The sale is led by a pair of the most magnificent Imperial vases ever to come to auction (est. £2-2.5 million). Photo: Sotheby's.
LONDON.- On 25th and 26th November, over a series of four auctions, Sotheby’s will bring together more than £16 million of Russian paintings, sculpture and decorative arts for its biannual sales of Russian art in London. Led by a pair of the most magnificent Imperial vases ever to come to auction (est. £2-2.5 million), Sotheby’s sales series will include important paintings by Henri Semiradsky, Petr Vereshchagin and Nikolai Fechin. This season the company will also stage the inaugural auction of ‘Contemporary East’ - the first-ever sale dedicated to contemporary art from Russia and Eastern Europe held by an international auction house.
Jo Vickery, Senior Director and Head of Sotheby’s Russian Art Department said: We are kicking off the Russian sales week with a new and innovative sale of Russian and Eastern European Art led by Ilya Kabakov's Holiday, No 6. Our Evening sale boasts several Russian masterpieces with excellent provenance which are offered on the market for the first time ever. The highlight of our Russian Works of Art sale is a truly rare and magnificent pair of Imperial porcelain vases which we expect to appeal not only to Russian collectors but major art buyers across the globe. It is clear that demand for great Russian works is currently as strong as ever.
AUCTION HIGHLIGHTS RUSSIAN WORKS OF ART, FABERGÉ AND ICONS
A magnificent pair of Imperial porcelain vases Imperial Porcelain Manufactory, period of Nicholas I dated 1833, £2,000,000-2,500,000. Photo courtesy Sotheby's
‘The size and decoration of these vases make a bold statement, just as they did 180 years ago. We’ve called them ‘magnificent’ but that doesn’t really do them justice. They are impressive on a truly Imperial scale’ - Darin Bloomquist, Director, Head of Russian Works of Art at Sotheby’s.
Produced in 1833 at the Imperial Porcelain Manufactory of Nicholas I, these magnificent large-scale porcelain vases rank among the very best, most desirable examples of their type.
The three decades of Emperor Nicholas I’s reign are regarded as the peak of porcelain production in Russia. He was an enthusiastic patron of the Imperial Manufactory and was, apart from Catherine the Great, the Russian monarch most interested in the arts. Foremost among the porcelain wares made during this period are the vases on which the central panels serve as ‘canvases’ for reproducing two-dimensional works of art. Paintings were either brought to the manufactory for copying, or the painter-decorators worked in a room at the Hermitage specially reserved for the purpose. Such vases were often produced for the Emperor himself, presented to him at New Year or Easter, or for a member of the Imperial family, sometimes as part of a dowry, or as diplomatic gifts to foreigners.
The first of the present vases is painted with an interior genre scene after the The Concert by Anthonie Palamedes (1601-1673), copied by the master porcelain painter Semyon Golov (c1783-1849). The original painting remains in the collection of the Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg. The second vase is painted with an outdoor musical gathering. The whereabouts of the original painting and the identity of its artist remain unknown though if indeed the painting has been lost to history, it has been skilfully reproduced here by the master porcelain painter Vasili Meshcheriakov (b. 1781).
A Fabergé jewelled and enamelled gold flower study St Petersburg, circa 1900. Est. £220,000-250,000. Photo courtesy Sotheby's
formed as a single stem with three branches, the petals enamelled in translucent yellow over a finely textured ground, each stigma set with a brilliant-cut diamond within gold stamens, engraved leaves and stem, resting in a faceted rock crystal pot, possibly associated,apparently unmarked apart from a possible faint scratched inventory number; height 15cm, 5 7/8 in.
Provenance: Christie's Geneva, 30 November 1982, lot 294
The present lot is among a small number of buttercups produced. For a similar example, see Wartski, Carl Fabergé: A Private Collection, 15-25 May 2012, cat. no. 26, p. 34-35. Another, struck with Wigström's mark, was formerly in the Robert Strauss Collection (illustrated, G. von Habsburg and A. von Solodkoff, Fabergé: Court Jeweller to the Tsars, 1979, plate 109, p. 89.) The Royal Collection includes a flower study of both buttercups and cornflowers (RCIN 100011; illustrated, C. de Guitaut,Royal Fabergé, 2011, p. 122-123), which was purchased by Queen Elizabeth in 1947. A small, budding buttercup with nephrite leaves, struck with Wigström's mark and dated 1908-1917, is in the National Museum, Stockholm (illustrated, M. Swezey, Fabergé Flowers, 2004, p. 38).
The inventory of Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna's flowers compiled in 1917 includes a 'wildflower - gold stem, yellow enamelled flower with diamonds' and a 'wildflower - gold stem, yellow enamelled flower with diamonds in a vase of rock crystal' (see V. Skurlov, 'In Search of Fabergé Flowers in Russia', M. Swezey, Fabergé Flowers, 2004, p. 113).
The rock crystal pots or vases were carved in a variety of forms. For other faceted pots, see Christie's Geneva, 11 November 1975, lot 262, and Christie's New York, 20 April 2000, lot 73, containing a dandelion; Sotheby's New York, 28 June 1979, lot 360, a sprig of raspberry; The India Early Minshall Collection at The Cleveland Museum of Art, inv. no. 66.443, a lily-of-the-valley.
IMPORTANT RUSSIAN ART HIGHLIGHTS
Henri Semiradsky Un naufragé mendiant (1878) oil on canvas, 208 by 293.5cm £1,000,000-£1,300,000
Born into a Polish family near Kharkov, a graduate of the Imperial Academy of Arts in St Petersburg and a resident of Rome, Semiradsky was a truly pan-European artist who in his works brought to life a Golden Age of European civilisation. He took Paris by storm when he submitted three paintings to the Exposition Universelle in 1878, and was singled out not just for his monumental masterpiece The Torches of Nero (now held in the National Museum Krakow), but also for the two other paintings hanging alongside this spectacular canvas: La coupe ou la femme and Un naufragé mendiant.
Now estimated at £1-1.3 million, Un naufragé mendiant is one of the artist’s most significant works remaining in private hands. Depicting a beautiful young woman being lowered on to a luxurious barge as she looks at an elderly beggar, it is an exceptional example of an idealised scene set in Classical antiquity and a tour de force of light, colour and different textures. The Russian Imperial family were among Semiradsky’s patrons, and sadly many of his other monumental works, such as his murals for the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in Moscow, are now lost.
Originally in the collection of the Hollywood actor and collector, George Montgomery (1916-2000), this is unquestionably the most impressive nude by Fechin ever to come to auction and a striking example of the artist’s talent as a colourist - demonstrating an exquisite command of palette and an adept understanding of form. The present nude is one of several works from Montgomery’s collection bequeathed to the Palm Springs Art Museum after the actor’s death. It will be sold by the museum in November to benefit the George Montgomery Acquisition Fund.
Vereshchagin spent the winter of 1873-74 in Tiflis after travelling through the Caucasus following the course of the river Rioni. The exoticism of the region, and Tiflis in particular, made it an extremely attractive destination for a number of Russian writers and painters - it was a highly cosmopolitan city during the 19th century, populated by Armenians, Turks and Azeris and a hub of trade, as Vereshchagin’s bustling street scene implies. Fascinated by the life of the local population, the architecture and colour, Vereshschagin gave the contemporary spectator a real sense of local life in the far-flung cities of the Russian empire which they would likely never see first-hand.
THREE IMPORTANT WORKS FROM A PRIVATE COLLECTION, FINLAND
Nikolai Roerich Karelia, Evening Snow 1918, £250,000-350,000
This landscape was most likely painted in Sortavala, where the Roerich family lived after fleeing the Bolshevik Revolution. They had left behind all their possessions, money was running out and the future was uncertain while the artist was slowly recovering from a near fatal bout of pneumonia. This is one of very few winter scenes from the period and shows not a hint of the turmoil in the artist’s personal life or the madness engulfing the continent.
Nikolai Sapunov Peonies, 1907 Estimate £40,000-60,000
Valentin Serov Portrait of a Lady said to be Maria Vasilievna Yakunchikova, 1892 Estimate £200,000-300,000
This portrait is thought to depict Maria Yakunchikova (1870-1902), a close friend of the Abramtsevo group and an artist in her own right. She was the subject of a number of works by her contemporaries including At Tea by Konstantin Korovin.