Angiolo Barbetti
A Fine Pair of Italian Carved Walnut and Parcel-Gilt Figural Torchères by Angiolo Barbetti, (1805-1873)
£32,000
A Fine Pair of Italian Carved Walnut and Parcel Gilt Figural Torchères by Angiolo Barbetti, (1805-1873) Florence. Signed 'Barbetti', 'Anno 1866,''Firenze'. Each...
Dimensions
Height: 150 cm (60 in)Width: 50 cm (20 in)
Depth: 50 cm (20 in)
Description
A Fine Pair of Italian Carved Walnut and Parcel Gilt Figural Torchères by Angiolo Barbetti, (1805-1873) Florence.
Signed ‘Barbetti’, ‘Anno 1866,”Firenze’.
Each torchère finely carved in the Renaissance revival style as classical Grecian heroic figures with elaborate draped robes heighted with gilding, raised on elaborate triform bases with winged lion’s paw feet and scallop shells, above a guilloche frieze centred to each side with panels inscribed with ‘Barbetti’, ‘Anno 1866,’ and ‘Firenze’.
Italy Dated 1866.
Date
Dated 1866
Origin
Italy
Medium
Carved Walnut
Signature
Signed 'Barbetti', 'Anno 1866,''Firenze'.
Angiolo Barbetti (1805 – 1873) was a skilled carver, designer and decorator, with a flourishing atelier in Florence during the nineteenth century.
After working in his father Massimiliano’s atelier in Siena, he took up an apprenticeship with Giovacchino Guidi (d. 1842), considered one of Siena’s finest ebenisti. By 1826-7, he had established a workshop on the Piazza San Giovanni, Siena and in 1830 exhibited his first works at the Istituto delle Belle Arti, Siena.
In 1842, Barbetti moved his workshop to Florence, establishing himself near the ponte alle Grazie. Important commissions from this period included carvings for the interiors of Villa San Donato for Prince Anatoly Demidoff.
Barbetti took part in many of the international exhibitions of the second half of the nineteenth century, including the 1851 Great Exhibition in London, where he was awarded a medal for a suite of carved walnut furniture. Following the exhibition, the suite of furniture was purchased by the South Kensington Museum, now the Victoria and Albert Museum, where it remains today.
Joined in the business by his four sons Rafaello, Egisto, Ottavio and Rinaldo by the beginning of 1860, the firm of Barbetti continued to find international success exhibiting successfully at the 1861 Florence exhibition, the 1867 Paris Exposition Universelle and the Vienna Exhibition of 1873.
Bibliography
Meyer, Jonathan, Great Exhibitions: London, New York, Paris, Philadelphia, 1851-1900, Antique Collectors‚’ Club (Woodbridge, UK), 2006, p. 41.
Simone Chiarugi, ‚‘La bottega di Angiolo Barbetti a Siena e Firenze‚’, in C. Paolini, A. Ponte and O. Selvafolta, Il bello ‚‘ritrovato‚’, Novara, De Agostini, 1990, pp. 220-223.
Simone Chiarugi, ‚‘La fortuna degli intagliatori senesi‚’, in Siena tra Purismo e Liberty, exhibition catalogue, A. Mondadori and De Luca (Milan and Rome), 1988.
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