Renaissance frame

Code :  ANCOSP0116160

not available
Renaissance frame

Code :  ANCOSP0116160

not available

Renaissance frame

Features

Style:  Renaissance (1460-1630)

Age:  17th Century / 1601 - 1700

Origin:  Italy

Main essence:  Walnut

Description

Renaissance mirror in walnut, carved with leaf and fruit festoons, has been cleaned and re-patinated; present lacks on the stop, also carved with subsequent leaves motif.

Product Condition:
Product that due to age and wear requires restoration and resumption of polishing.

Dimensions (cm):
Height: 56
Width: 74,5
Depth: 5

Maximum size (cm):
Height: 70,5
Width: 88,5

Additional Information

Style: Renaissance (1460-1630)

With the Renaissance, furniture took on architectural forms, perfect proportions, adorned with rationally arranged decorations, taken from Greco-Roman iconography.
Supports and feet carved in acanthus leaf or lion's paw appear at least from the early 1560s.
Next to parallelepiped chests appear others in the shape of a classic sarcophagus, with surfaces marked by ornamental metrics rigidly regulated within pilasters and frames.
The novelty of the sculptural intaglio decoration deduced from archaeological remains triumphs, stylistic elements decoded and reworked in different compositional harmonies arranged in alternating plays of dentils, ovules, volutes, acanthus-shaped spirals, loricatures, dressings, candelabras and grotesques, and the whole relives pantheon of pagan mythology, to historize in particular chests, which the initial function of container of the wedding dowry takes over the new instance of real parade furniture.
It should be remembered that the furniture displayed was generally richly embellished with gold leaf gilding.
In the first decades of the sixteenth century, the use of the Carthusian inlay definitively declined, although even in the Renaissance this technique had great renown, just think of the activity of the Tasso workshop in Florence.
Find out more about the Renaissance style with our insights:
Renaissance style
A pair of candle holders between Renaissance and Baroque
FineArt: the Renaissance
FineArt: Renaissance golden Cassina, Belloni family – Venice, 16th century
The dictionary of antiques - Savonarola

Age: 17th Century / 1601 - 1700

17th Century / 1601 - 1700

Main essence: Walnut

Walnut wood comes from the plant whose botanical name is juglans regia , probably originally from the East but very common in Europe. Light or dark brown in color, it is a hard wood with a beautiful grain, widely used in antique furniture. It was the main essence in Italy throughout the Renaissance and later had a good diffusion in Europe, especially in England, until the advent of mahogany. It was used for solid wood furniture and sometimes carvings and inlays, its only big limitation is that it suffers a lot from woodworm. In France it was widely used more than anything else in the provinces. In the second half of the eighteenth century its use decreased significantly because mahogany and other exotic woods were preferred.
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