Contact Information: Media Contact: Michael Vallone The BlueEyes Group 646-643-9081 DuMouchelle Art Galleries, Inc. Certified Auctioneers & Real Estate Appraisers 409 East Jefferson Avenue, Detroit, MI 48226 313-963-6255 (T) 313-963-8199 (F) www.dumouchelles.com www.auctiondetroit.com
Art Collection of Cultural and Social Historical Import Goes to Auction at DuMouchelle Art Galleries
Previously Unseen Collection's Owner a Russian Royal Prince & Member of the Astor Family, Had Major Role in Russian & U.S. History and New York Hotels
| Source: DuMouchelle Art Galleries, Inc.
DETROIT, MI--(Marketwire - January 11, 2008) - DuMouchelle Art Galleries, Inc., one of the
leading United States art galleries, announces the auction of an art
collection, culturally and socially significant to Russian and United
States history. The entire collection is that of Prince Serge Obolensky,
former husband to Russian Czar Alexander II's daughter, Princess Catherine
Yourievsky, and later to U.S. real-estate tycoon Colonel John Jacob Astor
IV's daughter, Alice Astor. Obolensky was a prominent figure in the Astor
family and later Hilton International's New York hotel business. Presently,
the entire collection, previously secluded and unseen, is on preview until
January 18th, when the auction begins and runs through the 20th. The
location is the historic DuMouchelle Galleries building in Detroit,
Michigan, 409 East Jefferson Avenue, across from the Renaissance Center.
The Obolensky collection boasts everything from Russian and French bronze
sculptures to French Art Deco perfume bottles and Russian carved rock
crystal candlesticks and silver medals commemorating decisive battles of
the 18th (1700s) and 19th (1800s) centuries.
This collection's piece-de-resistance is an oil painting depicting
voluptuous roses and lilacs by the Russian painter, Saveli Abramovich
Sorine -- known for his many portraits of the rich and famous. Sorine, who
fled Russia during the Revolution, gave this painting to his good friend,
the Prince, as a wedding gift; inscribed in Cyrillic with the translation
-- "Given to Serge & Alice (Astor) on 24 July 1924 As A Prent (sic) on
Their Wedding (sic)."
Another lot, attracting considerable interest, is a vivid watercolor of
wildflowers painted by Russia's Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna. Her
artworks are in the collections of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II of Great
Britain and His Royal Highness the Duke of Edinburgh. She was the youngest
sister of Russia's Tsar Nicholas II, assassinated with his family by the
Bolsheviks in 1918. Noted as the "The Last Romanov Grand Duchess of
Russia," she lived out her 78 years retired to a farm outside of Toronto,
where she was known to have been visited Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Philip,
and Prince Charles.
Since her husband's death in 1978 at age 87, the collected works of art and
artifacts were cared for by Princess Obolensky until her death last
October. It reveals Prince Serge's amazing saga, which began as a Russian
prince in Czarist Russia to his whirlwind life through a revolution, two
world wars, landing in New York's post-war high society, and retiring in
Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan in the 1970s. The art also offers the
discovery of stories of a lifetime that most read about only in books.
Tolstoy wrote of Obolensky's father and his famous horse race in "Anna
Karenina." His great-grandfather helped turn back Napoleon's invasion of
Russia. His great, great, great grandmother inspired one of Tchaikovsky's
last operas.
In his book "One Man in His Time," Obolensky describes his aristocratic
upbringing, "...brilliant uniforms, much jewelry, and fine horses and
carriages." World War I saw Obolensky earn three St. George's Crosses
(equivalent to the U.S. Medal of Honor) for valor. In the Russian
Revolution, the Oxford-educated prince became a marked man after fighting
with the anti-Bolshevik Tartars, culminating in a daring escape to England
after a year of hiding in Moscow. After divorcing, he remarried in 1924 to
Alice Astor. Her father built The Astoria Hotel (adjoining his cousin's
Waldorf) and died aboard The Titanic. Later in life, Obolensky married
Marilyn Wall of Grosse Pointe Farms.
During World War II, Obolensky, 53 and the U.S. Army's oldest paratrooper,
rose from buck private to Lt. Colonel. He gained renown for leading a
daring parachute drop into Sardinia, carrying General Eisenhower's letters
and successfully talking the Italians into surrendering, and securing a
captive OSS team's release. Obolensky also became a hotel business legend,
overseeing operations of renowned hotels as the Plaza, the
Sherry-Netherland, the St. Regis, the Ambassador, and the Astor, and rising
to Vice President of Hilton International. In 1949 he started a public
relations firm, landing accounts like Harry Winston and Piper-Heidsieck.
His friends included high-profile and elite names within social and
political circles including the Prince of Wales, the Duke of York, Grace
Vanderbilt, Marjorie Merriweather-Post, Ginger Rogers, and Marilyn Monroe.
About DuMouchelle Art Galleries, Inc.:
Detroit-based DuMouchelle, founded in 1927, is among the top ten auction
galleries in the United States. DuMouchelle appraises and auctions,
monthly, over 2,000 lots of fine arts and collectibles -- paintings,
furniture, oriental rugs, silver, crystal, and jewelry -- to bidders in
person and by phone and the Internet. The company has grown from a local
entity to national and international renown in the fine arts community. The
DuMouchelle Galleries guiding principles start with the client -- focus on
personal service and long-term relationships. For further information
please visit our website at www.auctiondetroit.com.