Russian Works of Art, Fabergé & Icons

Russian Works of Art, Fabergé & Icons

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 89. A gold and enamel Order of St Anne, Second Class, St Petersburg, late-19th century.

An Important Swiss Collection (lots 6-7, 69, 73-94, 171-172, 195-199, 231-234, 253)

A gold and enamel Order of St Anne, Second Class, St Petersburg, late-19th century

Lot Closed

June 9, 02:29 PM GMT

Estimate

12,000 - 18,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

An Important Swiss Collection (lots 6-7, 69, 73-94, 171-172, 195-199, 231-234, 253)


A gold and enamel Order of St Anne, Second Class, St Petersburg, late-19th century

of bulbous form, centered with an enamel image of St. Anne surrounded by pastes, the arched spandrels and suspension pin also set with pastes, the cross enamelled red over a guilloché ground, maker’s mark poorly struck, 56 standard, with a length of yellow-bordered red sash ribbon, fitted in a red leather case

46mm by 43mm

The Sandars Collection of Russian Imperial Orders; Sotheby’s, Geneva, 16 May 1991, lot 326
Acquired at the above sale by the family of the present owner

The Sandars Collection of Imperial Russian Orders


The monumental collection of Orders and Decorations of Paul Sandars Sr was inspired by a gift from his son of a 4th class Badge of St Stanislaus Badge, that he acquired on a visit to Paris. Sandars, who had grown up and trained as a musician in Moscow, had relocated to Germany, then Paris, and finally New York following the occupation of France in 1943, where he entered the world of perfumery. His son’s gift of the St Stanislaus Badge provoked such excitement in Sandars that began researching the history of the Russian Order. His studies evoked feelings of nostalgia for his homeland and prompted him to amass the largest private collection Russian Orders and Decorations at the time. His linguistic acuity facilitated his collecting as he was able not just to research in Russian, but also to liaise with international curators, collectors and dealers. Upon his death, Sandars’s collection comprised a staggering 650 pieces, of which notable pieces from the present collection formed part (lots 7, 73, 75, 76, 78, 80-82, 85 and 89).