Restoration Showcase Mahogany - Italy XIX Century

Code: ANMOLI0138058

not available
Restoration Showcase Mahogany - Italy XIX Century

Code: ANMOLI0138058

not available

Restoration Showcase Mahogany - Italy XIX Century

Features

Style:  Bourbon Restoration (1815-1830)

Age:  19th Century / 1801 - 1900

Origin:  Liguria, Italy

Main essence:  Mahogany

Description

Ligurian restoration showcase, supported by turned and carved feet, on the front, in the lower part it has two doors with glass framed between uprights with twisted columns; raised with two doors, also with glass, which lacks the original wooden grate. Mahogany.

Product Condition:
Product that due to age and wear requires restoration and resumption of polishing.

Dimensions (cm):
Height: 204,5
Width: 135
Depth: 42

Additional Information

Style: Bourbon Restoration (1815-1830)

Starting from the Congress of Vienna in 1815, the arts also expressed the return to monarchical order and the desire for order after the years of war.

The stylistic characteristics are an evolution of the Empire style, but with simpler lines and stripped of the typical symbols of the Napoleonic period.

There is greater attention to the practicality of the furniture and domestic use.

Find out more with the insights of our blog and FineArt on the Restoration style:

The return to the past in the Restoration period

Gueridon Restaurazione

INSERT ADDITIONAL LINKS

Austrian taste for Baroque

The history of French furniture

Age: 19th Century / 1801 - 1900

19th Century / 1801 - 1900

Main essence: Mahogany

It is one of the most precious and sought-after woods in cabinet making. It was discovered in Central America around 1600 and began to be imported to England in the 1700s. Much appreciated for its hardness and indestructibility, it became widespread following the blocking of walnut exports from France in 1720 and the consequent elimination of English import duties on mahogany from the colonies in America and India. The most valuable version comes from Cuba, but it became very expensive. At the end of the 18th century it began to be used also in France in Louis XVI, Directory and Empire furniture, its diffusion declined starting from when Napoleon, in 1810, forbade its import. It was generally used in the manufacture of elegant furniture, due to its characteristics and beautiful grain.
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