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Russian Imperial Porcelain Factory Military Plate with a view of a member of the Guard Équipage

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SKU: 1312-301 Category:

Description

A Russian porcelain military plate by the Imperial Porcelain Factory, St. Petersburg, period of Nicholas II, dated 1896 & 1914. Circular, the center decorated with a soldier from the Guard Équipage as they were uniformed in 1883, within a gilt border with laurel leaves & the Imperial state seal, inscribed in Russian under base, signed in Cyrillic & dated “Iv. Nazarov 1914.” 9 ¾” (25 cm) diam.

This plate is from the final series of military plates made at the Imperial Porcelain Factory during the reign of Nicholas II. The central images were based on images of various Russian regiments from the period of Alexander III by battle painter Viktor Mazurovsky (1859-1944). After studying with the well-known Bogdan Villevalde at the Imperial Academy of Arts, Mazurovsky was made an official painter of the Russian Imperial Army, traveling with various regiments & completing a cycle of canvases based on his observations. He was stationed at the front during both the Russo-Japanese War & his paintings from that conflict brought him to the attention of the Nicholas II. The emperor had them exhibited in Tsarskoe Selo in 1907 & purchased a significant part of the series. In that same year, he was asked to produce the designs that would become the last series of military plates. The borders were designed by Rudolf Vilde von Vildeman (1868-1937), the head of the factory’s painting workshop who continued to work at the factory after the 1917 Revolution & who painted a great number of important designs under the name Rudolf Vilde. The original design is now in the collection of the Hermitage & includes the factory directors notes about the small changes Emperor Nicholas II requested. (See Tamara Kudriavtseva, Russian Imperial Porcelain, St. Petersburg: Slaviia, 2003, p. 217.) According to recent research, the commission for the service from the emperor was dated 31 March 1907. Like several earlier series, two examples of each image was made. By 1912, 142 plates had been finished. Another 11 were added in 1913. A large number of the plates from the series are now in the collection of the Russian Museum in St Petersburg. On the series, see Geraldika na russkom farfore, S-Peterburg: Ermitazh, 2008, pp. 26-28, 139-142.

Ivan Mikhailovich Nazarov (1876-after 1914) was one of the most talented underglaze painters working at the Imperial Porcelain Factory in the last years before the 1917 Revolution. In addition to working on the last series of military plates, he is known to have painted over 100 vases with his own compositions of flowers, plants, & animals.

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