Sideboard Neo-Renaissance Style Walnut Oak Italy '900

Code :  ANMOAL0124620

not available
Sideboard Neo-Renaissance Style Walnut Oak Italy '900

Code :  ANMOAL0124620

not available

Sideboard Neo-Renaissance Style Walnut Oak Italy '900

Features

Style:  Neo-Renaissance Revival

Age:  20th Century / 1901 - 2000

Origin:  Italy

Main essence:  Walnut Sessile Oak

Description

Sideboard in Neo-Renaissance style, supported by lion feet, on the front it has three drawers surmounted by a door with a carved central rosette; in walnut, the interiors are in oak.

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

Dimensions (cm):
Height: 167,5
Width: 100
Depth: 47,5

Additional Information

Style: Neo-Renaissance Revival

Stylistic revival, from the 1900s, of the forms typical of the Renaissance style.
This is a style that re-proposes, looking at the grandeur of the past, decorative motifs and decorations typical of the 1500s.
Mascheroni, cornices, columns carved with herms that make up typical architectural structures of Renaissance palaces, are the elements that characterize the Neo-Renaissance style.
These elements will remain in the production of furniture until the early 1900s, contaminating themselves with floral elements.
Find out more about the Neo-Renaissance with our insights:
A Milanese library between the Belle Epoque and Fascism

Age: 20th Century / 1901 - 2000

20th Century / 1901 - 2000

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.

Sessile Oak

Under the name of oak or oak various types of woods derived from plants of the genus quercus are grouped. They are always resistant, hard and compact woods. Oak is lighter than oak, both are used for more rustic furniture or for the interiors of French and English antique furniture. In other processes it was gradually replaced by the advent of exotic woods considered more valuable since the 18th century.
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