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From
Quill and Pad:
The egg made in St. Petersburg by Fabergé under workmaster Henrik
Wigström – Fabergé used the word “workmaster” instead of “creative
director” or even “supplier” – was given to Felix’s mother, Zinaida,
the seventh princess of Yusupov, by his father, Count Felix Felixovich
Sumarokov-Elston, on the occasion of their twenty-fifth wedding
anniversary in 1907.
Princess Zinaida Yusupov, a lady-in-waiting to two Russian empresses,
owned the most significant collection of historical jewels in
pre-Revolution Russia after the imperial family. When the princess fled Russia as the Revolution began, she left most
of her financial assets in the country, including her collection of
jewels and objets d’art, which were hidden in a secret vault in Moika
Palace. Within five years the Bolsheviks had found the stash, though,
and these items were sold off.
The egg was likely sold by Russian officials in Paris or Berlin, and by 1949 it was owned by dealers in London, who sold it to Maurice Yves Sandoz (1892-1958) in 1953. It went from Maurice to the collection of Edouard Marcel Sandoz (1881-1971) and finally to the Sandoz Foundation
in 1995, established in 1964 by Edouard Marcel as a family foundation
to encourage entrepreneurial commitment, creativity, and private
initiative. The Sandoz Foundation owns Parmigiani Fleurier and a number
of direct suppliers (including the controlling portion of Vaucher) as of
1996. (Read more.)
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