A FINE SILVER-GILT AND NIELLO COFFEE-POT
A FINE SILVER-GILT AND NIELLO COFFEE-POT

MARK OF IVAN ZHILIN, VELIKII USTIUG, 1804

細節
A FINE SILVER-GILT AND NIELLO COFFEE-POT
MARK OF IVAN ZHILIN, VELIKII USTIUG, 1804
Cylindrical, the body with two circular cartouches, suspended from rose festoons, both nielloed with pastoral scenes of two men fishing and a man resting by a lake on a stippled ground, both within laurel nielloed borders, the cover and spout similarly decorated with foliage and garlands, the detachable cover surmounted by a pine cone finial, with ebonised geometric handle, marked under base and cover, also with French import marks
6¼ in. (16 cm.) high, with cover
18.06 oz. (561.6 gr.) gross
來源
The Herbette Collection; Christie's, Geneva, 25-26 May 1971, lot 452.
Acquired at the above sale by Alexandre Djanchieff.
By descent to the present owner.

榮譽呈獻

Aleksandra Babenko
Aleksandra Babenko

拍品專文

Both these salt cellars and coffee-pot belonged to Jean Herbette (1878-1960), the first French Ambassador to the Soviet Union. He was appointed upon the resumption of diplomatic relations between France and the Soviet Union in December 1924. During their six years in Leningrad, he and his wife became passionate collectors of Russian objects, particularly pieces evocative of the Imperial past. In the 1920s, when the Soviet government first released objects from museum collections for hard currency, a number of foreign ambassadors including Jean Herbette purchased important works of art.

The impressive collection that the Herbettes amassed from both private sources and the Soviet Sate was sold at Christie’s, Geneva, 25-26 May 1971.

The Zhilin family of Velikii Ustiug were renowned masters of niello work in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Works by Ivan Zhillin are held in the collections of the State Historical Museum, Moscow, and the Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg.

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