UK: Rothschild Faberge egg fetches a record price of nine milliion pounds in Russian art works auction
Record ID:
1535634
UK: Rothschild Faberge egg fetches a record price of nine milliion pounds in Russian art works auction
- Title: UK: Rothschild Faberge egg fetches a record price of nine milliion pounds in Russian art works auction
- Date: 30th November 2007
- Summary: (W5) LONDON, ENGLAND, UNITED KINGDOM (NOVEMBER 27, 2007) (REUTERS) (SOUNDBITE) (English) INTERNATIONAL HEAD OF RUSSIAN ART AT CHRISTIE'S, ALEXIS DE TIESENHAUSEN, SAYING: "The uniqueness of this egg is that basically it was unknown to the great public. We were approached 20 years ago to evaluate and sort of for the last 20 years slowly but surely we put the full story together. It's a unique egg not because it only belongs to Rothschild but it's an egg which basically since it was purchased in 1902 stayed in the same family. I mean it's probably the only egg of this size produced by the workshop of Faberge which stayed for more than one hundred years in the same family." DISPLAY OF RUSSIAN ARTIST KONSTANTIN SOMOV'S PAINTINGS VARIOUS PAINTINGS FROM SOMOV'S COLLECTION ON DISPLAY BEFORE AUCTION
- Embargoed: 14th December 2007 14:07
- Keywords:
- Topics: Arts / Culture / Entertainment
- Reuters ID: LVAEZUT040KK086JGI3I21UR5O1X
- Aspect Ratio: 4:3
- Story Text: A previously unrecorded Faberge egg fetched nine million pounds (18.5 million USD) on Wednesday (November 28), setting an auction record for the jeweller, any Russian art object and any timepiece.
The translucent pink egg contains a clock and animated cockerel and had never been seen in public before the sale was announced.
A spokesman for Christie's said a tense auction room burst into applause when the hammer went down. The piece, not publicly documented when it was made in 1902 for the Rothschild family, went to an unidentified private Russian buyer, he added.
The egg is the highlight of a five-day sale of Russian 19th- and 20th century art at Christie's in London.
Faberge's eggs have become a byword for opulence and luxury ever since the young jeweller was commissioned in 1885 by Tsar Alexander III of Russia to make one as a gift for his wife Maria.
According to Christie's experts, there are only two other known Faberge eggs featuring both a clock and an automaton.
In this case the automaton is in the form of a diamond-set cockerel which pops up, flaps its wings, nods its head, opens and shuts its beak and crows every hour.
The Rothschild Faberge Egg is exceptionally large with vary-coloured gold work and translucent pink enamel.
Speaking to Reuters on Tuesday (November 27) the International Head of Russian Art at Christie's, Alexis de Tiesenhausen said that what is unique about the egg is that it belonged to a single family for over a hundred years.
"The uniqueness of this egg is that basically it was unknown to the great public. We were approached 20 years ago to evaluate and sort of for the last 20 years slowly but surely we put the full story together. It's a unique egg not because it only belongs to Rothschild but it's an egg which basically since it was purchased in 1902 stayed in the same family. I mean it's probably the only egg of this size produced by the workshop of Faberge which stayed for more than one hundred years in the same family," he said.
Another highlight of the auction is the Somov Collection, which offers 53 lots related to Konstantin Andreevich Somov, a well known Russian painter who was born in Russia and emigrated to France before dying in the late 1930's.
The pre-auction viewings at Christie's offered the members of the public a unique chance to see the Russian masterpieces.
Also part of Russian week, Christie's held a sale of Russian miniatures depicting members of the Imperial Family and key military and cultural figures. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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