STYLE: Furniture, Silver, Ceramics
STYLE: Furniture, Silver, Ceramics
Property from a Distinguished Private Collection, Washington, D.C.
Lot Closed
October 21, 02:17 PM GMT
Estimate
10,000 - 15,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
Property from a Distinguished Private Collection, Washington, D.C.
AN ITALIAN NEOCLASSICAL GILTWOOD SOFA, ROME, LATE 18TH CENTURY
upholstered à chassis, the black painted backgrounds to the rosettes possibly later added, en suite with lots 115 and 116
height 41 ½ in.; width 52 in.; depth 24 in.
105.5 cm; 132 cm; 61 cm
G. Sarti Gallery, London
E. Colle, Il Mobile Neoclassico in Italia, Milan 2005
Il tempio del gusto. Le arti decorative in Italia fra classicismi e barocco. Roma e il regno delle due Sicilie, Milan 1984
Alvar González-Palacios, Arredi e ornamenti alla corte di Roma 1560-1795, Milan 2004
This sofa forms part of a larger suite, one armchair of which is illustrated in Colle, p.145. They exemplify the Roman interpretation of the neoclassical idiom, heavily influenced by the designs of the architect and draughtsman Giovanni Battista Piranesi (1720-1788). Ram's headed legs and a frieze with a central circular portrait medallion appear in a design for a console table by Piranesi now in the Kunstbibliothek, Berlin (ill. González-Palacios 1984, Vol.II p.81 n.153). Comparable legs with ram's heads and hoof feet are also found on several surviving Roman tables including a pair of console tables and a gueridon now in the Lazienki Palace, Warsaw (ill. González-Palacios 2004, p.216-18), and on a single console with mosaic top sold Sotheby's New York, Inspired by Chatsworth, 28 June - 18 September 2019, n.54.
Stylistically this group is related to another set of important Roman neoclassical armchairs constructed equally à chassis and with comparable portrait medallions centering the crest and seat rails and very similar scrolled armrests with acanthus-carved supports. One armchair was in the Alberto Bruni-Tedeschi Collection, sold Sotheby's London, 21 March 2007, lot 131; another sold Sotheby's London 11 June 2003, lot 77 and a further pair was exhibited by Christophe de Quénetain at the Paris Biennale des Antiquiares in September 2010. Their design has been attributed to the architect Antonio Asprucci and their execution to Antonio Landucci, who supplied a pair of console tables with medallion-centered friezes to Prince Marcantonio Borghese at the Palazzo Borghese in 1773 (now in the Quirinale Palace).