AN ITALIAN GILT-BRONZE-MOUNTED EBONY AND PIETRA DURA CASKET
THE PROPERTY OF A DANISH PRIVATE COLLECTOR
AN ITALIAN GILT-BRONZE-MOUNTED EBONY AND PIETRA DURA CASKET

THE GRAND DUCAL WORKSHOPS, FLORENCE, CIRCA 1720

Details
AN ITALIAN GILT-BRONZE-MOUNTED EBONY AND PIETRA DURA CASKET
The Grand Ducal Workshops, Florence, circa 1720
Inlaid with various pietre dure including giallo antico, agate, chalcedonio di volterra, lineato dell'Arno and tigrato dell'Arno, set in lapis lazuli borders, the raised moulded hinged rectangular lid centred by a large plaque decorated with a bird, two butterflies and various flowers, framed by grotesque mask corner clasps issuing fruiting trails, with olivewood-lined interior inlaid with panels, their grain imitating watered silk, the front, back and sides inlaid with further rectangular plaques decorated with flowers and branches of fruit, framed by conforming ribbon-tied fruiting trails, incorporating further grotesque masks, on a moulded rim and foliate-wrapped bun feet, minor losses to the fruit of the framing trails and to the gilt-bronze moulding, three small twigs to the corners of the lid lacking, two small foliate mounts to the lower moulded edge lacking, the interior with later lock and later inset mirror plate
11½ in. (29½ cm.) high; 17 in. (43 cm.) wide; 14½ in. (37 cm.) deep
Provenance
Anonymous sale, Sotheby's London, 7 April 1977, lot 125.
Literature
A. González-Palacios, Il Tempio del Gusto: La Toscana e L'Italia Settentrionale, Milan, 1984, vol. I, p. 43, and vol. II, p. 60, fig. 74

Lot Essay

This magnificent Florentine casket, richly mounted with polished hardstones in imitation of fruit and gilt-bronzes with ribbon-tied sprays of foliage and exotic dolphin masks, can be firmly attributed to the Grand Ducal workshops, and was probably made under the supervision of Giovanni Battista Foggini (1652-1725), who was director of the workshops under Duke Cosimo III (1670-1723).

The spectacular creations of the Galleria dei Lavori, which was originally founded by Ferdinand I Medici in 1588, were admired in all the courts of Europe, and were often offered as diplomatic gifts by the Medici. Louis XIV even consciously tried to emulate their success when he created the Gobelins workshops in 1667, and imported Italian craftsmen such as Domenico Cucci.

Foggini played a remarkably active role as director of the Medici workshops under Duke Cosimo III, supervising every detail of the works of art produced. This is demonstrated by a fascinating series of drawings by him in the Giornale of the workshops, for caskets and gilt-bronze mounts, executed towards the end of his career (circa 1713-1718), now in the Gabinetto Disegni e Stampe in the Uffizi, Florence (see González-Palacios, op. cit.,vol. I, pp. 41-4, and vol. II, pp. 54-60, figs. 57-77). His painstaking attention to detail is also revealed by this 1699 item in the accounts: 'da casa sua il S. re Foggini il Modello di terra per formarsi i Capitelli de' 2 pilastri dell'Oriuolo, con detti pilastri di Lapisllazulo...' (González-Palacios op. cit., vol. I, p. 41).

A number of closely related caskets are known, all in distinguished collections, including the following:

-one in the Staatliche Kunstsammlungen, Kassel (González-Palacios op. cit., vol. II, fig. 75)

-one previously in the collection of prince Marc de Beauvau-Craon (1679-1754), acquired while Governor of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany under Francesco I (González-Palacios, op. cit., vol. II, figs. 75-6)

-one in the Vyne, Hampshire, where it is recorded as early as 1752, probably acquired by John Chute on the Grand Tour in the 1740's (González-Palacios op. cit., vol. II, fig. 83

-one formerly in the collection of William Beckford, acquired at his sale in 1823 at Fonthill by George Hammond Lucy for Charlecote Park, Warwickshire, where it remains (P. Hewat-Jaboor/B. McLeod et al.,, William Beckford, 1760-1844: An Eye for the Magnificent, New Haven, 2002, pp. 358-9, cat. 83).

More from Important European Furniture,Sculpture,Tapestries & Carpets

View All
View All