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Hand
Painted One of a Kind Russian Lacquer box by the talented artist
Dmitriy Tipyakov.
Throughout this box he portrays "The Tale of a Brave Boy and his Eagle", with other animals in the forest .
On
the top lid of the box has flowers. The tsar
and the princess await the ships arrival with the man who made the
ship.
The
box is completely hand painted and signed by the artist Tipyakov. The
size of the box is 5.5 X 4 x 3.25 inches ( 14 x 10 x 8 cm). Made in
Russia.
All Russian lacquer boxes are made from Paper mache, treated with 7 layers of red lacquer (inside) and black lacquer (outside) or clear lacquer.
This subject and background all comes from the following Russian Fairytale:
A couple had three sons, and the youngest was a fool. One day, the Tsar
declared that whoever made him a ship that could sail through the air
would marry his daughter. The older two set out, with everything their
parents could give them; then the youngest set out as well, despite
their ridicule and being given less fine food. He met a little man and,
when the man asked to share, he hesitated only because it was not fit.
But when he opened it, the food had become fine. The
man told him how to strike a tree with an axe; then, he was not to look
at it but fall to his knees. When he was lifted up, he would find the
tree had been turned into a boat, and could fly it to the Tsar's palace,
but he should give anyone who asked a lift. He obeyed. On
the way, he met and gave a lift to a man who was listening to
everything in the world, a man who hopped on one leg so that he would
not reach the end of the world in one bound, a man who could shoot a
bird at a hundred miles, a man who needed a great basket of bread for
his breakfast, a man whose thirst could not be sated by a lake, a man
with a bundle of wood that would become soldiers, and a man with straw
that would make everything cold. At
the Tsar's place, the Tsar did not want to marry the princess to a
peasant. He decided to send him to the end of the world to get healing
water, before the Tsar finished his dinner. But the man who could hear
heard him and told the youngest son, who lamented his fate. The
fleet-footed man went after it. He fell asleep by the spring, and the
huntsman shot the tree he was leaning against to wake him up, and he
brought back the water in time. The Tsar then ordered him to eat twelve
oxen and twelve tons of bread, but the glutton ate them all. The Tsar
then ordered him to drink forty casks of wine, with forty gallons each,
but the thirsty man drank them all. The
Tsar said that the betrothal would be announced after the youngest son
bathed, and went to have him stifled in the bath by heat. The straw
cooled it, saving him. The
King demanded that he present him with an army on the spot, and with
the wood, the youngest son had it and threatened to attack if the Tsar
did not agree. The Tsar had him dressed in fine clothing, and the
princess fell in love with him on sight. They were married, and even the
glutton and the thirsty man had enough to eat and drink at the feast.