Apr 21, 2026 10:00 EST

Russian Paintings / Russian Works of Art

 
Lot 236
 

236

Jeweled Gold and Guilloché Enamel Imperial Presentation Snuff Box

Property of a New York Collector

Unmarked, probably Hanau, circa 1870

Cartouche-shaped, with baluster sides, the cover set with six old mine cut diamonds and enameled in translucent royal blue over a wavy engine-turned ground, under foliate cagework, centering an oval portrait miniature of Empress Maria Alexandrovna of Russia, unsigned, within a border set with old mine cut diamonds, further bordered by twenty old mine cut diamonds, the thumb-piece chased with leaves and branches, the sides chased with floral and foliate sprays, the base centering a floral bouquet on a trellis-chased ground, the flange and rim of cover and foot with later scratched stock numbers.

Height 2 inches (5 cm), width 4 1/2 inches (11.4 cm), depth 3 3/4 inches (9.5 cm), approximately 196 dwt., gross.

Provenance:

Private Collection, New York.

Property of a New York Private Collector, Sotheby Parke Bernet, New York, October 24 and 27, 1979, lot 96.

Acquired at the above sale by the family of the present owner.

Sold for $44,800
Estimated at $20,000 - $30,000

Includes Buyer's Premium


 

Property of a New York Collector

Unmarked, probably Hanau, circa 1870

Cartouche-shaped, with baluster sides, the cover set with six old mine cut diamonds and enameled in translucent royal blue over a wavy engine-turned ground, under foliate cagework, centering an oval portrait miniature of Empress Maria Alexandrovna of Russia, unsigned, within a border set with old mine cut diamonds, further bordered by twenty old mine cut diamonds, the thumb-piece chased with leaves and branches, the sides chased with floral and foliate sprays, the base centering a floral bouquet on a trellis-chased ground, the flange and rim of cover and foot with later scratched stock numbers.

Height 2 inches (5 cm), width 4 1/2 inches (11.4 cm), depth 3 3/4 inches (9.5 cm), approximately 196 dwt., gross.

Provenance:

Private Collection, New York.

Property of a New York Private Collector, Sotheby Parke Bernet, New York, October 24 and 27, 1979, lot 96.

Acquired at the above sale by the family of the present owner.

Notes:

Russian sovereigns followed the practice of their European counterparts by awarding jeweled snuff boxes as gifts. The custom flourished in the eighteenth century during the reigns of Empress Elizabeth (1741–1762) and Empress Catherine II (1762–1796), when the habit of snuff-taking had evolved into an elaborate social ritual, creating strong demand for luxurious snuff boxes. In Russia, the tradition of presenting snuff boxes as imperial gifts endured well into the reign of Nicholas II (1894–1917), long after the fashion for snuff-taking had declined elsewhere in Europe.

During the reign of Alexander II (1855–1881), many of the snuff boxes awarded by the sovereign were supplied by German goldsmiths, who also provided pieces for other European courts. Several examples dating from the third quarter of the nineteenth century, set with the jeweled cypher or portrait of Emperor Alexander II, have appeared at auction, including those sold at Christie’s, London, May 25, 2004, lot 215 (later Sotheby’s, London, June 1, 2021, lot 178); Christie’s, London, June 10, 2010, lot 244; and Hermitage Fine Art, Monaco, December 20, 2024, lot 400.

Empress Maria Alexandrovna (1824–1880), who was German by birth, married the future Emperor Alexander II in 1841 and remained his consort until her death in 1880. She bore eight children, among them the future Emperor Alexander III (1845–1894). Snuff boxes fitted with her diamond-set cypher have also appeared on the international auction market. One notable example—a diamond-set, guilloché enamel and two-color gold Russian imperial presentation snuff box made by Carl Martin Weishaupt und Söhne of Hanau—was sold at Doyle, New York, May 25, 2017, lot 711. Another gold snuff box set with the Empress’s diamond cypher, probably made in Hanau, was sold at Christie’s, New York, October 5, 1983, lot 299, and again at Christie’s, New York, October 26, 2007, lot 24. The latter is now in the Iakobachvili Collection (see Haydn Williams, ed., 19th-Century Snuffboxes: Snuffboxes in the Iakobachvili Collection, Volume II, Monaco, 2025, no. 400).

Snuff boxes fitted with a portrait of the Empress are rarer than those fitted with a portrait of the Emperor, and thus they seldom appear on the market. The portrait miniature on the present snuff box is after the original by Franz Xaver Winterhalter (1806-1873), which was painted in 1857. The original portrait hung in the private apartments of Alexander II in the Winter Palace in St. Petersburg, before entering the collection of the State Hermitage Museum in 1926 (museum No. ГЭ-7539). The present snuff box was sold by a New York Private Collector at Sotheby Parke Bernet, New York, October 24 and 27, 1979, lot 96, where it was acquired by the family of the present owner.


Russian Works of Art

   

Auction: Russian Paintings / Russian Works of Art, Apr 21, 2026

  • Auction of Russian Paintings / Russian Works of Art Tops $1.7 Million

  • April 21, 2026 Sale Total Soars Past Expectations Amid International Bidding

  • Circa 1905 Winter Sunset by Ivan Fedorovich Choultsé Achieved $152,900

  • Consignments Are Currently Being Accepted for Future Auctions


NEW YORK, NY – Doyle’s highly successful auction of Russian Paintings / Russian Works of Art on April 21, 2026 saw international bidding drive outstanding results and a sale total that topped $1.7 million – far surpassing expectations. The paintings section of the sale delivered exceptional prices for a broad range of Russian art spanning the 19th and 20th centuries.

Ivan Fedorovich Choultsé
Transatlantic competition drove bidding on a radiant landscape by Ivan Fedorovich Choultsé (1874–1939) far beyond its $20,000–40,000 estimate, achieving an impressive $152,900. Titled Coucher de soleil (Engadine), or Twilight of the Gods, the circa 1905 work captures a brilliant sunset over a snow-covered landscape in the Swiss Alps—a region that proved a rich source of inspiration for the artist. Choultsé was celebrated for his masterful handling of light, particularly in winter scenes, where he rendered snow and ice with remarkable luminosity and depth.

Alexey Gavrilovich Venetsianov
Portrait of a Girl with a Hay Rake attributed to Alexey Gavrilovich Venetsianov achieved a stunning $140,200 amid spirited bidding that spanned the globe. Venetsianov (1780-1847) is widely regarded for his sensitive portrayals of rural life, which helped shape a distinctly Russian school of genre painting in the early 19th century. Property from a West Coast Private Collection, the present painting depicts a young peasant girl rendered in the characteristic manner of the Russian master.

Dmitri Krasnopevtsev
Strong results were also seen for Soviet non-conformist art, with a focused group of works underscoring continued demand for “unofficial” artists working beyond the limits of state-sanctioned doctrine. Among them, a still life by Dmitri Krasnopevtsev (1925-1995) achieved $70,350, reflecting sustained collector interest in artists who developed highly individual visual languages—often marked by wit, experimentation, and a pointed engagement with the realities of Soviet life.

Russian Works of Art
The April 21 sale also featured a section showcasing Russian Works of Art, including Fabergé, enamels, silver, porcelain and icons. (Read More)

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