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This tiny diamond-eyed anteater was purchased by Henry Walters, founder of the Walters Art Museum, on a trip to St. Petersburg in 1900. The House of Fabergé began making hardstone animals in the 1890s and they proved popular with their elite clients. Queen Alexandra (wife of the British King Edward VII) built a large collection, and production peaked in the years immediately before the outbreak of the First World War in 1914. Objects such as this anteater were inspired by Japanese netsuke. Carl Fabergé owned over 500 of these. He married this admiration of Asian art with the rich Russian tradition of hardstone carving. The anteater is unusual among Fabergé's menagerie, although examples in bloodstone and quartz are also known.
Page data
- Page
- 2
- Source index
- 0
- Type
- photo
- Media ID
- c9818aa814ce2c32
- Size
- unknown
Document data
- ID
- 14933
- Core
- obj
- Type
- object
DTO data
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"contentType": "object",
"stage": "normalized",
"title": "Anteater",
"description": "This tiny diamond-eyed anteater was purchased by Henry Walters, founder of the Walters Art Museum, on a trip to St. Petersburg in 1900. The House of Fabergé began making hardstone animals in the 1890s and they proved popular with their elite clients. Queen Alexandra (wife of the British King Edward VII) built a large collection, and production peaked in the years immediately before the outbreak of the First World War in 1914. Objects such as this anteater were inspired by Japanese netsuke. Carl Fabergé owned over 500 of these. He married this admiration of Asian art with the rich Russian tradition of hardstone carving. The anteater is unusual among Fabergé's menagerie, although examples in bloodstone and quartz are also known.",
"provenance": "Henry Walters, Baltimore, 1900, by purchase; Walters Art Museum, 1931, by bequest.",
"date": "ca. 1900",
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Context sent to Scholar
Document identity
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"label": "Anteater",
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Document source metadata
{
"id": "14933",
"sourceUrl": "https://purl.thewalters.org/art/42.354",
"contentType": "object",
"stage": "normalized",
"title": "Anteater",
"description": "This tiny diamond-eyed anteater was purchased by Henry Walters, founder of the Walters Art Museum, on a trip to St. Petersburg in 1900. The House of Fabergé began making hardstone animals in the 1890s and they proved popular with their elite clients. Queen Alexandra (wife of the British King Edward VII) built a large collection, and production peaked in the years immediately before the outbreak of the First World War in 1914. Objects such as this anteater were inspired by Japanese netsuke. Carl Fabergé owned over 500 of these. He married this admiration of Asian art with the rich Russian tradition of hardstone carving. The anteater is unusual among Fabergé's menagerie, although examples in bloodstone and quartz are also known.",
"provenance": "Henry Walters, Baltimore, 1900, by purchase; Walters Art Museum, 1931, by bequest.",
"date": "ca. 1900",
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Document source extras
{
"med": "jasper, diamonds",
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Page context
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