Demidov Collection
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Demidov Collection. |
The Demidov collection was a collection of artworks gathered by the Russian industrialist Nikolay Demidov and considerably expanded by his second son Anatole. It was mainly on show at their Villa San Donato near Florence, in which a private museum of 14 rooms was devoted to them. It was dispersed at sales in Paris in 1863 and 21 February and 3 March 1870 and at the Villa in March 1880.
Objects
Paintings
- Camille Corot, Orpheus.
- Eugène Delacroix, Christopher Columbus and his son at La Rábida, hst. 90,3 x 118 cm, commissioned by Anatole, 1838. Washington, D.C., National Gallery of Art.
- Paul Delaroche, The Execution of Lady Jane Grey, acquired by Anatole at the 1834 Paris Salon. National Gallery, London
- 16th century German school, Portrait of a woman, hsp. 44,2 x 31,7 cm, acquired by Nicolay. Washington, D.C., National Gallery of Art.
- François Marius Granet, The Death of Poussin, acquired by Anatole in 1833.
- Hans Memling, The chalice of Saint John the Evangelist, hsp. 30,2 x 23 cm, c. 1470–1475, acquired by Nicolay. Washington, D.C., National Gallery of Art.
- Hans Memling, Saint Veronica, hsp. 30,3 x 22,8 cm, c. 1470–1475, acquired by Nicolay. Washington, D.C., National Gallery of Art.
- Rubens, Landscape with milkmaids and cows, c. 1616. Liechtenstein Museum, Vienna.
- Gerard Terborch, The Peace of Munster, 1648. London, Wallace Collection.
- Diego Velázquez, Philip IV. National Gallery, London.
- Jan Vermeer van Delft, The geographer, c. 1668, acquired in 1872 by Paul Pavlovitch Demidov.
Sculptures
- Lorenzo Bartolini, La Table aux Amours, also known as the Demidov Table, marble, 137,2 cm x 162,6 cm, commissioned by Anatole in 1845. New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
- Antonio Canova, Madame Mère, marble.
Decorative arts
- Pierre-Philippe Thomire : The Demidov Vase (1819), in the Empire style, malachite in a gold mount, 171.5m high, commissioned by Nicolay. New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
- Clodion, Monumental urn, marble, 131,5 x 97,1 cm, 1782, acquired by Anatole. Washington, D.C., National Gallery of Art.
- Clodion, Monumental urn, marble, 132 x 97 cm, 1782, acquired by Anatole. Washington, D.C., National Gallery of Art.
- Arms and armour, now in the Wallace Collection
- The Polish coronation sword Szczerbiec
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/21/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.