1899 Imperial Fabergé egg
The Pansy egg or Spinach Jade egg is one of the Imperial Russian Fabergé eggs, and it was commissioned in 1899 by Tsar Nicholas II as an Easter gift for his mother, Dowager Empress Maria Feodoronova. Its design was overseen by the jeweler Peter Carl Fabergé. This egg is one of only three made in the Art Nouveau style; the others are the Lilies of the Valley egg of 1898 and the Clover Leaf egg of 1902.
Description
The egg is made of nephrite and has a stand made of gilt silver in the form of branches twisting up about the bottom of the egg (the egg points downward). Around the sides are five pansies with enamelled leaves and petals. The top of the egg – a nephrite dome – lifts off to reveal the egg's surprise.
Surprise
Regarding the "surprise":
Within is a gold easel surmounted by a diamond-set Star of Bethlehem inside a
wreath over the year; the easel is fluted and embellished with carved gold floral and
torch motifs and is set with gems and pearls. On it rests a heart-shaped plaque enamelled
opalescent white on a sun-ray guilloché background and bordered by rose diamonds set
in silver and surmounted by the Romanov crown also in diamonds. Eleven tiny translucent strawberry enamelled gold covers, each bearing its own monogram, are connected by a large diamond ‘M’ to form a decoration for the front of this plaque.[1]
When a button is pressed, the covers open simultaneously revealing
miniatures of the Imperial Family. Reading vertically, those in the first
column are:
In the second column are
- the Tsar himself
- Grand Duchess Irina, subsequently Princess Youssoupoff, the Tsar's only niece, daughter of Grand Duke Alexander and Grand Duchess Xenia
In the third column are:
In the fourth column are
In the fifth column are:
Not shown are the Tsar's three other as-yet-unborn children.
Owners
This egg is among the 10 Fabergé eggs sold by the Russian Antikvariat in 1930, and it was purchased by the Hammer Galleries of New York. The gallery's owner, Armand Hammer, then sold it to the New Orleans oil heiress Matilda Geddings Gray in 1947. She in turn gave it to her niece, Matilda Gray Stream (Mrs. Harold H. Stream, Jr.), as a wedding anniversary present. It is one of the very few Fabergé Imperial Easter eggs to remain in a private collection.[2]
References
Further reading
External links