundation

Juan Pantoja de la Cruz (1553-1608), Queen Elizabeth of Valois, third wife of Philip II, 1605

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Juan Pantoja de la Cruz (1553-1608), Queen Elizabeth of Valois, third wife of Philip II, 1605, oil on canvas, 120.1 × 84 cm (47.3 × 33.1 in). P01030© 2016. Museo Nacional del Prado. 

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Juan Pantoja de la Cruz (1553-1608), Queen Elizabeth of Valois, third wife of Philip II, detail, 1605. © 2016. Museo Nacional del Prado. 

Spouted vessel with lion protome, Parthian period, 1st century BCE-1st century CE, Iran

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Spouted vessel with lion protome, Parthian period, 1st century BCE-1st century CE, Iran. Silver and gilt, 25.8 x 26.9 x 17.5 cm. Gift of Arthur M. Sackler, S1987.130 © 2016 Smithsonian Institution

Spouted vessel with lynx protome, Parthian period, 1st century BCE-1st century CE, Iran

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Spouted vessel with lynx protome, Parthian period, 1st century BCE-1st century CE, Iran. Silver and gilt, 23.5 x 12.4 x 30.4 cmGift of Arthur M. Sackler, S1987.131 © 2016 Smithsonian Institution

Drinking vessels with a tall horn joined to the protome (forepart) of a lynx, panther, or lion, are sometimes depicted in Hellenistic and Roman art. They are usually identified as objects used in celebrating the cult of Dionysos, the Greek god of wine and ecstatic experience, which spread over a wide area of the eastern Mediterranean and southwest Asia.

Harry Winston

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Harry Winston. Extraordinary sapphires encircled by a symphony of diamonds.

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Harry Winston Diamond Drop Earrings

François de La Rochefoucauld

Wine ewer decorated with flowers and fruits, Ming dynasty, Yongle period, 1403 - 1425

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Wine ewer decorated with flowers and fruits, Ming dynasty, Yongle period, 1403 - 1425

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Wine ewer decorated with flowers and fruits, Ming dynasty, Yongle period, 1403 - 1425. Porcelain with underglaze blue decoration, height 26.1 cm, diameter of mouth 6.4 cm. National Museum of Chinese History, Beijing

This wine ewer was made in Jingdezhen, the center of porcelain manufacture. It is based on an Islamic metal prototype.

During the Mongol Yuan dynasty, Islamic traders settled in China's coastal cities, and Muslim officials wielded considerable influence at the imperial court. Their fine metalwork spurred Chinese potters to copy many of these shapes in blue and white porcelain, sometimes decorated with Koranic texts. Ewers such as these are depicted on Persian miniatures as precious objects.

Chinese Muslims going on the hajj pilgrimage to Mecca would take along these blue and white porcelain wares to use as highly desirable objects of barter.


Covered jar decorated with goldfish and aquatic plants, Ming dynasty, Jiajing mark and period, 1522 - 1566

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Covered jar decorated with goldfish and aquatic plants, Ming dynasty, Jiajing period, 1522 - 1566

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Covered jar decorated with goldfish and aquatic plants, Ming dynasty, Jiajing mark and period, 1522 - 1566. Excavated in the eastern suburbs of Beijing in 1955. Porcelain with five-color enamels, wucai, height 46 cm. National Museum of Chinese History, Beijing

Underglaze blue and overglaze enamel colors decorate this massive wine jar with a continuous scene of large golden carp swimming among various water weeds and lotus flowers. On the base a six-character imperial reign mark reads: "Made in the Jiajing period of the great Ming." 

Human-like head, Shang dynasty, ca. 16th - 11th BCE

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Human-like head, Shang dynasty, ca

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Human-like head, Shang dynasty, ca. 16th - 11th BCE. Excavated in Sanxingdui, Guanghan county, Sichuan Province, in 1986. Bronze, height 39.3 cm. National Museum of Chinese History, Beijing

In 1986, a sizable group of larger-than-life bronze figures and heads, some covered with gold, along with many jades and elephant tusks, were unearthed in sacrificial pits in Sanxingdui, in Sichuan province. No signs of human sacrifice were found. This discovery shed new light on the geographic range of bronze culture, which until then had been thought of as concentrated mainly in central China. At the same time, it raised many questions about this hitherto unknown civilization and these awesome bronze figures, which are unlike anything found before and on which no written documentation exists.

Rectangular vessel for offering wine, Late Shang period, ca. 1200 BCE

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Rectangular vessel for offering wine, Late Shang period, ca

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Rectangular vessel for offering wine, Late Shang period, ca. 1200 BCE. Excavated from the tomb of Fu Hao in Yin ruins, Anyang, Henan Province, in 1976. Bronze, height 67 cm. Institute of Archeology, CASS, Beijing

This large vessel, used for warming and serving wine, is a square variant of the three-legged jia vessel. It is one of three exceptionally large square jia vessels made for Fu Hao, whose name is inscribed on the flat base. It stands on four flanged, flaring blade-like legs, and the body is decorated with taotie. The vessel is topped by two large capped posts, which were used to lift the goblet after it had stood in the fire to warm the wine.

Tiger-shaped token, fu, used to authenticate an imperial military order, Qin dynasty, 221-206 BCE

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Tiger-shaped token, fu, used to authenticate an imperial military order, Qin dynasty, 221-206 BCE

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Tiger-shaped token, fu, used to authenticate an imperial military order, Qin dynasty, 221-206 BCE. Possibly excavated on Lincheng, Shandong Province. Bronze inlaid with gold characters, length 8.9 cm. National Museum of Chinese History, Beijing

Always fearful of rebellion, the Qin Emperor devised a system to ensure that troops could be moved only by his express order. He had tokens, fu, made consisting of two interlocking parts. One half went to the commanding officer, and the other half stayed with the Emperor. An order by the Emperor to move troops would be brought by a messenger carrying the Emperor's half token. When the commander ascertained that the two halves fit, the order was valid. This token, in the form of a tiger, is inscribed in gold lettering: "Token for moving soldiers, the right half is in the Emperor's hands, the left at Yangling."

Wine container, zun, in rhinoceros shape, Western Han dynasty, 206 BCE-23 CE

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Wine container, zun, in rhinoceros shape, Western Han dynasty, 206 BCE-23 CE

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Wine container, zun, in rhinoceros shape, Western Han dynasty, 206 BCE-23 CE. Found in Maoling, Xingping county, Shaanxi Province, in 1963. Bronze inlaid with gold and silver, height 34.1 cm, length 58 cm. National Museum of Chinese History, Beijing.

Archaeological evidence shows that rhinoceros have been found in China since earliest times. A text on oracle bones from the late Shang dynasty (ca.1300 - ca. 1050 BCE) records the king hunting rhinoceros, whose tough, thick hide was used as body armor by high-ranking soldiers. In the war-torn centuries preceding the Han period, the rhinoceros was hunted nearly to distinction, becoming so rare that it attained almost mythical status.

A chance discovery by a farmer plowing his field, this large rhinoceros-shaped wine vessel, found in a large pottery jar, was probably hidden by its owner during a period of unrest, but never retrieved. It is a masterful creation by an artist who doubtless observed the animal, with its solidity, belligerent stance, and malevolent eye inlaid in black glass.

The body was inlaid with a swirling pattern in gold and silver wire, of which some remains.

Mythical animal, Chu State, Eastern Zhou, Spring and Autumn period, 770-476 BCE

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Mythical animal, Chu State, Eastern Zhou, Spring and Autumn period, 770-476 BCE

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Mythical animal, Chu State, Eastern Zhou, Spring and Autumn period, 770-476 BCE. Excavated in Xujialing, Xichuan county, Henan Province, in 1990.Bronze inlaid with malachite, height 48 cm. Institute of Archeology and Cultural Relics, Henan Province.

This fantastical animal, which is one of a pair, may have served as a drum stand. It is composed of a tiger's body and a dragon's head, on which six small dragons writhe. On its back stands another animal, a dragon emerging from its mouth. The body is inlaid with malachite in the form of dragons, phoenixes, and spirals, which add to the feeling of frenzied movement.

Guanyin, the Goddess of Mercy, Five Dynasties, 907 - 960 CE

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Guanyin, the Goddess of Mercy, Five Dynasties, 907 - 960 CE

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Guanyin, the Goddess of Mercy, Five Dynasties, 907 - 960 CE. Excavated at the Tem Thousand Buddha Pagoda in Hunhua county, Zhejiang Province, in 1958. Gilt bronze, total height 77.7 cm. National Museum of Chinese History, Beijing.

Buddhism arrived in China in the first century CE from India, transmitted along the trade routes by Buddhist traders.

When pagodas were erected, Buddhist relics were usually buried in their foundations, and many treasures have been discovered during the restoration or demolition of pagodas. This Buddhist gilt bronze sculpture was found in a pagoda. It depicts the bodhisattva Guanyin, the goddess of mercy, seated on a rock in the pose called "royal ease," a beautifully wrought halo framing her elegant figure.


Agestrata

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Agestrata orichalca augustata

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Agestrata luzonica

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Agestrata punctatostriata

John Keats

Spinel and diamond pendant, end of 18th century

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Spinel and diamond pendant, end of 18th centuryPhoto Sotheby's

The cross-shaped faceted spinel bordered by rose-cut diamonds. Estimate 8,000 — 12,000 CHF. Lot 259. Sold 68,500 CHF

Provenance: Duke Wilhelm II von Urach (1864-1928) and his wife Amélie (1865-1912), born Duchess in Bayern.
Duke Wihelm II von Urach (1864-1928) and his second wife Wiltrud (1884-1975), born Princess of Bavaria.
Prince Alfred von und zu Liechtenstein (1842-1907) and his wife Henriette (1843-1931), born Princess von und zu Liechtenstein.
Prince Karl von und zu Liechtenstein (1878-1955) and his wife Elisabeth (1894-1962), born Princess von Urach and Countess Wurtemberg.
Prince Wilhelm von und zu Liechtenstein (1922- 2006) and his wife Emma (1926-1984), born von Guthmannstahl-Benvenuti.
Thence by descent.

Sotheby's. Magnificent Jewels and Noble Jewels And A Celebration of Taste and Style, Magnificent Jewels from a Private Collection. Geneva, 12 May 2009

Exhibition of photographs by Peter Lindbergh opens at Gagosian Gallery Athens

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Peter Lindbergh, NADJA AUERMANN, MOJAVE DESERT, CALIFORNIA USA, 1996, 2015. Gelatin Silver Print Illford multigrade, 23 5/8 × 19 11/16 inches unframed (60 × 50 cm). Edition of 25 © Peter Lindbergh

ATHENS.- Gagosian Athens presents photographs by Peter Lindbergh. 

Lindbergh’s now-iconic photographs of women derive inspiration from early narrative cinema and street photography, in their fleeting observations and compositional elegance. His Eastern European heritage can be traced in the stark and guileless realism that frames the feminine beauty of his subjects. 

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Peter Lindbergh, CORDULA REYER, CAMARGUE, France, 1993, 2003. Gelatin Silver Print Illford multigrade, 19 11/16 × 23 5/8 inches unframed (50 × 60 cm). Edition of 25 © Peter Lindbergh

In his editorial work for Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, Interview, and many other international magazines, Lindbergh replaces staged, calculated glamour with a vérité approach, enhanced by his use of high-contrast black-and-white photography. He uses body movement, in particular modern dance, to celebrate the human form in a way that carries elements of both antiquity and modernity.

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Peter Lindbergh, CORDULA REYER, CAMARGUE, France, 1993, 2013. Hahnemuhle Photo Rag® Baryta 315 grs, 26 3/16 × 30 7/8 inches framed (66.5 × 78.5 cm). Edition of 25 © Peter Lindbergh

Spanning the last thirty years, the exhibition testifies to Lindbergh’s impact on the world of fashion photography, and his contribution to portraiture in general. The beauty of his female subjects is purposeful, self-possessed, and uninhibited. With little styling or setting to divert attention, Lindbergh’s approach emphasizes the raw physical grace of his subjects. 

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Peter Lindbergh, MONICA BELLUCCI, PARIS, FRANCE, 1999, 2015. Gelatin Silver Print Illford multigrade, 23 5/8 × 19 11/16 inches unframed (60 × 50 cm). Edition of 25 © Peter Lindbergh

In a diptych of Monica Bellucci, one image holds her untamed and purposeful stare as she walks toward the camera, while in the other she looks away, apparently absorbed in a private moment far from the camera’s eye. In an homage to the late choreographer Pina Bausch, five models merge in an interlocking movement, their limbs and curves becoming elements of pure abstraction. In another photograph, Karen Elson’s pale stillness recalls classical stone statuary.

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Peter Lindbergh, KRISTEN MCMENAMY, LE TOUQUET, FRANCE, 2009, 2014. Hahnemuhle Photo Rag® Baryta 315 grs, 66 1/8 × 95 11/16 inches framed (168 × 243 cm). Edition of 1 © Peter Lindbergh

Peter Lindbergh was born in Lissa, Germany, in 1944. He lives and works between Paris, New York, and Arles, France. Public collections include Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Victoria and Albert Museum, London; and Centre national des arts plastiques (CNAP), Paris, among others. Solo exhibitions include “Peter Lindbergh: A Different History of Fashion,” Kunsthal Rotterdam, Netherlands (forthcoming 2016); “Peter Lindbergh: Images of Women,” Bunkamura Museum of Art, Tokyo (1996, traveled to Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin; and Kunsthaus Wien, Vienna in 1997; Palazzo Delle Esposizioni, Rome in 1998; Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow, in 2002; and other locations); “Peter Lindbergh: Stories Supermodels,” Ludwig Museum Schloss, Oberhausen, Germany (2003); “Peter Lindbergh: The Unknown,” Ullens Center For Contemporary Art, Beijing (2011); “Peter Lindbergh,” FoMu, Antwerp (2011–12); and “Peter Lindbergh: Berlin,” Maison de la Photographie, Lille (2013).

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Peter Lindbergh, JESSICA CHASTAIN, INDUSTRIA SUPERSTUDIO, NEW YORK USA, 2011, 2015. Hahnemuhle Photo Rag® Baryta 315 grs, 23 5/8 × 19 11/16 inches unframed (60 × 50 cm). Edition of 25 © Peter Lindbergh

Group of Musicians, Tang dynasty, 618 - 906 CE

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Group of Musicians, Tang dynasty, 618 - 906 CE. Excavated in Xiuan, Shaanxi Province, in 1995. Earthenware, height 11 x 11.5 cm. National Museum of Chinese History, Beijing

The upper classes in the Tang dynasty enjoyed a life of luxury and leisure. Lavish banquets enlivened by music and dance.

This group of male musicians in loose-fitting informal dress and scarf caps probably accompanied a group of dancers. The instruments are the four-stringed lute, pipa; the upright mouth organ, sheng; the transverse flute, the pan flute, the clapper, and the small harp.

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