A PORCELAIN FIGURE OF AN ARMENIAN WOMAN FROM THE 'PEOPLES OF RUSSIA' SERIES
From time to time, Christie's may offer a lot whic… Read more
A PORCELAIN FIGURE OF AN ARMENIAN WOMAN FROM THE 'PEOPLES OF RUSSIA' SERIES

BY THE IMPERIAL PORCELAIN FACTORY, ST PETERSBURG, 1780-1790s

Details
A PORCELAIN FIGURE OF AN ARMENIAN WOMAN FROM THE 'PEOPLES OF RUSSIA' SERIES
BY THE IMPERIAL PORCELAIN FACTORY, ST PETERSBURG, 1780-1790s
Realistically modelled and painted, a standing figure of a woman, wearing an ochre gown, orange-red overcoat and a pale purple hat, on a circular shaped naturalistic base, apparently unmarked
8¾ in. (22.3 cm.) high
Provenance
With Galerie Popoff, Paris, 1973 (label under base).
Property of an Important European Collector; Christie's, London, 2 June 2014, lot 271.
Literature
Exhibition catalogue, Exhibition of Russian Art, London, 1935, listed p. 39, no. AF.
M. Baruch, et al., Shedevry Russkogo Farfora XVIII Veka iz Sobraniya Galerei 'Popov & Co' [Masterpieces of Russian 18th Century Porcelain, from the Collection of 'Popov & Co'], Moscow, 2009, illustrated p. 21.
Exhibited
London, Belgrave Sq., Exhibition of Russian Art, London, 4 June - 13 July 1935, no. AF.
Special notice
From time to time, Christie's may offer a lot which it owns in whole or in part. This is such a lot.

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Alexis de Tiesenhausen
Alexis de Tiesenhausen

Lot Essay

The present lot comes from the famous Gallery Popoff, which was largely dedicated to outstanding 18th century porcelain. The gallery's founder Alexander Popov (1880-1964) was truly devoted to this subject matter. According to the memoirs of one of the gallery's visitors, Alexander Popov gave exact specifications about porcelain items to the touch, being an already elderly owner with poor eyesight. Alexander Popov assembled one of the most significant private collections of Russian porcelain, located outside Russia.

Popov had an extensive collection of figures from the Peoples of Russia series, created by Jacques-Dominique Rachette (1744-1809), the chief modeller at the Imperial Porcelain Factory during the reign of Empress Catherine II. The present figure of an Armenian woman is a very rare example, depicted on the group photograph of figures, sent to the Exhibition of Russian Art in London in 1935.

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