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Description:
|   |   | #006821Title: SadkoArtist: Wagner Marie
 Size: 21x16x7.5
 Size (inches): 8.25x6.25x3
 Price : $
 4950SOLD!
 
  
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|                                                                 |  |  Sadko is a wonderful old Russian fable based in ancient Russian Mythology.In the realistic-style composition painted on this box, Sadko has descended into the undersea world of Tsar Morskoi, as a live sacrifice to save his stranded ship. Sadko falls to the bottom of the sea and finds himself in the palace of Tsar Morskoi. The King and Queen of the Sea have heard about Sadko's musical talents and ask him to play and to sing for them. They are overjoyed by his music, and decide to keep Sadko in their Sea Tsardom, to be their daughter's bride. But Sadko tells their daughter, Volkhova, that he can't marry her, as he is in love with his wife, Lubava. Volkhova understands that Sadko's devotion to his wife is too strong to be swayed, so she helps him to sneak away, back to Novgorod. Still amorous of Sadko, Volkhova tenderly kisses Sadko "goodbye" and turns into the river Volkhova which flows from Lake Ilmen to the sea.
 The famous Russian poet Alexander Pushkin also wrote a famous rendition of this fairy tale. This excerpt from Pushkin's poem Sadko illustrates the last moments before our hero sacrifices himself to Tsar Morskoi (Sea King).
 
 "Oh, my brethren, oh, my brave
 men-at-arms! Bring to me my sweet-
 sounding gusla, for I wish to play
 it one last time. I little think
 that I may ever play it again.
 Or shall I take it with me when
 I descend into the ocean depths?"
 He took up his sweet-sounding
 gusla and spake these words:
 "Cast an oaken board into the blue
 sea, that I may stand upon it and
 perchance delay my death."
 They cast an oaken board into
 the deep blue sea, and Sadko leapt
 down upon it. And the sea grew
 calm at once, and the ships flew
 as the crow flies, straight
 to their homeland.
 
 This box is a magnificent piece, with a presence which would complement any collection. The artist masterfully combines scenes from Novgorod, the high seas, and from Morskoi's underwater kingdom to tell the story.
 Kornilova uses swirling waves of blue and green to pull the scenes together into one fantastic composition.
 With masterful use of pallet and stroke, Wagner has created action and motion in her work. The positioning and detailing of each character is beautifully executed with precision and lifelike blending. Gold paint is used to frame the the border of the lid and jutted out part of the bottom.
 The box is constructed out of paper-mache. Black lacquer covers the exterior and the interior of the box. The box has a hinge above the composition and rests on four round legs.
 Sizes of the smaller boxes that are located under the major lid are:
8.5x6x3cm or
 3.25x2.25x1 inches
 
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