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Pair of Italian 19th Century Baroque Style Carved Walnut Sgabello Side Chairs
$3,950per set
$6,450per set38% Off
£3,008.35per set
£4,912.37per set38% Off
€3,467.57per set
€5,662.23per set38% Off
CA$5,526.02per set
CA$9,023.51per set38% Off
A$6,210.88per set
A$10,141.82per set38% Off
CHF 3,234.47per set
CHF 5,281.59per set38% Off
MX$75,539.72per set
MX$123,349.67per set38% Off
NOK 41,388.94per set
NOK 67,584.47per set38% Off
SEK 39,248.91per set
SEK 64,090per set38% Off
DKK 25,879.64per set
DKK 42,259.15per set38% Off
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About the Item
A fine pair of Italian 19th century Baroque Revival style carved walnut Sgabello figural side-chairs, each backrest with carvings of winged male figures, the base with female figures, raised on with paw feet, Florence, circa 1880.
Measures: Height 39 1/2 inches (100.3 cm)
Width 16 1/2 inches (41.9 cm)
Depth 19 1/2 inches (49.5 cm)
Seat height 20 1/4 inches (51.5 cm).
- Dimensions:Height: 39.5 in (100.33 cm)Width: 16.25 in (41.28 cm)Depth: 19.5 in (49.53 cm)Seat Height: 20.25 in (51.44 cm)
- Sold As:Set of 2
- Style:Baroque Revival (In the Style Of)
- Materials and Techniques:
- Place of Origin:
- Period:
- Date of Manufacture:circa 1880
- Condition:Repaired: Touch ups. Wear consistent with age and use. Minor losses. Minor fading. A beautiful pair of side chairs in good original condition. Some age wear, as expected, minor edge losses and scratches, wood split restorations, especially on the reverse. Evidence of prior antique woodworm pin-holes. Please view all images.
- Seller Location:Los Angeles, CA
- Reference Number:Seller: Lot 102931stDibs: LU1796213114281
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Andrea Brustolon (20 July 1662 – 25 October 1732) was an Italian sculptor in wood. He is known for his furnishings in the Baroque style and devotional sculptures.
Biography
He was trained in a vigorous local tradition of sculpture in his native Belluno, in the Venetian terraferma, and in the studio of the Genoese sculptor Filippo Parodi, who was carrying out commissions at Padua and at Venice (1677). He spent the years 1678-80 at Rome, where the High Baroque sculpture of Bernini and his contemporaries polished his style. Apart from that, the first phase of Brustolon's working career was spent in Venice, 1680–1685. Brustolon is documented at several Venetian churches where he executed decorative carving in such profusion that he must have quickly assembled a large studio of assistants. As with his contemporary in London, Grinling Gibbons almost all the high quality robust Baroque carving in Venice has been attributed to Brustolon at one time or another. In the Venetian Ghetto, at the Scola Levantina, Brustolon provided the woodwork for the synagogue on the piano nobile, where the carved, canopied bimah is supported on Solomonic columns, which Brustolon had seen in Bernini's baldacchino in the Basilica of St Peter's.
His furniture included armchairs with figural sculptures that take the place of front legs and armrest supports, inspired by his experience of Bernini's Cathedra Petri. The gueridon, a tall stand for a candelabrum, offered Brustolon unhampered possibilities for variations of the idea of a caryatid or atlas: the familiar Baroque painted and ebonized figural gueridons, endlessly reproduced since the eighteenth century, found their models in Brustolon's work.
His secular commissions from Pietro Venier, of the Venier di San Vio family (a suite of forty sculptural pieces that can be seen in the Sala di Brustolon of the Ca' Rezzonico, Venice), from the Pisani of Strà, and from the Correr di San Simeone families encourage the attribution to him of some extravagantly rich undocumented moveable furniture. Andrea Brustolon's elaborate carved furniture aspired towards the condition of sculpture, such as the Dutch bases for console tables which look like enlargements of the work of the two Van Vianens, Paulus and Adam, perhaps the greatest Dutch silversmiths of the period. These carved pieces display the baroque tendency to develop a form three-dimensionally in space.
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Daniel Marot or Daniel Marot the Elder (1661–1752) was a French-born Dutch architect, furniture designer and engraver at the forefront of the classicizing Late Baroque Louis XIV style. He worked for a long time in England and the Dutch Republic, where he was naturalised in 1709.
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State bed, designed by Daniel Marot, engraving, ca 1702
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