. Portraits of Nikolai II and Alexandra Fedorovna, two works, each signed and dated 1903. 200,000-300,000 GBP Provenance: Private collection, Europe. Authenticity of the work has been confirmed by the expert N. Ignatova Alexander Makovsky painted these matching portraits of Emperor Nicholas II and his wife Empress Alexandra Feodorovna in 1903, as official, full-dress portraits of the ruling family. Portraits of this kind were commissioned as gifts for officials or organisations and were obliged to conform to an 'imperially approved' image. Alexander Makovsky often painted full-dress portraits


. Portraits of Nikolai II and Alexandra Fedorovna, two works, each signed and dated 1903. 200,000-300,000 GBP Provenance: Private collection, Europe. Authenticity of the work has been confirmed by the expert N. Ignatova Alexander Makovsky painted these matching portraits of Emperor Nicholas II and his wife Empress Alexandra Feodorovna in 1903, as official, full-dress portraits of the ruling family. Portraits of this kind were commissioned as gifts for officials or organisations and were obliged to conform to an 'imperially approved' image. Alexander Makovsky often painted full-dress portraits of imperial persons, depicting Nicholas II in the uniforms of various regiments under his or the Empress's patronage, and even exhibited one of these at the 38th Exhibition of the Society of Itinerant Art Exhibitions in 1909-1910. Today the collections of the Russian Museum, the Hermitage, the Historical Museum and the Tsarskoe Selo Museum and Estate still include both small-scale and large-format portraits, by this artist, of Nicholas Alexandrovich on horseback and Alexandra Feodorovna in a formal white evening gown and jewelled diadem. In the oval portrait now offered at auction, Empress Alexandra Feodorovna is portrayed in court dress, with a kokoshnik head-dress and veil, and the sash and diamond insignia of the Order of Saint Catherine, the highest order of the Russian Empire for women. It was Nicholas I, great-grandfather of the last Emperor, who had introduced court dress in the Russian style as obligatory practice. At the end of the 19th century, thanks to a new wave of enthusiasm for the 'Russian style', many high-society ladies, headed by the Empress, returned once more to this kind of court dress, embroidered with pearls, when posing for portraits. Nicholas II is, likewise, depicted as a holder of the highest order, with the medal-ribbon of Saint Andrew the First-Called and in the full-dress uniform of a Colonel in His Majesty's Preobrazhensky Life Guards Regiment.


Size: 2053px × 2433px
Photo credit: © The Picture Art Collection / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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