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Dec 10, 2016 - Dec 11, 2016
A LARGE RUSSIAN ICON OF NIKOLAI MOZHAISKY, NORTHERN SCHOOL, FIRST HALF OF THE 17TH CENTURY
PROVENANCE
Purchased by Adelaide and Helen Hooker in Russia during the 1920s (see Lot Notes below)
Thence by descent in Family Collection
Shapiro Auctions, New York, May 18, 2013, lot 5
Acquired by the present owner at the above sale
The saint depicted holding a sword in one hand and the city of Mozhaisk, as a symbol of his patronage, in the other. The central figure of Saint Nikolai surrounded by fourteen scenes from his life. Egg tempera and gesso on wood panel with a kovcheg and rubchik. Two insert splints on the back (one missing). 63.7 x 50 cm. (25 x 20 in.)
LOT NOTES
During the late 1920s, shortly after the Russian Revolution, two young New York society women, sisters Adelaide and Helen Hooker secretly traveled to Russia "out of curiosity and cussedness." Unbeknownst to their father, the president of the American Defense Society, they spent over six months in snowy Russia, pursuing adventure in Moscow, Leningrad, Vladimir, Novgorod, and Suzdal among other cities. Searching for a glimpse of "Old Russia," the women sought-out ancient churches and monasteries, just as they were being taken over by the government and converted to Anti-Religious museums. This icon was among those that Adelaide and Helen Hooker purchased from these establishments and brought to the United States, in effect saving them from becoming victims of iconoclasm. In the States, the icons were kept in esteemed family collections. One of the sisters would go on to marry the IRA officer Ernie O`Malley, the other the writer John P. Marquand. Their youngest sister, Blanchette, went on to marry John D. Rockefeller III, and would become a major benefactor of the Museum of Modern Art, where she served as president from 1972 to 1985. The story of their travels was published in Good Housekeeping, July-September 1930.