LOT 1314:
SEHR FEINES TRIPTYCHON MIT ERWEITERTER DEESIS, DER NEUTESTAMENTLICHEN DREIFALTIGKEIT UND VITA-SZENEN DES HEILIGEN ...
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Sold for: €7,000
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SEHR FEINES TRIPTYCHON MIT ERWEITERTER DEESIS, DER NEUTESTAMENTLICHEN DREIFALTIGKEIT UND VITA-SZENEN DES HEILIGEN NIKOLAUS
Origin: Russland, 17. Jh.
Technique: Eitempera auf Kreidegrund auf Holz, Kowtscheg, partielle Vergoldung. Graviertes Metallbasma
Dimension: 49,5 x 67 cm (geöffnet)
A VERY FINE TRIPTYCH SHOWING THE EXTENDED DEISIS WITH BASMA, THE NEW TESTAMENT TRINITY AND SCENES FROM THE LIFE OF ST. NICHOLAS OF MYRA Russian, 17th century Tempera on wood panels. The central icon overlaid with a finely engraved metal basma. On the reverse traces of an old label ‘POSTNIKO[…]’ in Cyrillic. Minor paint blisterings, minor damages to the basma. 49.5 x 67 cm (extended). 1826 der Handel von Ikonen sowie orthodoxen Gegenständen aus Silber und Gold belegt ist. The label on the back refers to the famous Moscow family Postnikov, for whom the trade in icons and Orthodox objects made of silver and gold has been documented since 1826. Among the members of the family, which was active for several generations, were Mikhailo Alekseevich Postnikov and his eldest son Nikolai Mikhailovich. He was a famous collector of antique Russian icons. Part of his rich collection is now in the Tretyakov Gallery, the Moscow Kremlin and other Russian museums. His younger brother Andrei Mikhailovich Postnikov, born in 1830, collected Russian icons for almost fifty years.
A VERY FINE TRIPTYCH SHOWING THE EXTENDED DEISIS WITH BASMA, THE NEW TESTAMENT TRINITY AND SCENES FROM THE LIFE OF ST. NICHOLAS OF MYRA Russian, 17th century Tempera on wood panels. The central icon overlaid with a finely engraved metal basma. On the reverse traces of an old label ‘POSTNIKO[…]’ in Cyrillic. Minor paint blisterings, minor damages to the basma. 49.5 x 67 cm (extended). 1826 der Handel von Ikonen sowie orthodoxen Gegenständen aus Silber und Gold belegt ist. The label on the back refers to the famous Moscow family Postnikov, for whom the trade in icons and Orthodox objects made of silver and gold has been documented since 1826. Among the members of the family, which was active for several generations, were Mikhailo Alekseevich Postnikov and his eldest son Nikolai Mikhailovich. He was a famous collector of antique Russian icons. Part of his rich collection is now in the Tretyakov Gallery, the Moscow Kremlin and other Russian museums. His younger brother Andrei Mikhailovich Postnikov, born in 1830, collected Russian icons for almost fifty years.