A GERMAN VARI-COLOR GOLD MICROMOSAIC BONBONNIERE
Property from the Collection of Robert and Ellen Gutenstein
A GERMAN VARI-COLOR GOLD MICROMOSAIC BONBONNIERE

THE MICROMOSAIC IN THE MANNER OF GIACOMO RAFFAELLI (1753-1836), ROME, CIRCA 1800, THE GOLD BOX HANAU, EARLY 19TH CENTURY

Details
A GERMAN VARI-COLOR GOLD MICROMOSAIC BONBONNIERE
THE MICROMOSAIC IN THE MANNER OF GIACOMO RAFFAELLI (1753-1836), ROME, CIRCA 1800, THE GOLD BOX HANAU, EARLY 19TH CENTURY
The cover set with a micromosaic plaque depicting a perched European goldfinch, with a star border; the gold box decorated with scrolling vines and flowers, marked to interior
2 7/8 in. (7 cm.) diameter
Provenance
Acquired from The Antique Enamel Co., London; June 2010.

Lot Essay

Giacomo Raffaelli is often credited with the invention of micromosaics, exhibiting the technique for the first time in 1775 in Rome. The depiction of birds in mosaic was often found in Florentine pietre dure plaques, table tops and cabinets, typically on a dark background. Raffaelli reproduced the popular motif in various, dynamic forms, including the present example. A snuff box and cover, inscribed by Raffaelli, was sold at Christie's, Amsterdam, on 13 December 2011. Another near identical example is illustrated in Jeanette Hanisee Gabriel, Micromosaics Private Collections, 2016, fig. 125.

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