A PAIR OF JEWELLED GOLD AND GUILLOCHÉ ENAMEL CUFFLINKS
PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE EUROPEAN COLLECTION
A PAIR OF JEWELLED GOLD AND GUILLOCHÉ ENAMEL CUFFLINKS

BY FABERGÉ, WITH THE WORKMASTER'S MARK OF EDVARD HELENIUS, ST PETERSBURG, 1908-1917, SCRATCHED INVENTORY NUMBER 91685

Details
A PAIR OF JEWELLED GOLD AND GUILLOCHÉ ENAMEL CUFFLINKS
BY FABERGÉ, WITH THE WORKMASTER'S MARK OF EDVARD HELENIUS, ST PETERSBURG, 1908-1917, SCRATCHED INVENTORY NUMBER 91685
Each with two square terminals, enamelled in translucent white over wavy sunburst guilloché ground, each with a rose-cut diamond accent, connected by a link, marked on links
Each terminal: ½ in. (1.3 cm.) wide (2)
Provenance
Acquired by the family of Friedrich Ludwig Mertens before the Russian Revolution.
By descent to the present owner.

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Aleksandra Babenko
Aleksandra Babenko

Lot Essay

The following collection of jewellery (lots 214-219) is offered at auction for the first time by the descendants of Friedrich Ludwig Mertens (1812-1887), owner of a prominent nineteenth-century fur business that was located on 21 Nevsky Prospekt in St Petersburg. Mertens moved to Russia from Germany in 1832 and acquired the impressive structure, still known as the Mertens House Building, in 1871. The present-day appearance of Mertens House dates to 1910-1912, when Friedrich Ludwig Mertens commissioned the architect Mikhail Lyalevich to remodel the building in current Neo-classical and Art Nouveau style. V.V. Kuznetsov added sculptural details to the faade. The remodelled building forms an essential part of the layout and view of the Nevsky Prospect.
According to his descendants, Friedrich Ludwig Mertens supplied the Imperial family with furs from his shop and most likely knew the Fabergé family personally. He was married twice and had twenty-one children. As a result of the Revolution, his descendants left Russia between 1917 and 1925.

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