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Source Description

Because of the popularity of this tankard form, which is modeled after a Turkish prototype in the Kremlin Armory, Ovchinnikov produced a number of variants in the late 1880s and early 1890s. The decoration is architectural in nature with the lower third encircled by an arches borne on eight colonnettes. Beneath the arches, there are alternating panels enameled in green and blue, which are decorated in painted and filigree enamel with Persian-style vines and flowers in light and dark blue, green, foiled red, beige and white colors. The upper third of the vessel is divided vertically into sixteen sections delineated by strands of braided wire. These sections bear similar Persian-style decoration in raised filigree enamel over a gilt ground. Wide bands of braided wire circumscribe both the bottom and the top of the container. The removable lid bears similarities to the Crown of Kazan, which is preserved in the Kremlin's Diamond Fund. Encircling the lid are two bands of koskoshnik shapes in pale blue over gilt silver. On the tankard's base is a crowned eagle in orange-red, blue, and turquoise plique-à-jour enamel.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
82457
label
Tankard
core
obj
dtoType
object
pageCount
5
Source metadata
id
82457
contentType
object
stage
normalized
title
Tankard
description
Because of the popularity of this tankard form, which is modeled after a Turkish prototype in the Kremlin Armory, Ovchinnikov produced a number of variants in the late 1880s and early 1890s. The decoration is architectural in nature with the lower third encircled by an arches borne on eight colonnettes. Beneath the arches, there are alternating panels enameled in green and blue, which are decorated in painted and filigree enamel with Persian-style vines and flowers in light and dark blue, green, foiled red, beige and white colors. The upper third of the vessel is divided vertically into sixteen sections delineated by strands of braided wire. These sections bear similar Persian-style decoration in raised filigree enamel over a gilt ground. Wide bands of braided wire circumscribe both the bottom and the top of the container. The removable lid bears similarities to the Crown of Kazan, which is preserved in the Kremlin's Diamond Fund. Encircling the lid are two bands of koskoshnik shapes in pale blue over gilt silver. On the tankard's base is a crowned eagle in orange-red, blue, and turquoise plique-à-jour enamel.
provenance
Leo Kaplan, New York; Jean M. Riddell, Washington, D.C., May 4, 1981, by purchase; Walters Art Museum, 2010, by bequest.
date
1888-1896
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
tankards
imageCount
5
pageCount
5
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
21
height
10.5
dimensionsRaw
H: 8 1/4 x Diam: 4 1/8 in. (20.96 x 10.48 cm)
Source extras
style
Old Russian
inscriptions
[Maker's Mark] On lid in Cyrillic: Imperial warrant over Ovchinnikov; [Mark] Town mark on lid: 88. St. George left
RelatedObjects
82458
med
silver gilding, painted filigree, plique-à-jour enamel
creator_ids
3889
collection_ids
EAN
exhibition_ids
2761
Page inventory
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1
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photo
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photo
mediaId
7b83ef7902e7a004
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seq
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type
photo
mediaId
b19b4b4794772f77
hasOcr
no
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seq
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type
photo
mediaId
0d2894abb60516ba
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no
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seq
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type
photo
mediaId
879a0aa1a73581dc
hasOcr
no
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no