165. THE SMOLENSK MOTHER OF GOD ICON IN A SILVER AND ENAMEL OKLAD RUSSIA, MOSCOW, 1896

ID-ANTQ-16051
live_auctionAUCTION OF RUSSIAN AND EUROPEAN ART No. 13
Auction begins: 29 Nov 2025 12:00
Estimate: 20000-30000 EUR
Add to favorites
Want to take part in the bidding?
Login or Sign up
guarantee
Auction participation
payment and delivery
A convenient and secure service that guarantees bidders the placement of preliminary bids, as well as bids in real time.
View the rules for the ANTIQON auction
Payment type:
payments
delivery:

THE SMOLENSK MOTHER OF GOD ICON IN A SILVER AND ENAMEL OKLAD RUSSIA, MOSCOW, 1896

A rare icon of the Mother of God of Smolensk with a silver oklad, created in Moscow in the late 19th century. This work represents an outstanding example of fine Russian jewellery art, combining the canonical precision of icon painting with the ornamental richness of the Moscow school of silversmithing. The oklad is made of solid silver, decorated with chasing, engraving and polychrome enamel in shades of blue, turquoise, white and cobalt.

A distinctive decorative role within the ornamental structure of the oklad is given to polychrome enamel (finift). On this example, cloisonné, champlevé and painted enamels are used in various combinations, adding brightness and colour saturation to the composition. The central field is adorned with vegetal ornament, while the Virgin’s maphorion and tunic, and Christ’s himation and chiton, are executed in the trompe-l’œil technique — an optical illusion of embroidered textile achieved by combining chasing, engraving and enamel painting. The halos are framed with enamel borders, while the fields and corner plates feature intricate vegetal motifs in cloisonné and champlevé enamel. The lower bar bears an enamelled plaque inscribed: “Smolenskaya Presvyataya Bogoroditsa”.

On the reverse remains the original brass dedicatory plaque engraved:
“A gift to the 24th Tikhvin Infantry Regiment. August 1905.”

Marks:On the halo — maker’s mark “S.Zh.” in a rectangular cartouche — Sergei Ivanovich Zharov, owner of a Moscow silver workshop located on Semyonovskaya Street in the Rogozhskaya district. His workshop operated from the late 19th to the early 20th century, employing 12 craftsmen by 1905. Renowned for its exceptional quality and refined execution, Zharov’s firm is regarded among Russia’s leading silversmiths. His works (primarily oklads and kiots) are preserved in the State Hermitage Museum, the State Historical Museum, the Andrei Rublev Museum of Old Russian Art, and the Sergiev Posad Museum-Reserve.

On the robe — maker’s mark “S.T.” — Stepan Trunakov, Moscow silversmith active between 1894 and 1898.
Assay mark “L.O/1896” — Lev Fridrikhovich Oleks, Moscow District Assay Inspector.
State assay mark with the city arms of Moscow (Saint George) and “84” silver standard.

Material: Silver, 84 standard, enamel, partial gilding.
Technique: Casting, stamping, chasing, engraving, cloisonné, champlevé and painted enamel, trompe-l’œil, gilding, piercing.
Dimensions: 26 × 32 cm.

Condition: Satisfactory. Signs of age and use; minor surface wear and small damage in the upper right part of the central field; partial enamel rubbing.

Provenance: Gift to the 24th Tikhvin Infantry Regiment. Private European collection

Condition: Signs of wear commensurate with age
Material: Silver 84, Cloisonné enamel, Gilding, Champlevé enamel
Product sizes: Height - 32cm, Width - 26cm, Depth - 7cm
Location: Gallery "Antiqon", Brivibas street 52, Riga, Latvia
Style: Neo-Russian
Country: Russia
Period: 19th century
Item description is approximate automatic translation . Antiqon.com is not responsible for translation errors. Show original text.
machine translation
Do you have a similar item?
Want to sell it ?
for pigs
Fill out the description of your item, attach high-quality photos of it, and set an affordable price. After moderation, your ad will go to the Antiqon online catalog and will be available to collectors from all over the world.

Similar items

Subscribe to our newsletter
Never miss new auctions
Subscribe

Your latest views