A FINE AND LARGE REVERSE PAINTING ON MIRRORED GLASS
A FINE AND LARGE REVERSE PAINTING ON MIRRORED GLASS

18TH CENTURY

Details
A FINE AND LARGE REVERSE PAINTING ON MIRRORED GLASS
18th century
Painted with a young lady reclining against a gnarled tree trunk with lush foliage entwined with white flowering branches, wearing a pale blue dragon robe underneath a red cape, a pug dog lying at her feet, another in the background beside rock formations and trees, some crazing
28 x 29 in. (71 x 75 cm.), gilt-wood frame
Provenance
John Sparks

Lot Essay

During the second half of the 18th Century, the fashion for Chinese wallpaper in England flourished along with an increased interest in numerous types of decorative material made in the Orient. The technique of 'back painting' in oils or colours mixed with gum on the reverse of the glass sheet had long been known in Europe, and was probably introduced to China by the Jesuit missionaries. The Chinese artists generally used imported European glass sheets, which were of finer quality and evenness than their own manufacture.

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