A RARE GEM-SET PURPURINE MODEL OF A RABBIT
A RARE GEM-SET PURPURINE MODEL OF A RABBIT
A RARE GEM-SET PURPURINE MODEL OF A RABBIT
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A RARE GEM-SET PURPURINE MODEL OF A RABBIT
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PROPERTY OF AN IMPORTANT PRIVATE COLLECTOR
A RARE GEM-SET PURPURINE MODEL OF A RABBIT

BY FABERGÉ, ST PETERSBURG, CIRCA 1900

Details
A RARE GEM-SET PURPURINE MODEL OF A RABBIT
BY FABERGÉ, ST PETERSBURG, CIRCA 1900
Stylistically carved crouching, with its front feet raised, with cabochon moonstone eyes, apparently unmarked
1 7⁄8 in. (4.7 cm.) long
Provenance
Acquired by Mrs Lucas from Wartski, London, on 9 November 1946 for £55.
Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 4 June 2018, lot 215.
Literature
Exhibition catalogue, The Last Flowering of Court Art, London, 2010, pp. 128-129, no. 47 (illustrated).
Exhibition catalogue, Wartski, Japonisme: from Falize to Fabergé, London, 2011, p. 115, no. 213 (illustrated).
Exhibited
London, Wartski, The Last Flowering of Court Art, 23 November - 4 December 2010, no. 47.
London, Wartski, Japonisme: from Falize to Fabergé, 10-20 May 2011, no. 213.

Brought to you by

Thomas Williams
Thomas Williams International Head of English Furniture & Clocks

Lot Essay

Purpurine works by Fabergé are exceptionally rare, particularly animal figures. Purpurine is produced by crystallising lead chromate within a glass matrix, a technique first developed in seventeenth-century Italy. In the nineteenth century, Sergey Petoukhov, a craftsman at the Imperial Glass Factory, rediscovered the process for creating purpurine.

The present model of a rabbit showcases the intensity and depth of colour that characterise the material, whilst also displaying the beautiful crystalline structure of the purpurine. The rabbit is carved in the style of Japanese netsuke, which often provided inspiration to Fabergé's designers. Carl Fabergé himself was a passionate collector and kept over 500 netsuke in his apartment on Bolshaya Morskaya street.

For a nearly identical model of a rabbit in lapis lazuli from the de Guigné collection, see G. von Habsburg, Fabergé in America, New York, 1996, p. 51, no. 32. For a further related model of a rabbit carved in purpurine see Exhibition catalogue, Fabergé - Cartier, Rivalen am Zarenhof, Munich, Kunsthalle der Hypo-Kulturstiftung, November 28, 2003-April 12, 2004, illustrated p. 250, no. 345.

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