Why would this prodigious vase, made made in St Petersburg by Russia’s Imperial Porcelain Factory, be adorned with a portrait of Emperor Franz I of Austria? Specialist Margo Oganesian reveals how she got to the bottom of a mystery with Napoleonic roots
‘It took my breath away,’ says Russian Works of Art specialist Margo
Oganesian of the moment she first saw this campana-shapedgilt vase. ‘I had never seen anything of that size or quality
outside of a museum before.’
Standing 1.5 metres high and decorated with fine ciselé gilding,
the vase, which will be offered for auction on 26 November
in the Important Russian Art sale at Christie’s in London,
is quite a showstopper. ‘But the most striking thing,’ explains
Oganesian, ‘is the portrait painted on the body of the vase, which depicts the Austrian Emperor Franz I (1768-1835).’
To try to find out why, our intrigued specialist looked at other known imperial porcelain
vases in museum collections around the world. The State
Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg has a vase of a similar
size and style, but painted with a portrait of
the King of Prussia, Friedrich Wilhelm III (1770-1840). It
led the specialist to suspect that both vases were connected,
in some way, to one of the most dramatic episodes in European
history — the Napoleonic Wars.
Napoleon’s catastrophic and bloody campaign against the Russian
Empire was an event so seismic that it continues to pervade
Russian lore, and has been immortalised most memorably in
Tolstoy’s War and Peace. As Oganesian explains,
‘Austria and Prussia became Tsar Alexander’s allies in order
to suppress the French. We think the vases were possibly
commissioned as gifts for the royal heads of state’.
Except that the vases date to 1836, by which time both Tsar
Alexander I and Franz I were dead. ‘We were a little confused
by that, but then following the war Russia, Austria and Prussia
formed the Holy Alliance in order to guard the post-war borders
of Europe. We think it is possible that the new Tsar, Nicholas
I, commissioned the vases to send to Prussia and the new
head of state in Austria, Ferdinand I (1793-1875), to commemorate
the war and ensure the continuation of good relations.’
Sign up today
The Online Magazine delivers the best features, videos, and auction news to your inbox every week
Subscribe
For Alexander I (1777-1825), who believed that empire was divinely ordained, the upstart French general turned Emperor Napoleon had shaken this holy order. The alliance between the Prussian, Russian and Austrian empires was formed to collectively suppress any future revolutionary ferment in Europe.
The vases are of such exceptional quality that they could be said to reflect this divine faith. ‘Making them would have involved a long and difficult process,’ says Oganesian. ‘The very fine ciselé gilding, a form of embossing, is incredibly hard to do. The painting of the emperor itself is signed by Alexander Nesterov, who was considered the Imperial Porcelain Factory’s finest painter.’
Nesterov copied the portrait of Franz I from the celebrated Equestrian Portrait of Emperor Franz I (1832), by Johann Peter Krafft, which can be found in the Military Gallery of 1812 in the Hermitage. ‘Copying it to porcelain would have been incredibly tricky,’ says Oganesian, ‘but it is exquisitely done. It is like an old master painting — the brush strokes are exceptional.’