Small Wonders: Early Gems and Jewels
Small Wonders: Early Gems and Jewels
Lot Closed
July 9, 01:10 PM GMT
Estimate
2,000 - 3,000 GBP
Lot Details
Description
ITALIAN, EARLY 19TH CENTURY
SILVIA BEWAILING THE LOSS OF HER STAG
carnelian
signed in Greek: ΤΕΥΚΡΟΥ (Teukar)
26.3 by 36.1mm., 1.03 by 1.42in.
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Prince Stanislas Poniatowski (1754-1833);
his sale, Christie's, London, 1839, lot 1292;
John Tyrell;
Charles Scarisbrick;
Christie's, London, 16 May 1861, lot 175
Catalogue des pierres graves antiques de S.A. le Prince Stanislas Poniatowski, 1830-1833, no. VII.52;
J. Prendeville, Explanatory catalogue of the proof-impressions of the antique gems possessed by the late Prince Poniatowski and now in the possession of John Tyrrell, Esq., 1841, no. 1128; Beazley Archive, University of Oxford, Poniatowski Database, no. T1128 [accessed 20 June 2020; https://www.beazley.ox.ac.uk/XDB/ASP/recordDetails.asp?recordCount=2&start=0]
This fine intaglio is one of the so-called Poniatowski gems. This group of around 2,500 gems were commissioned in the first decades of the 19th-century by the Polish aristocrat Prince Stanislas Poniatowski (1754-1833) from a number of skilled gem engravers active in Rome, who drew on literary sources including Homer, Virgil and Ovid, to create beautiful and original compositions. They are often frieze like in design and in this respect recall the line drawings of Neoclassical artist John Flaxman. Poniatowski catalogued them in his lifetime and encouraged the belief that they were in fact ancient gems. The collection was sold after his death, at Christie's in 1839, but the sale was unsuccessful, with many collectors outraged at what they saw as an assemblage of gems designed to deceive. Many of the Poniatowski gems were acquired by an English collector named John Tyrrell, who bought them as an investment and subsequently published them himself. There is no complete set of impressions, although the Beazley archive at Oxford University have created a growing Poniatowski database. In recent years Poniatowski gems have increasingly been seen as important examples of Neoclassical art in their own right, engraved by leading gem cutters including the likes of Luigi Pichler.