A finely carved marine ivory necklace consisting... - Lot 108 - Pierre Bergé & Associés

Lot 108
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2000 - 3000 EUR
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Result : 2 600EUR
A finely carved marine ivory necklace consisting... - Lot 108 - Pierre Bergé & Associés
A finely carved marine ivory necklace consisting of eight openwork rosette-shaped plates linked by ten chains. North-west Russia, Arkhangelsk, circa 1830 Length: 70 cm - Weight: 12 g (slight repairs) The Victoria and Albert Museum in London holds parts of these delicate rosette chains in its collection. Compared to the boxes or other precious objects made in the workshops of the Arkhangelsk region, which since the 18th century have specialised in openwork work on bone or marine ivory, the manufacture of these highly refined necklaces is attributed to north-west Russia. One tradition had it that these necklaces were the work of the Swedish marshal Magnus Gustafson Stenbock (1664-1717) during his captivity in Copenhagen. This attractive hypothesis has now been abandoned. Book consulted: M. Trusted, Baroque and later Ivories, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, 2013, cat. 321 and 322, p 325-326.
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