A PAIR OF NORTH ITALIAN WHITE-PAINTED CONSOLES
A PAIR OF NORTH ITALIAN WHITE-PAINTED CONSOLES

GENOA, LATE 18TH CENTURY

Details
A PAIR OF NORTH ITALIAN WHITE-PAINTED CONSOLES
GENOA, LATE 18TH CENTURY
Rectangular green marble veneer tops on molded and foliate carved cornice above a fluted frieze, supported by a fluted stand issuing three foliate scrolls, on a black painted plinth, redecorated, with traces of earlier decoration, white paper label inscribed '196V' on the back of one
38 in. (96.5 cm.) high, 31½ in. (80 cm.) wide, 18½ in. (47 cm.) deep (2)

Lot Essay

These elegant consoles, with their acanthus-headed triple-volute supports, are loosely based on the celebrated design by Richard de Lalonde for a console at Montreuil, now in the Kunstbibliothek, Berlin (for a pair of Louis XVI consoles based on this design, see Christie's, London, 12 December 2002, lot 30).

The use of delicate, pierced scrolling supports, in combination with small-scale classical masks, is typical of the work of Genoese carvers. A Genoese console in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, with similar pierced scrolling supports, is illustrated in A. Gonzaléz-Palacios, Il Mobile in Liguria, Genoa, 1996, p. 311, fig. 364.

More from European Furniture, Sculpture and Works of Art

View All
View All