A RUSSIAN PORCELAIN FIGURAL 'PROPAGANDA' CHESS SET
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A RUSSIAN PORCELAIN FIGURAL 'PROPAGANDA' CHESS SET

AFTER A DESIGN BY NATALIA AND YELENA DANKO, 20TH CENTURY

Details
A RUSSIAN PORCELAIN FIGURAL 'PROPAGANDA' CHESS SET
AFTER A DESIGN BY NATALIA AND YELENA DANKO, 20TH CENTURY
Representing the Capitalists versus the Communists
The king -- 3¾in. (9.5cm.) high; the pawn -- 2 3/8in. (6cm.) high
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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Lot Essay

This set reflects the influence of the October Revolution 1916 and the spread of Sovietism upon Russian decorative arts and design. Chess sets in porcelain had been made since 1760 in the Imperial Porcelain Factory, St. Petersburg. This example was designed by the sculpturess Natalia and her sister Yelana in 1922, who worked at the Lomonosov State Porcelain Factory, where these sets were produced until 1939. Traditional figures have been adapted to personify the Communists, symbolising liberty and labour in a predominately red palette. They oppose the Captials, who stand for enslavement and inequality, echoed in the black scheme and rich gilding, predominately on the king (figure of Death), and the excessive 'horn of plenty' presided over by the queen. These sets, made in the solid, are sometimes marked with a hammer and sickle. Production of these sets has resumed since the end of the Cold War. See Gareth Willaims, Master Pieces, Apple Press 2000, page 97, and Chess; East and West, Past and Present The Metroplitan Museum of Art, New York, 1968.

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