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Nobel's Ice Egg (Fabergé egg)

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(Redirected from Nobel Ice (Fabergé egg)) 1914 Fabergé egg Not to be confused with Ice eggs.
Nobel's Ice Egg Fabergé egg
Year delivered1914
CustomerEmanuel Nobel
RecipientUnknown
Current owner
Individual or institutionArtie and Dorothy McFerrin
Design and materials
Materials usedplatinum
Height70 millimetres (2.8 in)
Surprisewatch

The Nobel's Ice Egg (Russian: Ледяное яйцо Нобеля), sometimes also referred to as the Snowflake egg, is a jeweled Fabergé egg made under the supervision of the Russian jeweler Peter Carl Fabergé for the Swedish-Russian oil baron and industrialist Emanuel Nobel between 1913 and 1914. Unlike many of the eggs made in Fabergé's workshop, this egg is not considered an "imperial" egg as it was not given by a Russian Tsar to any Tsarina.

Design

The pearl-colored ground of the shell is covered with white enamel in alternating transparent and opaque layers each painted and engraved separately to resemble frost, the result is the icy opalescence of a winter morning. The egg, without support, lies on its side and opens in half along the greater perimeter, on the edges there is a row of beads. It lacks the realism of the Winter Egg which, however, shares the inspiration and technique in the execution of the hinges inside the jagged edges. It was designed by Alma Theresia Pihl as was the Winter Egg.

Surprise

Surprise in the Nobel Ice egg

Inside there is a watch pendant, the dial is partly hidden by decorations in the shape of ice crystals placed on the case, made of opalescent rock crystal.

History

Franz Birbaum, Fabergé's head workmaster, recalls that Emanuel Nobel "was so generous in his presents that at times it seemed that this was his chief occupation and delight. Orders were constantly being made for him in the workshops and from time to time he came to have a look at them. Often he only decided for whom the present should be when the work was finished."

After the Russian Revolution, it was sold to the Parisian dealer A. A. Anatra, who subsequently sold it to Jacques Zolotnitzky, of A La Vieille Russie, in Paris. It was later sold to a North-American collector.

In 1994, it was sold at Christie's, in Geneva, for $220,000.

The Nobel Ice egg's current owner are Artie and Dorothy McFerrin of Houston. It is on loan at the Houston Museum of Natural Science.

References

  1. Berry, Heidi L. (May 19, 1994). "REDISCOVERED FABERGE EGGS ILLUMINATE GENEVA AUCTION". Washington Post. Archived from the original on August 10, 2016. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  2. Ramit Plushnick-Masti (2013-03-18). "Houston couple puts Faberge collection on display". News.yahoo.com. Archived from the original on 2019-08-31. Retrieved 2019-10-08.

Notes

  • H.C. Bainbridge, Peter Carl Fabergé (London, 1949) p. 58
  • Birbaum, Franz, Memoirs, in St. Petersburg, The State Hermitage Museum, Fabergé: Imperial Jeweller (1993) p. 454)
  • Habsburg-Lothringen, Geza von, and Solodkoff, Alexander von, Fabergé Joaillier à la Cour de Russie (Fribourg, 1979) pp. 108, 118, 158, pl.141, p. 120, cat.69
  • Snowman, A. Kenneth, The Art of Carl Fabergé (London, 1964) p. 113, pl.387
  • Solodkoff, Alexander von (1984). 'History of the House of Fabergé', Masterpieces from the House of Fabergé. New York. p. 36.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Solodkoff, Alexander von, Fabergé (London, 1988) p. 47

External links

Fabergé eggs
Imperial Easter eggs
(1885–1917)
Kelch eggs
(1898–1904)
Other Fabergé eggs
Fabergé workmasters
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