Antique Baroque Bedside Table Maple Cherrywood Italy XVIII Century

Rome, Third Quarter XVIII Century

Code: ANMOCO0245941

not available
Add to cart
SAFE PAYMENTS
pagamenti sicuri
Request information
Book a date
Go to noleggio.dimanoinmano.it to rent the product
Rent
Antique Baroque Bedside Table Maple Cherrywood Italy XVIII Century

Rome, Third Quarter XVIII Century

Code: ANMOCO0245941

not available
Add to cart
SAFE PAYMENTS
pagamenti sicuri
Request information
Book a date
Go to noleggio.dimanoinmano.it to rent the product
Rent

Antique Baroque Bedside Table Maple Cherrywood Italy XVIII Century - Rome, Third Quarter XVIII Century

Features

Rome, Third Quarter XVIII Century

Style:  Barocchetto (1720-1770)

Age:  18th Century / 1701 - 1800

Origin:  Roma, Lazio, Central Italy

Main essence:  Maple Cherry Various Wood Essences Walnut

Material:  Gilded Bronze , Maple Slab , Cherry Slab , Fruitwood slab , Walnut Pedule

Description

Baroque commode subsequently transformed into a bedside table by blocking the top, Rome, third quarter of the eighteenth century. Supported by four wavy legs, on the wavy front it has two shaped doors in the lower part; the upper surface is also shaped. The external surface is veneered in various essences, including walnut, cherry, maple and fruit wood. The top, front and sides are then decorated with walnut pedule reserves placed within maple borders, with the same number of panels in the center containing inlaid compass roses. Gilt bronze applications placed at the top of the uprights.

Product Condition:
Product which due to age and wear requires restoration and re-polishing. We try to present the real state of the furniture as completely as possible with photos. If some details are not clear from the photos, what is stated in the description applies.

Dimensions (cm):
Height: 76
Width: 60,5
Depth: 39,5

Additional Information

Style: Barocchetto (1720-1770)

With this term we designate, for what specifically relates to furniture, a part of the production carried out in Italy in the period of time between the Rococo era and the first phase of neoclassicism.
It is characterized by the formal and decorative structure still rigidly adhering to the dictates dear to the Baroque period (hence the term baroque) and to the Louis XIV fashions and yet the new times are captured in the adoption of smaller volumes, more decorative modules. elegant, often directly inspired by French fashion, but always executed with rigorous principles of ornamental symmetry.
The tendency to assimilate formal and volumetric novelties but not to incorporate their ornamental elaboration finds natural explanation in Italy in the fact that in this century the great aristocracy experienced an unstoppable political and economic decline.
If in the previous century there was a great profusion of furnishings destined to adorn newly built homes, to proudly show the power of the client family, in the eighteenth century they rather take care to update the building with only the furniture strictly necessary for the new needs imposed by fashion or functional needs.
The old scenographic apparatus is maintained and the new must not contrast too much.
Find out more about the Barocchetto with our insights:
Classic Monday: discovering Barocchetto
Classic Monday: between Baroque and Barocchetto
Classic Monday elegant and unusual with two Barocchetto balustrades
FineArt: Pair of Barocchetto chairs, Venice
Emilian canterano first quarter XVIII century, first Barocchetto
Ribalta a urn, Milan mid-18th

Age: 18th Century / 1701 - 1800

18th Century / 1701 - 1800

Main essence:

Maple

Hard, light wood used for inlays. It grows mainly in Austria, but it is widespread throughout the northern hemisphere, from Japan to North America, passing through China and Europe. It is one of the lightest woods ever, tending to white, it is similar to lime or birch wood. The briar is used in the production of ancient secretaires .

Cherry

Obtained from prunus cerasus , a plant of oriental origin, it is a hard wood with a light and delicate color, with a reddish vein. Due to its diffusion and availability it was used in Europe in popular furniture. In cabinet making, in the seventeenth century, it was widely used in France and England for inlay work. In Italy it was very successful in Lucca. It was also very popular in the United States for the manufacture, from the late 1600s, of commonly used furniture.
The dictionary of antiques: Eclecticism
Classic Monday: a sofa from the 1800s example of eclecticism

Various Wood Essences

Walnut

Walnut wood comes from the plant whose botanical name is juglans regia , probably originally from the East but very common in Europe. Light or dark brown in color, it is a hard wood with a beautiful grain, widely used in antique furniture. It was the main essence in Italy throughout the Renaissance and later had a good diffusion in Europe, especially in England, until the advent of mahogany. It was used for solid wood furniture and sometimes carvings and inlays, its only big limitation is that it suffers a lot from woodworm. In France it was widely used more than anything else in the provinces. In the second half of the eighteenth century its use decreased significantly because mahogany and other exotic woods were preferred.

Material:

Gilded Bronze

Maple Slab

Cherry Slab

Fruitwood slab

Walnut Pedule

Alternative proposals
It could also interest you