EIGHTEEN RUSSIAN PORCELAIN PLATES FROM THE KREMLIN SERVICE
EIGHTEEN RUSSIAN PORCELAIN PLATES FROM THE KREMLIN SERVICE
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EIGHTEEN RUSSIAN PORCELAIN PLATES FROM THE KREMLIN SERVICE

BY THE IMPERIAL PORCELAIN FACTORY, ST PETERSBURG, PERIOD OF NICHOLAS I

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EIGHTEEN RUSSIAN PORCELAIN PLATES FROM THE KREMLIN SERVICE
BY THE IMPERIAL PORCELAIN FACTORY, ST PETERSBURG, PERIOD OF NICHOLAS I
Circular, painted with stylised blossoms on gilt ground with foliate sprays at intervals around the Imperial double-headed eagle and the Russian title of Nicholas I, the borders with floral and foliate sprays on gilt ground, marked under bases with underglaze factory mark and some inscribed with red inventory numbers of the Winter Palace; most with further inscribed and incised letters and numerals
8 5/8 in. (22 cm.) diameter (18)

榮譽呈獻

Arne Everwijn
Arne Everwijn

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拍品專文

The Kremlin Service was commissioned by Emperor Nicholas I in 1837 from the Imperial Porcelain Factory, and the design entrusted to the painter and future professor of the Academy of Arts, F. G. Solntsev (1801-1892). The motifs were inspired by seventeenth-century Russian metalwork; for example the design for the dessert plates came from a jewelled, gold and enamelled plate made in 1667 for Natalia Kirilovna, née Naryshkina, wife of the second Romanov Tsar, Alexei Mikhailovich.