A NORTH ITALIAN GREEN-PAINTED AND PARCEL-GILT MIRROR
A NORTH ITALIAN GREEN-PAINTED AND PARCEL-GILT MIRROR
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Please note this lot will be moved to Christie’s F… Read more
A NORTH ITALIAN GREEN-PAINTED AND PARCEL-GILT MIRROR

PROBABLY GENOA OR SOUTH GERMAN, CIRCA 1730-1740

Details
A NORTH ITALIAN GREEN-PAINTED AND PARCEL-GILT MIRROR
PROBABLY GENOA OR SOUTH GERMAN, CIRCA 1730-1740
The arched shell cresting with trailing berrying laurel leaves, C-scrolls and foliage above a leaf-wrapped bordered frame entwined with floral vinery, the mirror plate with applied flowering vinery border over a cabochon-carved apron issuing trailing foliage
92 in. (233.5 cm.) high, 52 in. (132 cm.) wide
Special notice
Please note this lot will be moved to Christie’s Fine Art Storage Services (CFASS in Red Hook, Brooklyn) at 5pm on the last day of the sale. Lots may not be collected during the day of their move to Christie’s Fine Art Storage Services. Please consult the Lot Collection Notice for collection information. This sheet is available from the Bidder Registration staff, Purchaser Payments or the Packing Desk and will be sent with your invoice.

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Lot Essay

The mirror offered here was most likely part of a wall paneling and as such was conceived with a matching console table or commode. Originally probably polychrome-painted and parcel-gilt, it would have been incorporated into an interior with equally refined and colorful stuccowork that would have matched the mirror’s carved decoration. Of all the Italian states, the Republic of Genova is the most known for such colorful interiors that were often adorned with polychrome-painted floral decoration highlighted with putti, rocaille motifs, and fantastical creatures. A good example of such an interior is the Gallerie delle Stagioni at the Villa Della Rovere in Albisola Superiore and rooms of the Villa Faraggiana in Albisola see E. Colle, Il Mobile Rococò in Italia, Milan, 2003, p. 248 and p. 252, respectively. Mirrors and picture frames were often incorporated seamlessly into lavish stuccowork as seen in the same villa, see ibid. p. 274., and were many times supplemented by furniture decorated equally colorfully. For examples of polychrome-painted Genovese furniture, including consoles with en suite mirrors, see L. Canonero, Barocchetto Genovese, Milan, 1964, figs. LXXXIII, XCII, and XCVI. The dragons found in the cresting of the present mirror can also be found in Genovese mirrors of this period, including one in the Palazzo Rosso, one in the Palazzo Reale, and another in the Palazzo Spinola, all in Genova, see Colle, pp. 268-269. However, dragon figures were also very popular among south German designers and craftsmen of the time and it is possible that this mirror was manufactured for one of the courts in Ansbach, Munich or Bayreuth, where interiors were conceived as a Gesamtkunstwerk with furnishings, wall paneling, and stuccowork made following a single artistic program or idea.

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