No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… Read more Gardner Porcelain Order Services Catherine II, who commissioned the Francis Gardner Porcelain Factory to produce the porcelain Order Services, derived her inspiration from similar pieces created by European factories. In 1743, the Empress Elizabeth I was presented by Augustus III, Elector of Saxony, with a Meissen service bearing the symbols of the Order of St Andrew First Called. Then, in 1772, Catherine received from Frederick the Great of Prussia a service created by the Berlin Porcelain Factory which included pierced baskets and leaf-formed dishes. Not to be outdone by the Europeans and wishing to encourage Russian craftsmanship, Catherine commissioned the Gardner Factory to produce services incorporating the ribbons, stars and badges of the important Imperial Orders. Three services were comissioned in 1777: St George, St Andrew First Called and St Alexander Nevskii. The fourth service, that of St Vladimir, was ordered in 1783. The Gardner Factory, while looking to the examples of the Meissen and Berlin services, produced exceptional services which were completely Russian in style. These were used once a year, on the feast day of their name saint, when the knights of the Order would dine at the Winter Palace. The decorations for the services were designed by academician G. I. Kozlov, who also designed the Orlov service, and sent from St Petersburg to the factory in the Moscow region. The Gardner Order Services seem to have been used until the time of Nicholas I, who transferred them to the Hermitage and replaced them with copies made by the Imperial Porcelain Factory. The Gardner pieces remained in the Hermitage until the 1920s, when many pieces were sold or dispersed to collectors. The pieces from the Order services are held in the collections of many museums worldwide, including The Russian State Museum, the Museum of Tsarskoe Selo, The Hermitage, The Historical Museum, The State Ceramic Museum in Kuskovo, the Musée de la Légion d'Honneur in France, The Museum of Russian Art in Hillwood, in Washington and other museums in the United States.
A porcelain dish from the Service of the Order of St George

BY THE GARDNER PORCELAIN FACTORY, MOSCOW, PERIOD OF CATHERINE II, 1777-1778

Details
A porcelain dish from the Service of the Order of St George
by the Gardner Porcelain Factory, Moscow, period of Catherine II, 1777-1778
Of circular form, formed as a vine leaf with gilt border, painted with various shades of green with yellowish veins and overlapping leafy branches throughout the ribbon of the Order, tied together with the cross of the Order of St George, enclosing its star, the pierced border simulating branches, with foliate handle, marked under base with blue underglaze 'G' and incised circle
10¼ in. (26 cm.) long
Design by G. I. Kozlov.
Literature
Masterpieces of 18th c..., number 133.
Exhibited
London, 1 Belgrave Square, Exhibition of Russian Art, 1935, p. 43, number CS (part of).
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

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Alexis de Tiesenhausen
Alexis de Tiesenhausen

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