1046
AN ITALIAN ALABASTER TWIN-HANDLED VASE AND COVER
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… 顯示更多
AN ITALIAN ALABASTER TWIN-HANDLED VASE AND COVER

LATE 18TH/EARLY 19TH CENTURY

細節
AN ITALIAN ALABASTER TWIN-HANDLED VASE AND COVER
LATE 18TH/EARLY 19TH CENTURY
29 in. (73.5 cm.) high
來源
Possibly the vase given by Cardinal Alessandro Albani to Georgiana Poyntz, 1st Countess Spencer (1758-1834) whilst on the Grand Tour in Italy in 1763, and thence by descent to John Poyntz, 5th Earl Spencer (1835-1910) at Althorp, Northamptonshire, where photographed in the Picture Gallery in 1892.
出版
Albert Edward John, 7th Earl Spencer (1892-1975), Althorp, Furniture, Vol. II, circa 1937 and later
注意事項
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium, which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis. Please note Payments and Collections will be unavailable on Monday 12th July 2010 due to a major update to the Client Accounting IT system. For further details please call +44 (0) 20 7839 9060 or e-mail info@christies.com

榮譽呈獻

Victoria von Westenholz
Victoria von Westenholz

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拍品專文

Alessandro Albani was the nephew of Pope Clement XI, who convinced him to set aside a budding military career increasingly debilitated by weak eyesight that would lead to blindness in old age, and become a cardinal, an elevation effected on July 16, 1721. Albani developed into one of the most astute antiquarians of his day; an arbiter of taste in the appreciation of Roman sculpture and a powerful and enterprising collector of Roman antiquities and patron of the arts... He used both ancient and modern art as a form of cultural capital, giving away acquisitions as favours and selling them for perpetually needed funds or when they lost efficacy for him (Seymour Howard, 'Some Eighteenth-Century 'Restored' Boxers', Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 56, 1993, pp. 238-255).

Albani was the formal protector of Rome's artists as patron of the Accademia di San Luca and was a powerful advocate for his favourites. Today, he is perhaps most famous for the creation of the Villa Albani in Rome. Begun in 1751 and completed by 1763 - the year of the Spencers visit to Rome - the Villa was designed to house his constantly evolving collections of antiquities and Roman sculpture, which soon also filled the casino that faced the Villa down a series of formal parterres. Albani's life-long friend Carlo Marchionni was the architect and the Albani antiquities were catalogued by the Cardinal's secretary, the first professional art historian, Johann Joachim Winckelmann. Cardinal Albani's coins and medals went to the Vatican Library, over which he presided from 1761 but the sarcophagi, columns and sculptures have long since been dispersed.