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A documentary Meissen silver-gilt-mounted snuff box with portrait of the Electress Elisabeth Auguste of the Palatinate, circa 1746-47
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A documentary Meissen silver-gilt-mounted snuff box with portrait of the Electress Elisabeth Auguste of the Palatinate, circa 1746-47
Footnotes
Provenance:
Dr. Fritz Clemm Collection, Berlin, sold by Rudolph Lepke's Kunst-Auctions-Haus, Berlin, 3-5 December 1907, lot 68 (lacking mounts)
Literature:
Beaucamp-Markowsky 1985, no. 72;
Beaucamp-Markowsky 1988, no. 22;
Jansen (ed.) 2001, no. 57
Exhibited:
Amsterdam, Rijksmuseum, 1972-2003;
Berlin, Schloss Charlottenburg, Commedia dell'Arte Fest der Komödianten, 14 July-14 October 2001;
London, Gilbert Collection, Somerset House, 2003-2008;
Barnard Castle, Co. Durham, The Bowes Museum, 2008-2010
There are several mentions in Johann Jacob Wagner's records of the painter working on snuff box covers depicting the Electress of the Palatinate: in November and December of 1746, and February, June, July, November and December of 1747.
The scene on the cover is based on 'La Marche comique', an engraving of 1739 by S.F. Ravenet the Elder (1706-74), after a painting by J.B. Pater (1706-74), now in the Frick Collection, New York.
Elisabeth Auguste von Sulzbach (1721-94) was the daughter of the Count Palatine Joseph Charles von Sulzbach, and his wife, Elisabeth Auguste von Neuburg. She married her cousin, the Elector Palatine, Carl Theodor, in 1742, who subsequently became Elector of Bavaria in 1777. Their only child, Franz Ludwig, survived only one day. Their marriage was not happy, and in 1768, Carl Theodor gave his wife Schloss Oggersheim to the west of Mannheim, where she resided, at first only during the Summer months, with a retinue of over 100 people. During her residence, the Schloss was the venue for numerous fêtes, with musical and theatrical performances. In 1793, French revolutionary troops entered the Palatinate and the Electress retreated to Weinheim, where she died the following year. Schloss Oggersheim was occupied by French troops, who set fire to it destroying the palace completely.
