Fabergé & Vertu: Property from the Brooklyn Museum, Sold to Support Museum Collections

Fabergé & Vertu: Property from the Brooklyn Museum, Sold to Support Museum Collections

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 2. A RARE FABERGÉ JEWELLED AGATE MODEL OF A CAT, ST PETERSBURG, CIRCA 1900.

Property from the Brooklyn Museum, sold to Support Museum Collections

A RARE FABERGÉ JEWELLED AGATE MODEL OF A CAT, ST PETERSBURG, CIRCA 1900

Auction Closed

December 2, 11:54 AM GMT

Estimate

45,000 - 65,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

Property from the Brooklyn Museum, sold to Support Museum Collections

A RARE FABERGÉ JEWELLED AGATE MODEL OF A CAT, ST PETERSBURG, CIRCA 1900


Realistically carved in striated grey agate, hissing with arched back and raised tail, rose-cut diamond-set eyes, apparently unmarked

length 3.8cm, 1 1/2in.

A La Vieille Russie, New York
Helen Babbott Sanders
The Brooklyn Museum, New York, bequest from the above in 1983
Exhibition catalogue, Fabergé: Exhibition for the Benefit of the Scholarship Fund of the Cooper-Hewitt Museum, the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Design, New York, A La Vieille Russie, Inc., 1983, n. 433, p. 228 listed, p. 117 illustrated
G. von Habsburg, Fabergé - Hofjuwelier der Zaren, Kunsthalle der Hypo-Kulturstiftung, Munich, 1986, n. 353, p. 203 illustrated
G. von Habsburg and D. Park Curry, Fabergé in America, San Francisco, 1996, n. 178, p. 197 illustrated
Exhibition catalogue The Fabergé Menagerie, Walters Art MuseumBaltimore, 2003, n. 56, p. 122 illustrated

Intrinsically charming and representative of the highest level of craftsmanship, the animals in the present collection have many corollaries in the Royal Collection, including this hissing cat with poised tail whose pose is reminiscent of a grey jasper model from the Sandringham Commission (RCIN 40294).


Fabergé animals are among the most whimsical and imaginative objects of vertu made by the famous firm, whose Royal and Imperial clients often favoured animal and flower studies (see lots 9 and 10) to elaborate jewels. These works, employing a range of natural materials, creatively and expertly transformed into realistic life studies were so popular amongst Faberge’s elite clientele that Queen Alexandra’s birthday table was described by Viscount Knutsford as containing numerous animals, which were augmented by further examples as she received her birthday gifts in 1909. These animals formed part of the Sandringham commission that is now part of the Royal Collection and represents the largest collection of hardstone animal models (C. de Guitaut, Fabergé’s Animals, A Royal Farm in Miniature, p. 9).


The Sandringham commission tells us much about the intricate process involved in creating each, individual Fabergé hardstone animal. The commission was born out of the Royal Family’s constant demand for new and interesting animal figures paired with the appetite of Fabergé’s other clients for these playful objects. In the case of the Sandringham commission, each animal was observed first-hand to create a wax model that was then executed in Russia by Fabergé’s ‘sculptor-stonecarvers’, famed for their ability to source the appropriate hardstone to capture the natural aspects of the animal. The careful choice of stone is described in the memoirs of one of the firm's head workmasters Franz Birbaum, written in 1919:


It is impossible to list all the animals that were used as themes for these figures, but it should be said that the pose was always as compact as possible, as dictated by the technique of the material.’ ('Birbaum Memoirs' in G. von Habsburg, M. Lopato, Fabergé: Imperial Jeweller, Milan, 1993, p. 459)


The workshops in which these animals were sculpted were most likely those of Kremlev and Derbyshev, who both carved studies themselves and oversaw the complete production process of each work. Thoughtful sculptures employing the vast range of naturally occurring Russian minerals came increasingly to the fore of Fabergé’s production, causing it to increasingly focus on hardstone animals, flowers and figures (C. de Guitaut, op. cit., p. 23).


It was of the greatest concern to Fabergé’s craftsmen that the perfect mineral specimens, of the right colour and markings were sourced for each individual study. In the present study of a hissing cat, the bands of agate are perfectly coloured with depth of colour in the body and transparency in the tail and legs to thoughtfully bring the study to life. The carving itself works with the natural light and variety of striations in the agate and the cat's pose delicately arches to accommodate the stone.


In addition to sourcing stones in Russia, Fabergé also supplied hardstones coming from Idar-Oberstein’s lapidaries, in Germany. These mines were known for being the most famous area for agate deposits, from which specimens have been collected since 1548. As can be seen in the present model of a cat, agate is a very large quartz specimen of many colours and is often banded or striped, which creates colour patterns and striations within its translucent carving.


Once the carving of each animal was completed, it was returned to the workshop of Fabergé’s head workmaster. In the case of the present studies, most likely that of Michael Perchin or Henrik Wigström. In the workshops the animals were then polished and mounted with their finishing touches, such as their gem-set eyes. These works were then retailed though Fabergé’s shops in St Petersburg and London, where they were broadly collected. Notably, an inventory of the possessions of Empress Maria Feodorovna and Emperor Alexander III compiled by the director of the Anichkov Palace after 1917 lists more than one hundred Fabergé stone animal studies (C. de Guitaut, op. cit., p. 34).