A PAIR OF ITALIAN ORMOLU, PATINATED BRONZE AND MARBLE TWO-BRANCH CANDELABRA
A PAIR OF ITALIAN ORMOLU, PATINATED BRONZE AND MARBLE TWO-BRANCH CANDELABRA

ATTRIBUTED TO FRANCESCO RIGHETTI, ROME, CIRCA 1800

Details
A PAIR OF ITALIAN ORMOLU, PATINATED BRONZE AND MARBLE TWO-BRANCH CANDELABRA
ATTRIBUTED TO FRANCESCO RIGHETTI, ROME, CIRCA 1800
One in the form of Diana, the other of Apollo, holding aloft a cornucopia issuing scroll branches with circular drip-pans and foliate nozzles, above a cylindrical white-veined black marble pedestal base mounted with a laurel wreath on a square plinth; originally with further mounts to base
19 ¾ in. (50 cm.) high
Literature
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE:
A. González-Palacios, Fasto Romano, Rome, 1991, p. 225, cat. 195-197.

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Paul Gallois
Paul Gallois

Lot Essay

Francesco Righetti was a sculptor, silversmith and bronze founder who had his training under Luigi Valadier (1726-1785). Valadier was, from 1779, in charge of restoration of the bronzes in the papal collections, and was also entrusted with the collection of antique cameos. Righetti would later (1805) succeed Valadier as superintendent of the Vatican foundries, by which time his reputation as one of the most talented sculptors, specialising in works after the antique, was well-established. In 1781 he had received a commission for a set of busts from the English banker Henry Hope, and in 1786 Catherine the Great of Russia commissioned a marble and bronze group of Apollo and the Muses after antique sculptures in the Museo Pio-Clementino, Rome.

By 1794, Righetti's success was such that he produced a catalogue which listed 46 busts, 25 groups and 78 single figures he could cast in bronze for clients wishing to purchase works of art they had seen while in Italy. These could be executed in a variety of sizes and with different patinations depending on the tastes of the individual. The present lot can be attributed to Francesco Righetti (Rome, 1749-1819) based on a stylistic comparison with closely related figures which appear on candelabra illustrated in A. González-Palacios, Fasto Romano, Rome, 1991, p. 225, cat. 195-197.

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