The jewel albums of Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna

On 16th February 2023, two jewel albums belonging to Grand Duchess Xenia [Ksenia] Alexandrovna [1875-1960] – the eldest sister of Emperor Nicholas II – sold at a Bonhams (Paris) auction for 63,375 Euros [$69,000 USD].

The leather-bound albums were illustrated in watercolours by Xenia herself, and feature her personal collection of jeweellery and bibelots The first album is dated from 24th June 1880 to 1905, and the second album from 12th January 1894 to 25th March 1912. The jewel albums display the Grand Duchess’s exceptional skill with watercolours, a talent perfected from an early age.

When Grand Duchess Xenia Alexanrovna fled Boshevik Russia In April 1919, she had with her two precious jewel albums which she kept until her death in 1960 when they passed to her family. The two lavishly illustrated documents constitute a highly sentimental record of jewellery received between 1880 and 1912. Presented together, the 925 entries provide a fascinating insight into the private wealth of the Romanovs, their personal taste and family relationships. The albums illustrate the manner in which important occasions were marked and offer a crucial link to proving attribution and provenance for so many pieces later gifted, sold on by the Grand Duchess or seized by the Soviet authorities.

Of immense interest to historians, only a small number of select pages of the albums had been published in specialist books, and the albums remained largely private until they were offered at auction by Bonhams New Bond Street in 2011 (Bonham’s London, The Russian Sale, 30 November 2011, lot 155).

The albums themselves have prompted much debate among scholars who have sought to determine the overarching purpose of the tomes. It is notable that pieces the Grand Duchess purchased for herself are not itemised and while the pages are filled with her careful and exact notations, the texts do not emphasize the value of the stones or the name of the fashionable jeweller who had made or sold the piece. Rather, each carefully rendered drawing is usually accompanied by the briefest – and most heartfelt – of statements: “From Mama,” “From Papa,” or “From Sandro” (her husband, Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich).

It is little wonder that when the Grand Duchess had to flee revolutionary forces, she chose these books to accompany her. Akin to a photograph album or a journal, the albums acted as an aide-memoire, with each entry recording the generosity of beloved family members who had put every effort into finding pieces of jewellery which reflected the occasion of their presentation. Reciprocally, the Grand Duchess honoured each gift by carefully studying and recording its character with her considerable skill as a watercolourist.

NOTE: this article has been condensed from the original, pubished by Bonhams. Click HERE to read the entire article, and to view more photos from the jewel albums – PG

***

Other Romanov jewel albums

It is interesting to note that according to the art historian, Dr Karen L. Kettering, a third album of Grand Duchess Xenia’s jewels exist, however, the album is in “private hands”. Kettering confirms that she has studied the albums since their sale in 2011.

Between 1889 and 1913 Nicholas II, painted his jewellery in a small album as a private record of his collection. In 1992, curator Tatiana Muntian announced that the Kremlin Archives had since 1922 held Nicholas II’s Jewel Album. In 1997 The Jewel Album of Nicholas II was published in full by Alexander von Solodkoff and Irina Bogatskaya, in a handsome clothbound edition with slipcase. It has since become a highly sought after collector’s item by those who share an interested in the life of Russia’s last Tsar.

It was also revealed that the Kremlin Archives also contained a jewellery album Empress Alexandra Fedorovna kept of pieces she had selected for family and friends.

In 1992, Sotheby’s Book and Manuscript Department in New York sold a jewel notebook that had been kept for several years by Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna the Younger.

Prompted by these discoveries, additional research was conducted in the Archives of Wolfsgarten Castle in Germany, where Empress Alexandra Feodorovna had spent part of her childhood, revealing a fifth jewel album her brother Grand Duke Ernest Ludwig had kept.

Training in drawing and watercolour was considered essential for the upbringing of any young lady or gentleman of distinction and most of the Romanov Grand Dukes and Duchesses were quite competent artists.

The discovery of these jewel albums continues to raise the question – are their others? How many other grand dukes and grand duchesses embraced the hobby of recording their personal collection of jewels in handsome leather albums?

Private collectors in Russia, Europe and even the United States as well as those of the now defunct royal houses of Europe, continue to find Romanov treasures lost or forgotten in old trunks, safes, and dusty shelves. Let us hope that other jewel albums surface from among their collections.

© Paul Gilbert. 22 January 2024

Nicholas II’s telephone sold at auction for $2 million USD

On Friday 10th March, a telephone belonging to Emperor Nicholas II was sold at a Sotheby’s auction. The Romanov Week auction featured more than 100 items belonging to members of the Russian Imperial Family.

The most expensive lot was a telephone belonging to Emperor Nicholas II, which sold for a staggering 2 million US dollars, almost five times over the estimate.

“It’s a unique device made in 1915 at the Russian-Baltic Wagon factory in Petrograd. The telephone was presented it to the Tsar during the First World War, who used it for communicating with the Empress at Tsarskoye Selo during his trips to General Headquarters (Stavka) at Mogilev,” said Sotheby’s representative Robert Jefferson.

Following the February 1917 Revolution the telephone was confiscated on the order of the Provisional Government and transferred to the custody of the chief of the Petrograd garrison.

Following the riots that swept the capital in July 1917, the telephone was later stolen during the Russian Civil War and smuggled to Europe.

NOTE: In 1896, the Swedish manufacturer of telecommunications equipment Ericsson, installed the first telephone for Emperor Nicholas II in the Grand Kremlin Palace in Moscow.

© Paul Gilbert. 11 March 2023

Rare 1896 Medal Depicting Nicholas & Alexandra Sells at Auction

048

Only two medals were cast, each made of 300 grams of gold

On 24th March 2019, a rare and beautiful medal (300 grams of gold) marking the 1896 visit to Paris by Emperor Nicholas II and Empress Alexandra Feodorovna, sold at auction for nearly €90,000 ($100,000 USD) at the Hôtel des Ventes de la Seine auction house in Rouen, France.

The gold medal was struck on 7th October 1896, on the occasion of the visit of Emperor Nicholas II and the Empress Alexandra to the Monnaie de Paris (Mint) with the president of the French Republic Felix Faure.

In competition were six buyers, all bidding over the telephone. Under the hammer of Mr. Guillaume Cheroyan, the object was sold to an annoymous Swiss buyer, for the tidy sum of € 73,000 (€ 89,060 with fees), and selling for more than double its initial estimate, set at € 30,000. 

The profiles of the Imperial couple are engraved on the front by the famous Jules-Clément Chaplain. Only two copies of this diplomatic gift were made, one presented to Emperor Nicholas II, the second to President Felix Faure.

Its provenance, however, remains a mystery. “We are not certain,” admitted Cheroyan, however, he was optimistic that his hammer fell on one of the two copies presented to  Nicholas II. Cheroyan noted that the seller – a local numismatist – had reported to the auctioneer that the medal had belonged to an émigré Russian aristocrat. “One can then imagine that, after Lenin nationalized the personal property of the Imperial family, that the Bolsheviks sold as many items as possible.”

This did not prevent him from sending an email to the Kremlin, to inform the Russian government of the sale of this 300 gold gram piece of Imperial Russia’s history.

© Paul Gilbert. 26 March 2019