The Art of The Double Eagle
Below you will find pictures and information
on some of the beautiful works of art that populate The Double
Eagle.
The
Winter Egg by Fabergé - 1913
The Winter Egg is viewed as perhaps Fabergé's
finest creation. It was made for Tsar Nicholas II to give
to his mother, the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna, for Easter
in 1913 and was the most expensive egg ever commissioned.
The egg, cut from Siberian rock crystal is encrusted with
more than three thousand diamonds, with another one thousand
three hundred diamonds adorning the base. Engravings on the
interior simulate ice crystals. The egg rests on a detachable
rock-crystal base formed as a melting block of ice and applied
with platinum-mounted rose-diamond rivulets.
The Easter 'surprise' common to all Fabergé's eggs,
is a platinum Easter basket decorated with flowers made from
gold, garnets and crystals. The basket symbolises the transition
from winter to spring.
Only twelve Fabergé Eggs have come up for auction
in the last seventy years. This one sold at Christies on 19th
April 2002 for $9.6 million to a private buyer, making it
the most expensive Egg ever sold.
In The Double Eagle, this is the first Fabergé
Egg that Tom is commissioned to steal from a seventeenth floor
apartment in New York.
The
Pansy Egg - 1899
This Egg, presented by Nicholas II to Dowager Empress Maria
Feodorovna in 1899 is made from tinted gold, diamonds, greenstone
and violet enamel. It stands on golden leaves which twist
up and from which sprout five flowers and five pansy buds
enamelled in different shades of violet.
The top part of the Egg opens to reveal the "surprise":
a gold easel supporting a heart lined in diamonds and decorated
with eleven scarlet medallions inscribed with individual monograms.
A button releases tiny lids on the medallions to reveal miniature
portraits of each member of imperial family.
This Egg is held in a private collection in the USA.
In The Double Eagle, Tom Kirk steals this Egg from a private
museum in Amsterdam.
Further information on the Fabergé Eggs
Carl Fabergé's workshop created 50 eggs between the
years 1885 and 1916 for Tsars Alexander III and Nicholas II,
who presented them each year to the Empresses and Dowager
Empress at Easter. Each egg was a unique masterpiece in its
own right, constituting a tribute to Fabergé’s
ingenious and exotic fantasies.
The Fabergé Easter tradition ended with the Bolshevik
uprising, the disappearance of the Romanov Imperial family
and their brutal slaying. In the chaos that followed, eight
eggs disappeared and Stalin, viewing the eggs as symbolic
of the worst Tsarist excesses, then authorised the piecemeal
sale of the remainder to help finance his army. Most were
sold to discerning American collectors.
Today, the largest single collection is held at the State
Armoury Museum in the Kremlin, Moscow. The Virginia Museum
of Arts has five, the New Orleans Museum of Art three and
Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II three. Only recently, the billionaire
Russian industrialist Victor Vekselberg bought the entire
Forbes collection of nine eggs. No price was disclosed, but
pre-sale estimates were in the range of $80 million to $120
million. He has vowed to return the eggs to Russia.
The
Nile Sword - c.1798
Admiral Lord Nelson (1758-1815) is Britain's greatest ever
naval commander. Even today, his battle tactics are studied
at naval academies all over the world.
The "Nile Sword" is believed to have been presented
to Nelson by Sultan Selim III following the Admiral's stunning
victory against the French in 1798. The sword carries an engraving
of the destruction of the French flagship L'Orient and has
a gilt crocodile-shaped hilt.
The sword was part of a collection which belonged to Nelson's
friend Alexander Davison and had remained hidden by his descendants
for almost two centuries. It also included the blood-stained
silk purse that Nelson was carrying when he was killed at
the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805. The sword was sold at Sotheby's
in October 2002 for £336,650 (approx. $500,000).
In The Double Eagle, Tom is present at the auctioning
of this item, although the dates have been changed.
Japanese
Noh Mask - 1280
The origins of Noh theatre go back to thirteenth century
Japan although it wasn't until the seventeenth century that
it was adopted as the official theatre of the Samurai class
and the Shogun.
Noh theatre is characterised by its simple plots, elaborate
costumes and its colourful masks. Masks are only worn by the
main character, with each one caricaturing the type of person
it represents and highlighting their essential traits and
stylised emotions. Noh masks have to be very light because
they are worn throughout a performance that lasts for several
hours. They are carved from one piece of cypress wood and
are comparatively small, covering the front of the face with
only small holes for the eyes, nostrils and mouth.
There are five categories of Noh masks: gods, demons, men,
women and the elderly. The mask pictured above dates from
1280 and features the character of Hannya, a once beautiful
woman whose unrequited love has turned her into a monster
consumed by jealousy and anger.
In The Double Eagle, Harry Renwick has a substantial
collection of Noh masks.
Christ
in the Storm on the Sea of Galilee by Rembrandt van Rijn -
1633
Rembrandt (1606-1669) was a Dutch baroque artist who ranks
as one of the greatest painters in the history of Western
art. Born in Leiden, he spent most of his working life in
Amsterdam where he soon made his name painting portraits for
wealthy patrons although his mythological and religious works
were also much in demand. His paintings are characterized
by luxuriant brushwork, rich colour, and a mastery of chiaroscuro
which has perhaps never been equalled.
Today, he is especially known for the fifty or sixty self-portraits
that he painted at various stages throughout his life that
demonstrate a profound penetration of character and objective
self-analysis.
Rembrandt also holds the dubious honour of being the most
stolen artist ever. This priceless work – the only known
seascape painted by Rembrandt – was stolen in the 1990
Isabella Stewart Gardener Museum heist in Boston, USA.
In The Double Eagle, Tom and Jennifer witness this painting
being secretly auctioned in Istanbul.
The
Concert by Jan Vermeer - 1665/6
Johannes Vermeer (1632-75) was born and lived in the Dutch
city of Delft. Overlooked for centuries, he is now regarded
as one of the greatest painters in Western European art. His
work is especially distinctive in its intimate portrayal of
everyday life in Delft that masterfully combines light, colour,
proportion and scale in a way that enhances the moods and
reality of the subjects. His paintings also often contain
a symbolical and allegorical content that further enhances
their impact.
Only thirty six of his paintings survive, making Vermeer
one of the world's rarest and most collectable artists. In
"The Concert" a man with his back to us plays a
lute, a young woman plays the harpsichord and another sings.
There are understated but powerful sexual tensions between
the three of them.
In The Double Eagle, Tom and Jennifer witness this painting
being secretly auctioned in Istanbul.
Further Information on the Isabella Stewart Gardener heist
The Isabella Stewart Gardener heist remains the largest
robbery in US history. Two men dressed as Boston police officers
talked their way inside, handcuffed and bound two guards,
disarmed the alarm system and spent the next 81 minutes looting
the place. They left with a Vermeer, three works by Rembrandt
and five by Degas in a haul valued at over $300 million.
Even today, not a single painting has been recovered and
not a single person arrested. The investigation continues
and a $5 million reward has been offered. (Click here for
more information.)
Giacometti sculpture
Alberto
Giacometti (1901-66) was a Swiss sculptor who, both because
of the nature of his work and his close friendship with the
French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre, is the artist most closely
identified with the Existentialist movement.
The piece pictured above, only 12.6 inches tall, was stolen
from the Kunsthalle exhibition centre in 2002. The thieves
used a crowd of about 16,000 visitors on the centre's extra
"Long Night" when opening hours were extended until
3:00 a.m. as cover to swap the original bronze for a painted
wooden figure. The theft was only discovered three days later.
In The Double Eagle, Tom and Jennifer witness this sculpture
being secretly auctioned in Istanbul.
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