Lot 0084
Marshak. Set of Vodka Beakers on a Tray with Erotic Scenes. Silver, Parcel-Gilt, En Plein Enamel
Estimate: 5000-6000€
Marshak. Set of Vodka Beakers on a tray with Erotic Scenes. Silver, parcel-gilt, en plein enamel
Makers mark of «Marshak». Kiev, 1908-1917. Weight: 134.7 g. Dimensions of the tray with the handles: 13.5 x 4.2 x 2 cm. Height of the glass: 4.4 cm.
A rare set of three vodka beakers on a silver tray, each decorated with finely painted en plein enamel miniatures depicting humorous and erotic scenes of partially undressed women. The lively and playful imagery reflects a popular taste for light-hearted and risqué motifs in art-nouveau style.
Iosif Abramovich Marshak (1854–1918), became one of the leading jewelers of Imperial Russia. Often called the “Cartier of Kiev” or «Ukrainian Faberge» he founded his own workshop in 1878, gradually expanding it into a major enterprise on Khreshchatyk Street.
Marshak introduced modern methods of production, employed both men and women craftsmen, and gained international recognition at exhibitions in Chicago (1893) and Antwerp (1894). His firm produced jewelry, silverware, clocks, and presentation pieces, many of which were purchased by aristocratic families and members of the Imperial court.
Starting price: 4000€
Estimate: 5000-6000€
Hammer Price: 5000€
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Lot 0082
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Estimate: 6000-8000€





Lot 0082
Very Rare Faberge Silver, Engraved Rock Crystal and Guilloche Enamel Vase by Mikhail Perchin
Estimate: 6000-8000€Very Rare Fabergé Silver, Engraved Rock Crystal and Guilloché Enamel Vase
Maker’s mark of “MP” and “Faberge”. Petersburg, 1898–1903.
Inv. No. 1163. Height: 7.6 cm. Total weight: 114.8 gThis rare Fabergé vase, crafted under the supervision of the firm’s leading workmaster Michael Perchin, exemplifies the refinement of late Imperial lapidary art. The delicately engraved rock crystal body rests on a silver base with translucent guilloché enamel in deep red.
The exceptional clarity and size of the smoky quartz used for this piece are remarkable, as such flawless crystals were sourced exclusively from the Ural Mountains and reserved for Fabergé’s workshops. Cutting rock crystal of this purity without fractures required exceptional skill, making this vase a true testament to the artistry of Fabergé’s lapidaries. Comparable vases are discussed in Franz Birbaum’s Memoirs (in: Habsburg & Lopato, Fabergé: Imperial Jeweller, Milan, 1993, p. 457).
Fabergé collaborated with several renowned stone-cutting centers, including the Imperial Peterhof Lapidary Works and workshops in Idar-Oberstein, Germany. After 1908, the firm’s own lapidaries, such as Peter Kremlev and Peter Derbychev, created masterpieces from hardstones within the Fabergé atelier.
Michael Perchin (1860–1903) was Fabergé’s chief workmaster from 1888 until his death in 1903. Trained under the court jeweler Vladimir Finikov, Perchin oversaw the creation of over 20,000 works, including twenty-eight Imperial Easter eggs and the celebrated Kelch series. His workshop produced many of Fabergé’s most technically sophisticated and artistically refined gold, silver, and hardstone objects, often in collaboration with his talented assistant Henrik Wigström, who succeeded him after 1903. Comparable Works:
Christie’s, London, Important Russian Silver, Works of Art and Fabergé, 28 November 2007, Lot 32: A Fabergé Gold-Mounted Rock Crystal and Guilloché Enamel Vase, Workmaster Michael Perchin, c.1898–1903 (https://www.christies.com/en/lot/lot-4857825)
Sotheby’s, London, Russian Works of Art, Fabergé and Icons, 30 November 2020: A Fabergé En Plein Enamel Gold-Mounted Rock Crystal Vase, early 20th century (https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2020/russian-works-of-art-faberge-and-icons/a-faberge-en-plein-enamel-gold-mounted-rock)
Starting price: 5000€
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Lot 0083
Russian Gold and Gem-Stone Smoking Set “Samorodok” by Friedrich Koehli
Estimate: 3500-4500€







Lot 0083
Russian Gold and Gem-Stone Smoking Set “Samorodok” by Friedrich Koehli
Estimate: 3500-4500€A Russian Gold and Gem-Set Smoking Set “Samorodok”
Maker’s mark of “FK”. Petersburg, late 19th century.
Dimensions of case: 7 × 14 × 2.7 cm. Total weight of items: 44.6 g.A luxurious three-piece smoking set comprising a cigar cutter, mouthpiece, and matchbox, each crafted in gold with a fine samorodok texture and set with colored gemstones. Presented in the original fitted green leather case lined with silk and velvet.
Friedrich Koehli (1837–1909) founded his distinguished jewelry firm in St. Petersburg in 1874. Originally from Switzerland, Koehli rose to prominence as one of the most refined and technically skilled jewelers of the Imperial capital. By 1902, his firm had been appointed official supplier to the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna and Grand Duke Pavel Alexandrovich, and later to Grand Duchess Maria Alexandrovna, Duchess of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha.
Koehli’s works — gold cigarette cases, enamel boxes, and diamond-set presentation gifts — were highly prized at the Imperial Court. He exhibited alongside Fabergé at the 1900 Paris Exposition Universelle, serving as a member of the jury. In 1903, together with his son Theodor-Friedrich (Fyodor Fyodorovich) Koehli, he established the partnership F. & F. Koehli, which continued the family’s production of fine gold and enamel objects until 1911.
Koehli’s elegant creations, often distinguished by samorodok surfaces, fine enameling, and restrained gemstone settings, remain among the most sophisticated examples of St. Petersburg court jewelry at the turn of the century
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Lot 0085
Very Rare Fabergé Medallion with a Minerva Cameo on a Stand in the Shape of an Easel by Henrik Wigström
Estimate: 35000-45000€






Lot 0085
Very Rare Fabergé Medallion with a Minerva Cameo on a Stand in the Shape of an Easel by Henrik Wigström
Estimate: 35000-45000€A rare Fabergé Medallion with Minerva Cameo on Easel Stand . Workmaster Henrik Wigström, St. Petersburg, 1908–1917 . Silver, gilt, guilloché enamel, carved cameo. Easel dimensions: 18.5 × 8 cm; medallion: 8.6 × 6 cm
A highly rare Fabergé creation, this object unites a finely carved cameo of Minerva, goddess of wisdom and war, with an elegant silver-gilt easel mount enriched with translucent guilloché enamel. Designed by the firm’s chief workmaster Henrik Wigström, the piece exemplifies Fabergé’s ability to combine classical imagery with refined decorative settings. Comparable examples are known only from the most distinguished collections, including a related work sold at Christie’s (A Selection of Fabergé Masterpieces from the Harry Woolf Collection, 9 November 2021, lot 32 SOLD GBP 137,500). Henrik Wigström is regarded as one of the most important workmasters of the House of Fabergé, alongside his predecessor Michael Perkhin. Born in Finland, Wigström began his training as an apprentice to the local jeweler and goldsmith Peter Madsen. Through Madsen’s professional connections in Russia, he moved to St. Petersburg in 1886, where he joined the Fabergé workshops as an assistant to Perkhin, the firm’s leading workmaster at the time. Following Perkhin’s death in 1903, Wigström succeeded him as head workmaster.Under his supervision, Fabergé’s workshops produced some of their most sophisticated creations in the Louis XVI and Neoclassical styles. He was highly prolific: approximately half of the Imperial Easter Eggs, as well as the majority of miniature hardstone animals, flowers, boxes, and cigarette cases made between 1904 and 1917, bear his mark “H.W.”
Wigström was also responsible for a remarkable series of objets de fantaisie, including miniature furniture inspired by 18th-century European decorative arts. These delicate, doll-like creations—crafted in gold and enamel—blur the line between functional objects and pure ornament.
One notable example is the bonbonnière in the form of an Empire-style gondola chair, produced around 1911–1912 and now in the Fabergé Museum Collection.
Starting price: 30000€
Estimate: 35000-45000€
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Lot 0086
Egor Cheriatov. Silver Enameled Beaker in Art-Nouveau Style
Estimate: 5000-7000€




Lot 0086
Egor Cheriatov. Silver Enameled Beaker in Art-Nouveau Style
Estimate: 5000-7000€Egor Cheriatov. Silver enameled beaker in art-nouveau style.
Makers mark of «E. CH.». Moscow, 1913.
Engraving on one rim of “July 2, 1913”, on the other “L.E. Koenig – Heirs”
Silver beaker on four ball feet with polychrome opaque enamel decoration. This remarkable piece, created by the master jeweler Georgy (Egor) Kuzmich Cheryatov, embodies of Russian Art Nouveau style. With the bird-shaped handles with semi-precious cabochon stones incrustation.
Georgy Kuzmich Cheryatov (1873–1947) was head of the silver department of the Moscow jewelry firm Lorie. Trained as a silversmith at the turn of the century, he became one of the prominent exponents of the Neo-Russian style, a branch of national romanticism in decorative arts. Alongside his long-standing collaboration with Lorie, Cheryatov also produced independent works marked by individuality and artistic refinement.
Dimensions: 5.3 x 14.2 x 9.6 cm. Total weight: 206.5 gStarting price: 4000€
Estimate: 5000-7000€
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