Plaster sculptures

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ATTRIBUTED INNOCENZO SPINAZZI (1726-1798), ITALIAN - ATTRIBUTED INNOCENZO SPINAZZI (1726-1798) ITALIAN, FLORENCE, CA. 1775 PAIR OF CAPRICORNS Marble each 115 by 154cm Provenance: With Giovanni Pratesi Antiquario, 2011 These outstanding marble Capricorns are exceptional for their size, quality and condition, as well as for the rarity of the subject matter in Italian sculpture. The model originates in 16th century Florence, created to decorate monumental gate posts in the Boboli Gardens, the famous park connected to the Palazzo Pitti. Attributed to a sculptor from the circle of Bartolomeo Ammannati (1511-1592), they flank the entrance to the Isola, a part of the gardens that has Giambologna's magisterial Oceanus fountain at its centre. The Capricorn was an important emblem for Cosimo I de' Medici (1519-1574), for whom the star sign was ascendant, and its use here may have been an homage to Lorenzo il Magnifico, the late 15th century Medici ruler, who was born on 1 January 1449, making him a Capricorn. By the middle of the 18th century, the Boboli Gardens had fallen into disrepair. With the arrival of the Lorrainese Grand Duke Pietro Leopoldo (later Emperor Leopold II) at Florence in 1770, a programme to restore the Gardens was initiated. The commission given to Innocenzo Spinazzi is documented between 1775-1777. The Roman sculptor was required to repair, copy and restore the sixteenth century Capricorns, which were eventually reinstalled in the Boboli Gardens. The Capricorns are the crowning achievement of Spinazzi's work in the Boboli Gardens project and this aspect of his career has been studied in depth by Prof. Gabriele Capecchi, who has written extensively on the Boboli Gardens and has authored a volume dedicated to these Capricorns that details all the related documents and to which the present text is indebted. Capecchi has published a series of documents issued by the Scrittoio della Fortezza e Fabbriche in the 1770s which relate to the programme of restoration in the Boboli Gardens. A document dated 27 January 1776 describes the Vasca detta dell'Isola that needed restoration to the sculptures, which included four Capricorns described as by Giambologna and his assistants; Capecchi attributes them to the circle of Ammannati, a contemporary of Giambologna. This document details how two of the statues had been delivered to Spinazzi's studio to be repaired and specifies that two casts were to be taken, from which four statues were required to be made. The documents go on to specify the high quality marble needed for these new copies which was to be brought directly from Carrara, because the quality of the existing marble in the warehouse at S. Lorenzo was inadequate. The documents note that Spinazzi was working on this commission with an assistant, Giuseppe Belli, and the plaster casts were made by the specialist craftsman, Niccolò Kindermann. By July 1777, the initial plan to replace the 16th century Capricorns with new ones was altered, presumably due to pressure of time and lack of funds, in favour of restoring the original marbles by adding new heads, horns and tails. The four restored statues were transported back to the Boboli Gardens and reinstalled on 26 August 1777. The present pair of marbles fit with the description of the Capricorns in these documents. It is apparent, however, that they vary in many details from the existing Capricorns in the Boboli Gardens. The carving of the hair on the heads, the anatomy of the mouths and the carving of the eyes are all different. It is notable that the tails differ between the four existing Capricorns in the Boboli Gardens, two having their tails pointing down and two pointing up. The present Capricorns are consistent with the latter. These inconsistencies bring into question which animals in the Boboli Gardens are the work of Spinazzi, Harwood and Capezzóli, and why the present marbles are different. In approaching the commission to restore and copy the Capricorns, Spinazzi brought a wealth of experience he had gained working with ancient sculpture in Rome, which had surely recommended him to the Grand Duke five years previously. Certainly, he was a skilled restorer of ancient Roman statues, and made exact, high quality copies. The Capricorns are of the same genre, but distinct in their animal subject matter. Here, his source is not Antiquity, but a 16th century model. In the late 18th century, the Boboli Capricorns were believed to be by the great Giambologna, whose sculptures were reproduced for the Grand Tourists with the same reverence afforded to antique marbles. It is natural, then, that Spinazzi would have approached his commission first to copy and then to restore the Capricorns with great respect to the originals. This may account for the clear differences between the heads of the Capricorns in the Boboli Gardens and the present pair: the eyes of the animals in situ are un-carved; the form of the snout and tail are different; the hair is depicted with shorter, more deeply carved curls; and the ha

Estim. 80,000 - 120,000 GBP

Reinhold Begas - Reinhold Begas Kaiser Wilhelm I on horseback, led by the Allegory of Victory Bronze, finely chased, golden brown patina. Round foundry mark Gladenbeck. H 40, W approx. 22, D approx. 32 cm. Berlin, Gladenbeck foundry, around 1900. This is one of the rare reductions of the central equestrian motif from the Kaiser Wilhelm National Monument. The sculptor Reinhold Begas and the architect Gustav Halmhuber erected the 21-meter-high monument between 1895 and 1897 on Berlin's Schlossfreiheit. Reinhold Begas was born in Schöneberg on July 15, 1831. As the son of the German painter Carl Joseph Begas, he was the scion of a dynasty of artists spanning several generations and therefore came into contact with the fine arts at an early age. Unlike his famous father, however, Reinhold Begas was more enthusiastic about sculpture from the outset, so that he received his basic training not in his father's workshop, but with the sculptor Ludwig Wilhelm Wichmann in Berlin. In 1846, he began his studies under Christian Daniel Rauch at the Berlin Academy of Art, which at the time had Johann Gottfried Schadow, one of the greatest sculptors in German art history, as its director. Reinhold Begas himself achieved his first success with his plaster group Hagar and Ishmael and was able to visit Rome on a scholarship from 1856 to 1858. In the cosmopolitan city, rich in tradition and art, he made the acquaintance of artistic personalities such as Arnold Böcklin, Heinrich Dreber and Anselm Feuerbach and created his marble group Amor and Psyche in the style of the Swiss sculptor Ferdinand Schlöth. Under the influence of his experiences in Rome, not least through his study of the works of Gian Lorenzo Bernini and Michelangelo, Reinhold Begas leaned towards a baroque style that ran counter to the strict classicism that still prevailed. In 1861, he received a call from the still young Grand Ducal Saxon School of Art in Weimar, where he met his Rome acquaintance Böcklin again as a teacher and also got to know Franz von Lenbach. Reinhold Begas held his teaching post until 1863 and then returned to Berlin. Although there were repeated short stays in Rome and Paris, Prussian Berlin remained the home of the artist, who earned the goodwill of the Hohenzollerns with his undisguised pathos and received numerous prestigious commissions from Kaiser Wilhelm II. The Kaiser Wilhelm National Monument, unveiled in 1897, was designed by Reinhold Begas together with Gustav Halmhuber in the neo-baroque style; it survived two world wars but was destroyed in the GDR in 1950; only three figures were preserved.

Estim. 5,000 - 7,000 EUR

MARTI LLAURADÓ MARISCOT (Barcelona, 1903 - 1957). "Portrait of Gemma". Plaster. Work catalogued in "Martí Llauradó". Josep Porter i Moix, 1993, p. 38, n.47. Measurements: 31 x 25 x 18 cm. This sculpture clearly shows the advance that Llauradó's work represented with respect to Noucentisme. The sculptor left behind the archaising and symbolic idealisation of the previous generation, moving towards capturing an intimate portrait through a more descriptive and narrative gaze, more realistic in short, which nevertheless does not forget the formal bases learned from the noucentistes. Thus, the figures are rotund and monumental, an effect that Llauradó does not achieve through traditional procedures, such as a low viewpoint, but through a totally sculptural sense of the figure, with volumetric and forceful forms, precise and clear and at the same time softly idealised, going beyond the portrait to capture an ideal through an everyday image. The sculptor Martí Llauradó worked during his youth with Joan Borrell and Joan Rebull, from whom he received important influences. In 1929 he made his debut with his first solo exhibition in Barcelona, together with Joan Commeleran. From then on he continued to exhibit his work and to take part in competitions, and in 1933 he was awarded a prize at the Exhibition of the Nude at the Círculo Artístico in Barcelona. The following year he won the first medal at the National Exhibition of Fine Arts in Madrid. In the post-war period he won other important prizes in cities such as Seville (for religious art), Madrid and Barcelona, and was invited to take part in two editions of the Venice Biennale. Llauradó was a leading figure of the young generation of post-noucentisme, and tempered the stylised idealism of the noucentistes with an accentuation of realism. He is currently represented at the Museu d'Art Contemporani de Barcelona.

Estim. 800 - 900 EUR