Antique Pair Self Portraits Rubens & Titian Florentine Frames 19th C

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Object Description

A lovely pair of Italian School oil on oval panel Florentine carved giltwood framed paintings, early 19th Century in date.

One a self portrait of the artist after Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640), and the companion piece  a self portrait of the artist after Titian.

They are both beautifully framed in the original carved giltwood Florentine frames, decorated with acanthus leaf, berry and trailing flowers.

Add some classical elegance to your home with this charming pair of paintings.

Condition:
In excellent condition the paintings and frames having been delicately cleaned in our workshops, please see photos for confirmation.

Dimensions in cm:
Height 41 cm x Width 36.5 cm x Depth 4 cm – Frame
Height 21.5 cm x Width 19 cm – Painting

Dimensions in inches:
Height 1 foot, 4 inches x Width 1 foot, 2 inches x Depth 2 inches – Frame
Height 8 inches x Width 7 inches – Painting

Florentine Crafts
During the Renaissance, Florence was renowned throughout Europe as a centre of fine art, particularly in painting, gold gilding, bronze work, and furnishings inlaid with intricate designs in marble or rare wood. The fine craft traditions associated with some of these arts never entirely died out in Florence, and remained well-established up to the 19th century. Florence’s craft guilds were a crucial force behind the survival of these trades.

In an effort to boost Florence’s economy, and promote its crafts to tourists, a museum of decorative arts opened in the Bargello in 1865. This, in combination with Florence’s reputation in fine arts, led to rapid growth in the demand for craft products among tourists, particularly from England. Victorian tourists found many craft shops listed in the back of guide books, such as John Murray’s Florence and its Environs.

Florentine style crafts have an ornate appearance, and are typically gold gilded.  Decoupage usually includes reproductions of well-known Classical Florentine art works, which may or may not be religious in nature.

Although the reproductions are in many cases a derivative style imitating fine art and fine objects made of rare materials, Florentine crafts aimed at tourists were fashionable, and termed bon gusto, or fine taste, “pure Italian” or “pure Renaissance style”. Florentine hand carved gold-gilt frames in particular became popular during the late Victorian era; references to such ornate frames appear in period literature, such as Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray.

Florentine-style crafts remain collectable today. Florentine frames and plaques, and reproduction Florentine furniture, are associated with the Shabby chic style of interior decorating in particular in recent years.

Our reference: A4578

Object Details

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