Russian Silver-Gilt and Cloisonné Enamel Covered Box
Antip Kuzmichev, Moscow, 1886
Rectangular with canted corners, with a hinged domed cover, on a stepped base, enameled with panels of varicolored flowers, foliage and strapwork, the corners with columns and arches, the inside cover monogrammed CAB for Cornelia A. Barculo. Height 4 1/8 (10.5 cm.), width 5 inches (12.7 cm.), depth 4 inches (10.2 cm.).
Provenance:
Cornelia A. Barculo (1812-1901).
Then by descent.
Cornelia A. Barculo, née Talman, was born in 1812 in New York to John Hubbell Talman and Sarah Somerindyke. The Somerindyke family owned a large tract of farm land on the west side of Manhattan, which included what is now part of the Upper West Side, a strip of Central Park and the land on which Lincoln Center and Columbus Circle are now located.
Cornelia was married to Seward Barculo in 1834 and, following his death in 1854, to Winthrop Atwill in 1862. A noted art collector, Cornelia Barculo Atwill purchased the acclaimed Magnolia Vase by Tiffany & Co., the centerpiece of the company's display at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago. The Magnolia Vase was among numerous works of art which she later bequeathed to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, including sculpture and Favrile glass by Louis Comfort Tiffany. Mrs. Atwill owned another important Tiffany & Co. silver and enamel exposition vase, also made for the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition. The vase was sold Christie's, New York, January 20, 2005, lot 72.
A number of the Russian silver and enamel objects offered in the present auction were purchased by Cornelia Barculo Atwill at Tiffany & Co., which retailed enamels by Russian silversmiths in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Sold for $9,450
Estimated at $2,500 - $3,500
Includes Buyer's Premium
Russian Silver-Gilt and Cloisonné Enamel Covered Box
Antip Kuzmichev, Moscow, 1886
Rectangular with canted corners, with a hinged domed cover, on a stepped base, enameled with panels of varicolored flowers, foliage and strapwork, the corners with columns and arches, the inside cover monogrammed CAB for Cornelia A. Barculo. Height 4 1/8 (10.5 cm.), width 5 inches (12.7 cm.), depth 4 inches (10.2 cm.).
Provenance:
Cornelia A. Barculo (1812-1901).
Then by descent.
Cornelia A. Barculo, née Talman, was born in 1812 in New York to John Hubbell Talman and Sarah Somerindyke. The Somerindyke family owned a large tract of farm land on the west side of Manhattan, which included what is now part of the Upper West Side, a strip of Central Park and the land on which Lincoln Center and Columbus Circle are now located.
Cornelia was married to Seward Barculo in 1834 and, following his death in 1854, to Winthrop Atwill in 1862. A noted art collector, Cornelia Barculo Atwill purchased the acclaimed Magnolia Vase by Tiffany & Co., the centerpiece of the company's display at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago. The Magnolia Vase was among numerous works of art which she later bequeathed to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, including sculpture and Favrile glass by Louis Comfort Tiffany. Mrs. Atwill owned another important Tiffany & Co. silver and enamel exposition vase, also made for the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition. The vase was sold Christie's, New York, January 20, 2005, lot 72.
A number of the Russian silver and enamel objects offered in the present auction were purchased by Cornelia Barculo Atwill at Tiffany & Co., which retailed enamels by Russian silversmiths in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
In very good original condition. Light surface wear, gilding lightly rubbed at high points, would benefit from a professional cleaning.
Any condition statement is given as a courtesy to a client, is an opinion and should not be treated as a statement of fact and our Organization shall have no responsibility for any error or omission. Please contact the specialist department to request further information or additional images that may be available.
Auction: Old Master & 19th Century Paintings & Drawings / English & Continental Silver, V, Oct 20, 2022