· Stockholm Auction House Russian Art Auction, Including Works on Paper from the Studio of Philip Maliavin ·12 March 2009
Philip Andreievich Maliavin (1869-1940), Self portrait, signed, inscription on the back written by the artist’s daughter reading, ‘On the back of this is the self portrait of my late father Philip Maliavin Zoya Bounatian Maliavin Nice 1941’, pencil and black chalk, 31 × 22,5 cm., Estimate: SEK 4000 to 6000 (€400 to 600), lot 18 Here is the press release for the upcoming Russian sale at Stockholm Auction House: Stockholm Auction House will hold its next biannual Russian Auction on 12 March 2009. The sale has been put together by Ivan Samarine of Russian Art Consultancy, London and co-founder of the Sotheby’s Russian Department in London and Martyn Saunders-Rawlins, a highly experienced Russian art expert, in collaboration with Stockholm Auction House, the oldest auction house in the world. Stockholm Auction House was the first venue for dedicated sales of Russian art outside of London and New York and has now firmly established itself as part of the Russian auction calendar with buyers from all over the world competing with collectors from Russia. The sale will include an extremely interesting group of works on paper from the studio of Philip Maliavin. The life story of Maliavin parallels Russia’s own dramas and tragedies during the first half of the 20th century. A peasant, who in his early youth became a monk on Mount Athos, he had an extraordinary talent for drawing and painting which brought him a scholarship to the Imperial Academy, followed by success and international fame. Because of his peasant origins, he was invited to the Kremlin shortly after the Revolution in order to paint Bolshevik leaders, but in 1922, he left Soviet Russia forever. He settled in the south of France and continued to work and hold exhibitions all over Europe until the end of his life. In 1940, happening to be in Brussels, and after 18 years of exile still not speaking any language but Russian, he was arrested as a suspicious alien by the Gestapo. Having persuaded him of his innocence, he walked home to Nice where he died a week later. The contents of his studio were inherited by his daughter and then purchased by a Monegasque picture dealer. Stockholm Auction House is delighted to have been consigned a large group of these previously unseen works, which will add enormously to our knowledge of this highly important Russian artist. The sale will also include a number of important portrait miniatures from a private Northern European collection, paintings, porcelain, silver, bronzes and works by Fabergé. The auction will take place on 12 March 2009 and can be viewed from 8 March until the sale. For more information please contact See below some highlights from the sale:
Russian Auction: 12 March 2009 · Online Catalogue |