Sunday Times

Bric-a-brac buy lays a R360m golden egg

- ANITA SINGH

A SCRAP metal dealer who bought an ornament from a bric-a-brac market to be melted down for its gold discovered it is a £20-million (R360-million) Fabergé egg.

The extraordin­ary find has been likened by the expert who verified it to “Indiana Jones being presented with the Lost Ark”, after a trail that began in tsarist Russia and ended in the kitchen of a house in the American Midwest overlookin­g a branch of Dunkin’ Donuts.

The Imperial Easter Egg was designed by Carl Fabergé for Tsar Alexander III in 1887 and seized by the Bolsheviks during the Russian Revolution.

It eventually turned up at an antiques stall in the US a decade ago, its provenance unknown to the vendor.

It was spotted by a dealer who bought and sold gold for scrap value.

Knowing nothing of the egg’s history, he bought it for £8 000 based on its weight and estimated value of the diamonds and sapphires featured in the decoration.

He intended to sell it on to a buyer who would melt it down, turning a quick profit of a few thousand pounds. But prospectiv­e buyers thought he had overestima­ted the price and turned him down.

The egg languished in his kitchen for years, until one night in 2012 when he Googled “egg” and “Vacheron Constantin”, a name etched on the timepiece inside.

The result was a newspaper article published a year earlier, featuring a picture of his egg and the title: “Is this £20-million nest egg on your mantelpiec­e?”

The dealer — who wishes to remain anonymous, given his new-found wealth — contacted the Fabergé expert named in the article, Kieran McCarthy of London jeweller Wartski.

“He saw the article and recognised his egg in the picture,” said McCarthy.

“He flew straight over to London — the first time he had ever been to Europe — and came to see us. He hadn’t slept for days.

“He brought pictures of the egg and I knew instantane­ously that was it. I was flabbergas­ted — it was like being Indiana Jones and finding the Lost Ark.”

McCarthy flew to the US to

And he practicall­y fainted. He literally fell to the floor in astonishme­nt

verify the discovery.

“It was a very modest home in the Midwest, next to a highway and a Dunkin’ Donuts. There was the egg next to some cupcakes on the kitchen counter.

“I examined it and said: ‘You have an imperial Fabergé Easter egg.’ And he practicall­y fainted. He literally fell to the floor in astonishme­nt.”

The dealer etched McCarthy’s name and the date into the wooden bar stool on which the latter sat to examine the egg, marking the day that his life changed forever.

Wartski bought the egg on behalf of a Fabergé collector.

The dealer was stunned by his new-found wealth and “petrified” of being publicly identified, McCarthy said.

“He’s from another world entirely. It’s a world of diners and pick-up trucks, real bluecollar America, and he and his partner are still stunned by all this. When I saw them in January, they hadn’t moved out but they were going to, although I think it was just to a bigger house around the corner. They’ve also bought a new car.

“It’s the same as winning the EuroMillio­ns, except better in a way, because he invested some money in this piece and hung on to it because he was too stubborn to sell it for a loss.

“I have been around the most marvellous discoverie­s in the art world, but I don’t think I’ve ever seen one quite like this — finding this extraordin­ary treasure in the middle of nowhere.”

The egg bears several scratches where the metal was tested for its gold content by prospectiv­e buyers.

“The scratches make it more valuable, not less,” said McCarthy. “We thought about removing them, but in the end the new buyer thought they enhanced the piece because they are part of its history.”

The egg was one of 50 created by Fabergé for the Russian Royal family. Measuring 8.2cm high, it was given by Tsar Alexander III to the tsarina for Easter 1887.

It was last seen in public in March 1902 as part of an exhibition of imperial treasures in St Petersburg.

Seized by the Bolsheviks, it was last recorded in Moscow in 1922 when the Soviets decided to sell it as part of their “Treasures into Tractors” policy.

In 1964, it was sold for £875 to a female buyer from the Deep South. She died in the early 2000s and her estate sold off. The egg, not believed to be of great value, found its way to the bric-a-brac market.—

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