THE COLLECTION PRESENTED, IS THE ONLY ONE IN THE WORLD
Attention! Here are silver sculptures, in some cases fragmentary covered with multicolored gold and platinum.
There are no bones or organic remains of mollusk shells inside the items.
Collection «The Russian Magnificent Seven»
Sculptures of hunting trophies of elk, deer, Siberian roe deer, bear, wolf, lynx and capercaillie. For the demonstration, a classic wall layout was chosen - silver skulls are placed on medallions made of petrified wood.
A distinctive feature of the sculptures from this collection is that the trophies are made only in silver, without gold decoration. Demonstrations chosen table layout, allowing you to examine the sculptures in detail from all sides. Silver skulls are placed in glass flasks on petrified wood pedestals.
The collection includes hunting trophies of the Siberian roe deer, bear, wolf, lynx and beaver. The sculptures are made in silver and decorated with yellow and rose gold. For the demonstration, a tabletop layout was chosen - silver skulls are placed under glass flasks on pedestals of their petrified wood.
The collection includes hunting trophies of the Siberian roe deer, bear, wolf, lynx and beaver. The sculptures are made in silver and decorated with yellow and rose gold. For the demonstration, a tabletop layout was chosen - silver skulls are placed under glass flasks on pedestals of their petrified wood.
Golden Safari presents a unique collection of trophy sculptures made of precious metals, the only one in the world.
The hunting trophy of ungulates - elk, deer, roe deer - are horns on the frontal bone or skull. Hunting trophy of predatory animals - bear, wolf, lynx - full skull. Capercaillie hunting trophy - a stuffed bird.
The cultural basis of the collections presented, is on the centuries-old experience of mankind from the Holy Scripture, Scythian «animal style», Western European Renaissance, High Renaissance aesthetics of Leonardo da Vinci (XV century), Northern (Flemish) Baroque to Art Nouveau «kink of times» at the turn of the XIX–XX centuries and modern ethical standards for displaying animal derivatives (hunting trophies).