Neapolitan Trumeau
Features
Style: Barocchetto (1720-1770)
Age: 18th Century / 1701 - 1800
Year: Metà '700
Origin: Napoli, Italy
Main essence: Walnut
Material: Striped Walnut Slab , Solid Wood of Different Species , Walnut Burl
Description
A serpentine trumeau with three drawers and 45° uprights with serpentine pilaster strips. Drop-leaf door hiding a glass cabinet with six drawers and hidden compartments. A shelf with a pair of shaped doors with mirrors. 'Rigatino' walnut slab veneer and walnut burr veneered parts. Bois de rose outlines. Boise de violette inlaid roses, not coeval handles. It has been restored. Manufactured in Naples, Italy, mid 18th century.
Product Condition:
The item shows signs of wear due to age. Any damage or loss is displayed as completely as possible in the pictures. It may require restoration and polishing.
Dimensions (cm):
Height: 270,5
Width: 139
Depth: 63,5
Additional Information
Style: Barocchetto (1720-1770)
With this term we designate, for what specifically relates to furniture, a part of the production carried out in Italy in the period of time between the Rococo era and the first phase of neoclassicism.It is characterized by the formal and decorative structure still rigidly adhering to the dictates dear to the Baroque period (hence the term baroque) and to the Louis XIV fashions and yet the new times are captured in the adoption of smaller volumes, more decorative modules. elegant, often directly inspired by French fashion, but always executed with rigorous principles of ornamental symmetry.
The tendency to assimilate formal and volumetric novelties but not to incorporate their ornamental elaboration finds natural explanation in Italy in the fact that in this century the great aristocracy experienced an unstoppable political and economic decline.
If in the previous century there was a great profusion of furnishings destined to adorn newly built homes, to proudly show the power of the client family, in the eighteenth century they rather take care to update the building with only the furniture strictly necessary for the new needs imposed by fashion or functional needs.
The old scenographic apparatus is maintained and the new must not contrast too much.
Find out more about the Barocchetto with our insights:
Classic Monday: discovering Barocchetto
Classic Monday: between Baroque and Barocchetto
Classic Monday elegant and unusual with two Barocchetto balustrades a>
FineArt: Pair of Barocchetto chairs, Venice
Emilian canterano first quarter XVIII century, first Barocchetto
Ribalta a urn, Milan mid-18th