Auction 521 Works of Art & Art Nouveau
Nov 12, 2024
Hitzelerstr. 2, 50968 Köln, Germany
Auction: Tuesday, 12 November 2024
The auction has ended

LOT 43:

Rome: EXTRAORDINARY WOODEN TABATIERE WITH MICROMOSAIC

catalog
  Previous item
Next item 
Sold for: €16,000
Start price:
4,000
Estimated price :
€5,000 - €7,000
Buyer's Premium: 35%
VAT: 19% On commission only
Users from foreign countries may be exempted from tax payments, according to the relevant tax regulations
Auction took place on Nov 12, 2024 at VAN HAM Kunstauktionen GmbH Co. KG
tags:

Rome: EXTRAORDINARY WOODEN TABATIERE WITH MICROMOSAIC
EXTRAORDINARY WOODEN TABATIERE WITH MICROMOSAIC.

Rome.
Date: Ca. 1810.
Maker/Designer: In the style of Gioacchino Barberi (1783-1857).
Technique: Very small, polychrome tesserae. Root wood. Yellow gold.
Description: Rectangular shape. Delicate, rectangular micro-mosaic set into the top of the tabatiere,
framed by a narrow frame with leafy tendrils. The mosaic depicts an animated scene of a
wild boar hunt with hunting dogs in virtuoso craftsmanship. Mountain landscape with lake
in the background.
Measurement: 2,5x9x6cm.
Mark: Gold mount marked: Paris warranty for 840ct gold (Rosenberg No.6571, 6584), maker's mark JL with bird.
Wood of the lid with crack and mounting therefore loosely attached.

Provenance:
German aristrocratic ownership.

Literatur:
Hanisee Gabriel, Jeanette: The Gilbert Collection - Micromosaics, London 2000. See for comparison with Gioacchino Barberi p.70, cat. no.18.

The term 'micromosaic' was coined by Sir Arthur Gilbert, a businessman and art lover who was able to build up one of the most important collections of micromosaics over the course of many years. The so-called 'Rosalind and Arthur Gilbert Collection' is now kept in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.
The present box with its highly refined micromosaic and rather dramatic scene can be compared very favourably with a bonbonnière from the same collection. It shows a fight between a dog and a cat and was created by the Roman mosaic artist Gioacchino Barberi (1783-1857). Every detail, whether the teeth of the animals or the bark of the tree trunk, is composed of tiny glass stones, the so-called tesserae. These are only visible as individual stones at absolute close range and otherwise form an almost smooth surface reminiscent of enamel painting.

Rome
Early Works of Art


Explanations to the Catalogue

Estimated shipping costs for this lot:
Germany: 18,49 Euro plus 3,51 Euro VAT
EU: 26,89 Euro plus 5,11 Euro VAT
Worldwide: 54,62 Euro plus 10,38 Euro VAT
additional shipping insurance


catalog
  Previous item
Next item