A Group of Silver-Gilt Plates and Serving Pieces from the Orloff Service
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A Group of Silver-Gilt Plates and Serving Pieces from the Orloff Service

MARKS OF CARL TEGELSTEN, NICHOLLS & PLINCKE AND IVAN MOROZOV, ST PETERSBURG, MID 19TH - EARLY 20TH CENTURY

Details
A Group of Silver-Gilt Plates and Serving Pieces from the Orloff Service
Marks of Carl Tegelsten, Nicholls & Plincke and Ivan Morozov, St Petersburg, mid 19th - early 20th century
Comprising three oval trays, four dishes, and two sauceboats on stands with ladles; the trays and dishes with shaped rims chased with laurel leaves and berries and borders engraved with bands of wavescrolls and Imperial double-headed eagles, the sauceboats on conforming stands with rims moulded as grapevines, handles clad with grape leaves, and Imperial double-headed eagles on either side, the ladles with oval bowls and scrolling foliate decoration, the terminals with oval cartouches engraved with Imperial double-headed eagles, marked on reverses, under bases or under stems
The largest oval trays 25 5/8 (65.1 cm.) long
621.9 oz. (19,344 gr.) gross weight (11)
Provenance
Grand Duke Michael Mikhailovich (1861-1929) and thence by family descent.
Literature
Baron A. de Foelkersam, Inventaire de l'Argenterie conservée dans les garde-meubles des Palais Impériaux, St. Petersburg, 1907, pp. 61-124.
Special Notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium, which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

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Lot Essay

These pieces were later additions to the celebrated Orloff Service, one of the greatest commissions of French silver of the eighteenth century. Empress Catherine the Great ordered the service from the Parisian silversmiths Jacques Roettiers and son Jacques-Nicolas Roettiers for use at Court, although she subsequently presented it to her lover and political ally Count Gregory Orloff. The service was supplemented throughout the nineteenth century by the leading silversmiths of St. Petersburg, including Carl Tegelsten, Nicholls and Plincke and Morozov. While the service consisted of 3,000 pieces originally, only about 1,000 pieces survived by 1907, when Baron A. de Foelkersam published his well-known inventory of the Russian Imperial silver collections, Inventaire de l'Argenterie conservée dans les garde-meubles des Palais Impériaux.

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