ART NOUVEAU& ART DECO 20th CENTURY DESIGN & OBJECTS OF VERTU JEWELLERY
Sep 28, 2021
Le Park Palace Avenue de la Costa 98000, Monaco

The following lots are subject to Artist's Resale Right (an additional 3% will be added to hammer price).

(Authors of original works of art are entitled to a royalty each time one of their works is resold through an art market professional)

Lots: 1, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 23.

The following lots with a Δ symbol: VAT will be charged at the standard rate on hammer price, buyer’s premium (and where else applicable, see article 5.2)

Lots : 137, 139, 142, 145,146, 151, 152, 155


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LOT 7:

ERTE (ROMAIN DE TIRTOFF) (1892-1990) Costume design for ‘Les Trésors de l’Indochine, L’Alcazar de Marseille’

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Sold for: €6,000
Start price:
6,600
Buyer's Premium: 27%
VAT: 17% On commission only
Users from foreign countries may be exempted from tax payments, according to the relevant tax regulations
tags:

ERTE (ROMAIN DE TIRTOFF) (1892-1990) Costume design for ‘Les Trésors de l’Indochine, L’Alcazar de Marseille’
signed ‘Erté’ (lower right) and inscribed ‘Tresor Indochine Alcazar 1922 Marseille’ (on reverse)
gouache on paper
image: 24 x 74 cm
passpartout: 41 x 86 cm

Regarded as one of the best known artists of the Art Deco movement, the Russian-born Romain de Tirtoff is one of the foremost fashion and theatrical designers of the twentieth century. He designed sets for shows in Paris, London and New York, and dance costumes for the Ballets Russes, and Hollywood actresses, such as Norma Shearer. Some of his earliest costume designs were created in 1913 for ‘Le Minaret’ featuring one of the earliest ‘belly dancer’ showgirls - Mata Hari. For 22 years he worked for Harper’s Bazaar and designed more than 240 magazine covers. The artist also wrote fashion reviews, ran social chronicles, and drew sketches of costumes, accessories, hats, shoes, jewellery and interior design.

Born in St. Petersburg to the old noble family Tyrtov (his father was a lieutenant general in the navy), as a child he attended cultural gatherings and travelled to Europe with his mother, where he was introduced to the elegance typical of the high society, saturared with lavish jewellery, garnments, decorative designs and classical art. In 1900, at the age of eight, Romain Tyrtov and his family visited the Exposition Universelle in Paris, which presented a comprehensive display of the Art Nouveau style. In St. Petesburg, he studied drawing under the Russian master of realist painting Ilya Repin.

In 1912, at the age of nineteen, Romain de Tirtoff moved to Paris and changed his name to Erté (‘R’ and ‘T’ in French). In Paris, Erté worked with Parisian couturier Paul Poiret, and during World War I Erte lived in a villa in Monte Carlo. Prince Nicholas Ourousoff, a distant cousin, came to live with him and was his business manager. Nicholas first suggested a relationship with Harper’s Bazar in New York.

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