Boîte - Bois

05
jours
16
heures
46
minutes
14
secondes
Offre actuelle
€ 1
Sans prix de réserve
Elena Napoleone
Expert
Sélectionné par Elena Napoleone

Titulaire d'un baccalauréat en histoire de l'art et de l'architecture, avec 12 ans d'expérience en arts décoratifs.

Estimation  € 90 - € 130
2 autres personnes s’intéressent cet objet
IT
1 €

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Boîte lacquée Palekh russe en bois, période 1970–1980, dimensions 160 × 60 × 30 mm, état neuf, fabriquée en Russie par le maître Михеев et signée en caractères cyrilliques en bas à gauche.

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Description fournie par le vendeur

Russian lacquer box - “Palekh Miniature”–based on Pushkin's fairy tale the “"The Tale of the Golden Cockerel"- papier-mache

Second half XX century - perfect condition- Russian lacquer boxes
Dimensions: 160 mm x 60 mm x 30 mm
Work artisan Михеев (Cyrillic)
perfect condition
papier-mache
Will be shipped registered and packaged carefully.
at the bottom -left in the Russian plot in Cyrillic - right signature of the master
Photos - of precisely those that are for sale.

Will be shipped registered and packaged carefully.
In "The Tale of the Golden Cockerel," Alexander Pushkin tells the parable of Tsar Dadon, for whom a magical cockerel predicts misfortune and preserves the peace of the kingdom. But this gift comes at a price: power, pride, and carelessness lead the hero to a fatal end. This wise and vivid tale is a warning about the price of greed and careless promises.
Palekh since the pre-Petrine times was famous for its icon painters. The greatest flourishing of Palekh iconography reached the XVIII - early XIX century. Local style was formed under the influence of Moscow, Novgorod, Stroganov and Yaroslavl schools. In addition to icon painting, the Paleshans were engaged in monumental painting, participating in the painting and restoration of churches and cathedrals, including the Faceted Chamber of the Moscow Kremlin, the temples of the Trinity-Sergius Lavra, the Novodevichy Monastery.

After the revolution of 1917 the painters of Palekh were forced to look for new forms of realizing their creative potential. In 1918 the artists created the Palekh Artistic Decorative Artel, which was engaged in painting on wood. The ancestors of the Palekh style are Ivan Golikov and Alexander Glazunov, in whose Moscow workshop Ivan Golikov wrote the first work in the so-called Palekh style. The Palesans got acquainted with the new material papier-mache, which for a century was the basis for the lacquer miniature Fedoskina. The masters mastered the new material, transferring to it the traditional for the ancient Russian icon-painting technology and conventional image stylistics. For the first time Palekh miniatures on papier-mache made at the request of the Handicraft Museum were presented at the All-Russian Agricultural and Artisanal Exhibition in 1923, where they were awarded diplomas of the 2 nd degree.

On December 5, 1924, the seven Palekh artists Ivan Golikov, Ivan Markichev, Ivan Bakanov, Ivan Zubkov, Alexander Zubkov, Alexander Kotukhin, and VV Kotukhin united in the Artel of Ancient Painting. Later they were joined by artists Ivan Vakurov, Dmitry Butorin, Nikolai Zinoviev. In 1925 Palekh miniatures were exhibited at the World Exhibition in Paris.
Typical plots of Palekh miniatures are borrowed from everyday life, literary works of classics, fairy tales, epics and songs. A number of compositions are based on the traditions of classical art [1]. Works are usually performed with tempera paints on a black background and painted with

Russian lacquer box - “Palekh Miniature”–based on Pushkin's fairy tale the “"The Tale of the Golden Cockerel"- papier-mache

Second half XX century - perfect condition- Russian lacquer boxes
Dimensions: 160 mm x 60 mm x 30 mm
Work artisan Михеев (Cyrillic)
perfect condition
papier-mache
Will be shipped registered and packaged carefully.
at the bottom -left in the Russian plot in Cyrillic - right signature of the master
Photos - of precisely those that are for sale.

Will be shipped registered and packaged carefully.
In "The Tale of the Golden Cockerel," Alexander Pushkin tells the parable of Tsar Dadon, for whom a magical cockerel predicts misfortune and preserves the peace of the kingdom. But this gift comes at a price: power, pride, and carelessness lead the hero to a fatal end. This wise and vivid tale is a warning about the price of greed and careless promises.
Palekh since the pre-Petrine times was famous for its icon painters. The greatest flourishing of Palekh iconography reached the XVIII - early XIX century. Local style was formed under the influence of Moscow, Novgorod, Stroganov and Yaroslavl schools. In addition to icon painting, the Paleshans were engaged in monumental painting, participating in the painting and restoration of churches and cathedrals, including the Faceted Chamber of the Moscow Kremlin, the temples of the Trinity-Sergius Lavra, the Novodevichy Monastery.

After the revolution of 1917 the painters of Palekh were forced to look for new forms of realizing their creative potential. In 1918 the artists created the Palekh Artistic Decorative Artel, which was engaged in painting on wood. The ancestors of the Palekh style are Ivan Golikov and Alexander Glazunov, in whose Moscow workshop Ivan Golikov wrote the first work in the so-called Palekh style. The Palesans got acquainted with the new material papier-mache, which for a century was the basis for the lacquer miniature Fedoskina. The masters mastered the new material, transferring to it the traditional for the ancient Russian icon-painting technology and conventional image stylistics. For the first time Palekh miniatures on papier-mache made at the request of the Handicraft Museum were presented at the All-Russian Agricultural and Artisanal Exhibition in 1923, where they were awarded diplomas of the 2 nd degree.

On December 5, 1924, the seven Palekh artists Ivan Golikov, Ivan Markichev, Ivan Bakanov, Ivan Zubkov, Alexander Zubkov, Alexander Kotukhin, and VV Kotukhin united in the Artel of Ancient Painting. Later they were joined by artists Ivan Vakurov, Dmitry Butorin, Nikolai Zinoviev. In 1925 Palekh miniatures were exhibited at the World Exhibition in Paris.
Typical plots of Palekh miniatures are borrowed from everyday life, literary works of classics, fairy tales, epics and songs. A number of compositions are based on the traditions of classical art [1]. Works are usually performed with tempera paints on a black background and painted with

Détails

Époque
1900-2000
Nombre d’articles
1
Pays d’origine
Russie
Matériau
Bois
Condition
Comme neuf, inutilisé
Hauteur
160 mm
Largeur
60 mm
Profondeur
30 mm
Période estimée
1970-1980
Vendu par
PologneVérifié
825
Objets vendus
Particulier

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