AN ITALIAN GILTWOOD SIDE TABLE
AN ITALIAN GILTWOOD SIDE TABLE

LATE 18TH CENTURY, PROBABLY ROME

Details
AN ITALIAN GILTWOOD SIDE TABLE
Late 18th Century, probably Rome
The later rectangular Cipollino Mandolato Verde marble top above the panelled frieze with a central medallion of a Roman emperor flanked by foliate scrolls, on four Pegasus monopodia joined by a waved foliate X-shaped stretcher centred by a fruiting vase, possibly associated, and on goat's hoof feet, one wing replaced
36 in. (92 cm.) high; 52 in. (134 cm.) wide; 26 in. (67 cm.) deep

Lot Essay

This side table is loosely based on a design from the Diverse maniere d'adornare i cammini by Giovanni Battista Piranesi (d. 1778) of 1769 which depicts a table supported with griffin monopodia (A. Gonzlez-Palacios, Il Tempio del Gusto, Milan, 1984, vol. II, p. 103, fig. 209) and a further drawing by Piranesi for a console table supported by ram's headed monopodia (G. Lizzani, Il Mobile Romano, Milan, 1970, p. XXXV, fig. LXVII). It relates to a pair of tables in the Quirinale, Rome, which were supplied in 1773 to Prince Don Marcantonio Borghese (d. 1800) for the Palazzo Borghese by Antonio Landucci (A. Gonzlez-Palacios, I Mobili Italiani, Milan, 1996, pp. 184-185, cat. 59). These tables incorporate the same curious juxtaposition of the neo-classical elements of the frieze and the supports in contrast to the early 18th Century manner of the stretcher. A pair of corner consoles with very similar supports was sold anonymously at Sotheby's New York, 22 March 1996, lot 241, while a large side table of similar character was sold anonymously at Sotheby's New York, 5 October 1991, lot. 318.

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