Null Elizabethan style console table; circa 1860.

Marble and stuccoed and gilde…
Description

Elizabethan style console table; circa 1860. Marble and stuccoed and gilded wood. It has slight damage. Measurements: 94,5 x 127 x 58,5 cm. The four legs of the console table have a light cabriole shape, a front carved with scrolls and vegetal elements, and are joined at the bottom by chambranes also decorated with classicist-inspired leaves, which are joined in a central form. The waist of the table has two curved areas towards the ends, and an openwork front with the same type of antique-inspired decoration as the legs: stems, garlands... The upper top follows the lines of the furniture: curved front corners, and a small projection towards the front. It is clearly inspired by decorative elements taken either from the Renaissance or from classical antiquity (more Imperial Rome than Greece), as is usual in the works that fall within the Neoclassicism. However, the movement of the upper panel, the openwork decoration on the front, the light cabriole legs and the abundance of decoration and gilding on this piece of furniture are also related to a continuation of the forms of another 18th century style: Rococo.

70 

Elizabethan style console table; circa 1860. Marble and stuccoed and gilded wood. It has slight damage. Measurements: 94,5 x 127 x 58,5 cm. The four legs of the console table have a light cabriole shape, a front carved with scrolls and vegetal elements, and are joined at the bottom by chambranes also decorated with classicist-inspired leaves, which are joined in a central form. The waist of the table has two curved areas towards the ends, and an openwork front with the same type of antique-inspired decoration as the legs: stems, garlands... The upper top follows the lines of the furniture: curved front corners, and a small projection towards the front. It is clearly inspired by decorative elements taken either from the Renaissance or from classical antiquity (more Imperial Rome than Greece), as is usual in the works that fall within the Neoclassicism. However, the movement of the upper panel, the openwork decoration on the front, the light cabriole legs and the abundance of decoration and gilding on this piece of furniture are also related to a continuation of the forms of another 18th century style: Rococo.

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