Lot 0084
Russian Crystal and Gilded Decoration Champagne Beaker in the Form of Flute
Estimate: 300-350€
Champagne Flute
Private manufacture, Russia, mid-19th century
Crystal, gilded decoration
Height: 18.5 cm
A finely crafted crystal champagne beaker in the form of a flute, adorned with delicate gilded drapery motifs and a stylized ornamental frieze along the rim. The elegant proportions and refined gilding reflect the neoclassical influence in Russian glass making of the mid-19th century.
Starting price: 250€
Estimate: 300-350€
Hammer Price: €
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Lot 0083
Russian Glass Vodka Tumbler with a Gold Rim “Nevaliashka”
Estimate: 400-600€

Lot 0083
Russian Glass Vodka Tumbler with a Gold Rim “Nevaliashka”
Estimate: 400-600€Vodka Tumbler “Nevaliashka”
Imperial Glass Factory, St. Petersburg
Late 19th century
Glass, gilded rim
Height: 7.2 cm.
Diameter: 6.6 cm
A small rounded vodka tumbler known as “Nevaliashka” (“roly-poly”), finely cut and decorated with a gilt rim and stylized leaf motifs. The elegant form and balanced proportions demonstrate the craftsmanship of the Imperial Glass Factory in St. Petersburg, renowned for its refinement and precision.A comparable example is held in the collection of the State Hermitage Museum and published in the catalogue Maxim Kocherov Collection: From Private Collection to Museum (Russian Museum; Palace Editions, 2014).
Starting price: 350€
Estimate: 400-600€
Hammer Price: € -

Lot 0082
Russian Imperial Glass Vodka Tumbler “Nevaliashka”
Estimate: 400-600€

Lot 0082
Russian Imperial Glass Vodka Tumbler “Nevaliashka”
Estimate: 400-600€Vodka Tumbler “Nevaliashka”
Imperial Glass Factory, Russia, late 19th century
Cobalt blue glass, cut and enameled
Height: 7 cm.
Diameter: 7 cmA rounded vodka tumbler known as “Nevaliashka” (“roly-poly”), made of deep cobalt-blue glass with cut decoration and a delicate white enamel border.
Starting price: 350€
Estimate: 400-600€
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Lot 0086
Judaica Kiddush Beaker with Menorah Motif, Polish Lands of the Russian Empire, Second Half of the 19th Century
Estimate: 800-1200€



Lot 0086
Judaica Kiddush Beaker with Menorah Motif, Polish Lands of the Russian Empire, Second Half of the 19th Century
Estimate: 800-1200€Judaica. Kiddush beaker for Sabbath wine, with the image of the Menorah. Polish lands of the Russian Empire, second half of the 19th century.
Glass; acid-etching, engraving. Dimensions: 13,3 x 9.8 x 9.8 cm.
Inscriptions: Hebrew letters נ״ח (“Noah”).
A cylindrical beaker of clear glass, ornamented with a continuous frieze of polished “pearls” around the lower zone and a scalloped band along the rim.
One side bears a frontal seven-branched Menorah with lit lamps, rendered as a ceremonial emblem. In Jewish tradition the Menorah is the principal attribute of the Temple in Jerusalem and a visual sign of divine presence, recalled in the biblical prescription given to Moses (Exodus 25:31, 37). Stylised foliate sprays flank the base, framing the composition in a restrained ornamental register.
The reverse presents a heraldic tableau: two facing lions support a crown, from which cords with tassel-like pendants descend. Radiating strokes around the crown intensify its sacral and emblematic character. Below, the Hebrew abbreviation נ״ח is traditionally read as “Noah”, suggesting an allusion to the biblical narrative, where the righteous patriarch is associated with salvation and renewed covenantal order.
By its iconography and function, the beaker belongs to the material culture of Jewish communities in the Polish provinces of the Empire, intended for the Kiddush blessing over wine on the Sabbath and festivalsStarting price: 700€
Estimate: 800-1200€
Hammer Price: € -

Lot 0085
Russian Imperial Glass Goblet, Imperial Glass Factory, St Petersburg, 1880s
Estimate: 6000-8000€






Lot 0085
Russian Imperial Glass Goblet, Imperial Glass Factory, St Petersburg, 1880s
Estimate: 6000-8000€A Russian Imperial Glass Goblet St Petersburg, Imperial Glass Factory, decorated by Ivan I. Murinov, 1880s.
Clear glass; blown, painted with transparent enamels and gold.
Dimensions
Height: 15 cm. Diameter; 7,6 cm.
Mark: gold enamel imperial cypher of Alexander III, “A III” beneath a crown, on the underside.
A rare Imperial Russian wine goblet. The vessel has a broad, slightly tapering bowl, a slender stem widening gently toward the base, and a hollow lower section articulated by a decorative knop above the spreading foot.
The surface is richly painted in transparent enamels and gold in a Renaissance Revival manner. Around the bowl runs a wide ornamental band composed of scrolling arabesques, stylized foliage, and symmetrical strapwork motifs in a refined palette of pale blue, red, ochre, and gold. The knop is encircled with a berry-and-leaf ornament, while the foot is decorated with palmettes and a blue beaded border framed by gilt bands.
Renaissance-style painting executed in transparent enamels on clear glass ranks among the most refined historicist directions in the production of the Imperial Glass Factory in the later 19th century. This type of decoration, described in factory records as “Italian” or “Venetian” in style, appears from the turn of the 1860s-1870s and is associated with the flowering of enamel painting at the factory.
Such paintings are closely connected with Ivan Ivanovich Murinov (1843-1901), who headed the painting workshop of the Imperial Glass Factory from 1873 into the 1890s and was especially noted for decorating glass in historical styles. The present example may be attributed to his circle, or executed under his direction. Surviving objects of this kind are uncommon and are usually preserved in museum collections as individual, non-serial pieces. Comparable items: https://www.hermitagemuseum.org/digital-collection/919015?lng=ru https://catalog.shm.ru/entity/OBJECT/5570925?query=муринов&index=0Starting price: 5000€
Estimate: 6000-8000€
Hammer Price: €










