Conferință științifică internațională, Chișinău, 22-23 septembrie 2020, ediția a II-a
~ 165 ~
the collection hampers research. With all the wide range of miniatures
exhibited in the Kremlin
collection one callers for a particular interest “a lady’s profile” miniature painted with an exqui-
site mastership by AnselmLagrenee. I cite the words of L. M. Frolova from her work “Portrait
miniatures of the 18
th
and 19
th
centuries”
1
published in 1985 by the Moscow “Imitative Arts” pub-
lishing house, a work small by volume but significant for cognition. “…The passion for antiq-
uity and the romantic tendencies in the art of the early 19
th
century are obvious in the works
by A. Lagrenet [Anthelme Francois Lagrenee,
remark by Yuri Pismak
], I. Bossi, J. Painshon,
A. Molinari. The antique cameos undoubtedly inspired the French artist A. Lagrenet [Lagrenee,
remark by Yuri Pismak
]. The technique he used in painting half-faced portraits was designed
to imitate the of cameo texture. His best work the portrait of Empress Alexandra Fyodorovna.
The white ivory, left unpainted or only slightly tinted with golden-blue shades, renders perfectly
the whiteness of skin. The clean-cut majestic profile stands out against
the reddish-brown back-
ground interspersed white patches to imitate tortoise shell, the valuable material often used for
ornamentation”
2
.
We must admit that the craftsmanship of the French artist who per formed this image on the
ivory plate imitating of glyptics in water-colours, is a work to admire.
Glyptics is an art of stone-
cutting (derived from the Greek verb (glypho) – to cut. The cut stones (gems) are divided into
two groups: intaglios and cameos. Intaglios are the incut impression on monochromatic stones
(cornelian, amethyst) which served as seals. Cameos are gems with relief convexity impressions,
cut on multi-layer stones, such as sardonyx, onyx and agate.
It came to our knowledge later that the artist Anselm Francois Lagrenee (1774–1832)
worked
in Russian empire in 1817–1825 and was known as miniature master. But whose image was left
by him on this oval miniature (fig. 1)? Count Mikhail Vorontsov and his spouse Elisabeth tend
to order their portraits with Western-European masters. Dropping the list of the Count’s images
want to render (even if not complete) but sufficiently detailed list of Countess (and later Princess)
Elisabeth Vorontsova’s images.
List of Elisabeth Vorontsova’s portrait images:
1. Angelica Kauffmann (1741–1807). Alexandra Vasilievna Branitskaya with children (The girl
with her head on her mother’s kness is the future Countess Elisabeth Vorontsova). Oil on canvas.
Alupka Palace-museum;
1
L. M. Frolova,
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: