12 October 2024

Feodor Ruckert Faberge silver, cloisonné enamel


Ruckert, coloured tea service, 1887-96, Alamy

Early medieval Russian silver often included calm niello work and ornamental lines with black enamel. But under Tsar Peter the Great (1682-1725), who west­ernised the Russ­ian Empire, local silversm­iths began explor­ing modern forms. The Imperial family and weal­thy cl­asses dined from fash­ionable, solid-silver Baroque, Rococo, then Neoclassic-style gob­lets, plat­ters, caviar dishes and bas­kets. Showy gilt-silver cigar­ette cas­es, cigar cas­es and tankards sat on shelves. Silver mirrors, per­fume bott­l­es, powder boxes and jewel­l­ery caskets went onto ladies dressers.

Cloisonné: an enamelling technique made from soldering de­licate metal strips bent to the outline of a des­ign, and filling the result­ing cellular compartments with vitreous enam­el paste. The ob­j­ect then was fired, ground smooth & polished. The strips were made from gold, brass or silver. Eventually bright co­lourful clois­onné-enamel florals were popular. Many ob­jects featured bolder champlevé-enamel des­ig­ns, the recesses fil­led with vitreous enamel before firing.

The Late Imperial Era saw prolific prod­uction. Friedrich Ruckert (1840-1917) was born in South Germ­any. At 14 he emigrated to Russia to work for a princely family, now re­named Feodor Ruckert. He spent most of his life in his bel­oved Moscow, where he had his art work­sh­ops. Eventually he had 14 craftsmen working for him, having full control over the creat­ive and prod­uct­ion proc­esses.

Ruckert, by Alamy 
                                                                              
Rückert was the most talented craftsman of enamelled silver objects in Imperial Russia. In Moscow, the cen­t­re of Russ­ian silver prod­uc­tion, he became an enamel master in 1886, working with every enamelling tech­n­ique (cloisonné, champlevé, en plein, guilloche and plique-à-jour).

Fol­lowing the Russian Revival style in the arts, Ruckert started producing traditional Russian des­igns, incorpor­ating foliage in de­l­icately shaded hues. Gradually his exper­im­ents with a more mod­ern colour palette and more intricate design el­ements develop­ed into a recognis­ab­le original style, while still tradit­ionally Slavic.

Rückert collaborated with some of the most resp­ected firms of his time. In 1886 he opened his own, new work­shop in Mos­cow and in 1887 he signed a cont­ract with Fab­ergé. In fact for 30 years Ruckert was the main supp­lier of clois­onné enamel for Fab­er­gé. Still, Ruck­ert supplied ot­h­­er important Rus­s­ian retailers eg Bolin.

Unlike other Europeans, Imperial Russians drank their tea at home and not in public tearooms. So the samovar was placed in the cent­re of the dining table and the accompanying tea sets had to be at­tractive. The tea sets included caddies, tea glass holders, sugar-cube boxes and cr­eam jugs. And to save the expense of sugar, some tea sets included a jam basket.

Rückert’s silver-gilt and cloisonné enamel tea service, Moscow, 1899-1908 a teapot, tea caddy and cr­eamer  with tiers of lobed teardrop panels with varicoloured stylised flowers and foliage (35,000 - 45,000 GBP Sotheby’s)

See Ruck­ert’s solid silver and cloisonné enamel salt, decorated with foliate enamels on gilded matted ground, set with cab­o­ch­­on emeralds. Moscow, 1908-17.

Enameled sugar bowl
Invaluable

Craftsmen in Moscow, especially those supervised by master Feodor Rück­ert, became known for their work in the pan-Slavic or neo-Russian style, referring back to C17th motifs of folk art. See, for example, silver-gilt and enamel kovshs-wine ladles retailed by Faber­gé, which inc­or­­porated enamel reproductions by Russ­ian artists.

The opulent lifestyle of Russia’s upper classes ended with the political upheavals of the early C20th. Heaps of pre­cious silver pieces seized from silversmiths, jewellers, weal­thy merch­ants, aristocrats and the Russian Imperial Family were melt­ed. Some were sold internationally for cash, or smug­gled out by westerners. Of­­ten on con­vent­­ional shapes, Rückert and his silver­sm­iths created an explos­ion of col­our, attained through the historic use of cl­oisonné enamel in which tiny metal lines were soldered to the surface then filled with glass powders in various colours and fired to a high gl­oss fin­ish. The result was a sp­ectacular ev­ocation of the C17th or­ig­inals. But far from mere copies, Rück­erts designs employed natural­is­t­ic or abst­r­act motifs in a modern adaptation of an earlier era.

Until 1908, Rückert’s work drew on Russian historical design preced­ents especially C17th Russian ornament. But after 1908 his work re­f­lected the influence of the emerging Neo-Russian style, which combin­ed Art Nouveau with Russian vernacular forms. Promoted by Stroganov Institute Design School, this Russian visual voc­­abulary spread across the decorative arts. He often com­bin­ed min­iatures based on Russian history th­emes with new arab­esque motifs.

Rückert’s designs were rooted in the C19th fas­­cination with national identity and culminating in the 1913 anniversary celeb­rat­ions of the Romanov Dyn­asty. But when WWI started in 1914, the Rückert family was being persecuted as a Foreign Enemy. Although the family st­rongly split from Germany and wrote to Nicholas II pl­eading for protection, they were treated as prison­ers of war and exiled. From 1915 any mention of Rüc­k­ert’s workshop in the Mos­cow Dir­­­­ec­t­­ory of Trade ended. Rückert died in Moscow in 1917.

 silver and cloisonné enamel bowl with bear heads handles, Moscow, 1908-17. 
Invaluable

Modern Russia
The 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union and then the rise of a weal­thy oligarchy inspired growing national­ism, an interest in art his­tory and a new generation of col­l­ectors. Fortunately Rückert’s timeless, Neo-Russian style withstood the chaos of the Russian Revol­ution and his works remained popular in the mod­ern mark­et. A record was established Nov 2018: an enamelled kovsh, £490,000.

Kovsh by Rückert, 1899–1908,
Khalili Collection of Enamels of the World

And see the parcel-gilt silver and cloisonné enamel bowl (above), cast with handles shaped as bear heads Moscow. It sold for $43,750.



22 comments:

  1. Never heard of Ruckert he sounds like quite a craftsman the tea set and bowls pictured are unique, I liked this post

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    1. Jo-Anne
      not unique at all. I always look at tea sets, bowls and jugs etc, whenever they are advertised in antique auctions. Unfortunately I could never afford any *sigh*

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  2. Hello Hels, Based on your picture of Ruckert, I would hate to have been one of the craftsmen working for him, but I admit that Ruckert did get stunning results. There is a lush style to a lot of Russian art objects that make them a little over-ripe for me. Perhaps their best setting is in a museum, where they can be inspected and admired for their workmanship, but we don't have to live with them. (Incidentally, I feel this way about many objects in museums, for example religious paintings by Renaissance masters.) A while ago I attended an all-Faberge major exhibit at the Cleveland Museum of Art. The detail and workmanship of the objects was almost overwhelming, and I'll bet that many were made by Ruckert, but I don't recall reading that on the labels.
    --Jim
    p.s. I had a little trouble finding this post, as your blog somehow came disconnected from my reading list, although I was able to fix it. (I discovered it when I just went to look up your post that mentioned micrography.) I hope you are still connected to my blog--I recently put up a new mystery item post.

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    1. Parnassus
      you should have emailed me before you visited the all-Faberge exhibit at the Cleveland Museum of Art. I would have dashed over the ocean in a heart beat. A little over-ripe might even be an understatement :)

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  3. Those dining pieces are beautiful. I like all the details, and they're different from what I usually see on fancy tables. Not that I've often see fancy table myself, except in movies. Have a great weekend.

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    1. Erika
      what is a fancy table and where can I see one? Thank you...I am learning more and more all the time from other peoples' blogs and comments.

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  4. The piece you have shown are just beautiful Hels.

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    1. Margaret
      my family came from Russia and although they had little money, they passed on their passion for Russian music, literature and art to me :)

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  5. I don't like them, they're just too decorated for my taste.

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    1. River
      I was totally rapt in (nearly) pure gold and silver art, and even wrote my thesis on Huguenot silver art in France then in Britain. So in my eyes they were way too decorated for my taste as well, worse still, they were hiding the gold or silver underneath. But I have since put more effort into studying Faberge :)

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  6. We had a cloisonné vase but I can't remember what it exactly looked like now. I remember it was was quite beautiful and a little understated. I am not sure why, but I assumed the technique came from China.

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    1. Andrew
      Andrew
      you are quite right. Cloisonné probably developed in the C15th in China. The Chinese cloisonné was recorded during a number of important dynasties, probably brought by Islamic people.

      I cannot find Cloisonné arriving in, or being made in Russia until Karl Faberge made it famous in St Petersburg in the 1840s. Only then did Russia perfect cloisonné enamel decoration.

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  7. Faberge was a talented Russian master! One can admire his masterpieces in different Russian museums.

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    1. Irina
      We must be sisters :)
      I would never buy a Faberge easter egg, but I would give my life savings to buy his cigarette cases, photo frames, spectacular jewellery etc etc.

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  8. Beautiful, intricate work. How sad that Ruckert was treated so shamefully at the end of his life.

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    1. jabblog
      it was so intricate that I wonder if the artists didn't damage their eyes. After all there were no special safety glasses made for enamelling back then, or for soldering silver and gold.

      Re career rises and falls, lots of artists and writers suffered from changes in the outside environment, not from their own creations. Religious authorities, political values or military support for the wrong side led to changes that: exiled individuals; removal of works from galleries and libraries; or a market collapse in values. With WWI, Feodor Rückert was faced with persecution as the enemy in what they considered to be their home. Although Feodor strongly disassociated from Germany, he miserably witnessed the destruction of his workshop in 1918.

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  9. I love Anglo-Saxon jewelry which also has cloisonne work. Gold and garnets being a particular favourite. Russia has an exuberant display of beautiful china and other craft work and who wouldn't what to own a Faberge egg. Sadly not me, the insurance would be mind boggling!

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  10. thelma
    Great taste :)
    Even if you were the richest family on earth, you may not be able to afford some of the Faberge eggs. I found a Third Imperial Egg was commissioned by Tsar Alexander III for his loving Empress. The solid 18-karat gold structure embellished with hand-crafted diamonds and sapphires cost USD c25 million apparently.

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  11. Bom dia e uma excelente segunda-feira. Obrigado pela excelente matéria. As peças são maravilhosas.

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    1. Luiz
      thank you. Are you a collector of any of these types of art works?

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  12. Very interesting post . I didn't know about Ruckert only Faberge . I remember seeing a Toilet set of mirror and combs etc belonging to Catherine the great encrust with diamonds. I think it was at the NGV but I cant remember the rest of the exhibition. I think I might have been a Bolshevik . The disparity in wealth was just appalling but created great beauty .

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    1. mem
      I have seen some of those gorgeous toilet sets, made of course in gold or silver and some had ceramics added. Can you imagine allowing your children to even TOUCH the matching mirror, basins, bowls, ewers and candlesticks?

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