A pair of French 19th century Louis XVI st. ormolu and patinated bronze lamps, signed Clodion
A beautiful pair of French 19th century Louis XVI st. ormolu and patinated bronze lamps, signed Clodion. Each lamp is raised by a fine ormolu base with a wonderfully executed ground like design. The left bronze is of a beautiful... — Read More
A beautiful pair of French 19th century Louis XVI st. ormolu and patinated bronze lamps, signed Clodion. Each lamp is raised by a fine ormolu base with a wonderfully executed ground like design. The left bronze is of a beautiful woman draped in classical attire, with an ormolu wine vessel at her feet and a tambourine at her hip. The right bronze is of a handsome man also draped in classical attire, with a charming pan flute at his feet and a tambourine at his hip. Each wonderfully executed bronze is holding up a sensational ormolu cornucopia in a stunning satin and burnished finish, with abundant richly chased berries and foliate movements. — Read Less
All light fixtures have been inspected and rewired to US standards.
- Item # 11254
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H: 49.5 in L: 9 in D: 24 in
H: 126 cm L: 23 cm D: 61 cm
- France
- 19th Century
- Ormolu, Patinated Bronze
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Louis XVI st. Read More
(Louis XVI st.) -
Also known as Louis Seize, Louis XVI's style is a style of architecture, furniture, decoration, and art created during Louis XVI’s 19-year reign in France, just before the French Revolution.
Thought to be a reaction and juxtaposition to the prior more elaborate styles, Louis XVI style developed at the end of the Baroque Period and continued until the birth of French Neoclassicism.
King Louis XVI showed little enthusiasm for the old world styles of the Baroque Period and he sought out a create a new “beau ideal” that focused on the purity and grandeur of Ancient Romans and Greeks.
Inspired by Ancient Roman architecture and art, distinct features of the Louis XVI style are linear lines, small repeated motifs, floral medallions hanging from ribbons, acanthus leaves, urns, dolphins, ram, and lion heads, and griffins.
Greco-Roman elements, often used in earlier and later French styles, were also quick common and included fluted and twisted columns, Caryathids, and corbels.
- Claude Michel Read More
Claude Michel, aka Clodion (1738 – 1814) Was a renowned French Master sculptor Born in Nancy, France. In 1755, Clodion went to Paris and was a pupil of J. B. Pigalle. In 1759 he obtained the grand prize for sculpture at the Académie Royale; in 1761 the silver medal for studies from models; and in 1762 he went to Rome. Catherine II of Russia was eager for him to go and stay in St Petersburg, but he returned to Paris. Among his patrons, were the chapter of Rouen, the states of Languedoc, and the Direction Générale. His works were frequently exhibited at the Salon. Among Clodion's works, that are displayed all over the world, are a statue of Montesquieu and a Dying Cleopatra, in the Victoria and Albert Museum, (London). One of his last groupings represented Homer as a beggar being driven away by fishermen (1810).
Claude Michel works may be seen at: the Art Institute of Chicago, the Bowes Museum (County Durham, UK), the Carnegie Museum of Art (Pittsburgh), the Courtauld Institute of Art (London), the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, the Frick Collection (New York City), the Getty Museum (Los Angeles), the Kimbell Art Museum (Texas), the Louvre (Paris), the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Musée Cognacq-Jay (Paris), the Museum of Fine Arts (Boston), Musée des Beaux-Arts (Bordeaux), Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen (Rotterdam), the National Gallery of Armenia, the National Gallery of Art (Washington.), the Norton Simon Museum (Pasadena) and the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
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