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  • Out of stock
    Conversation in the woods, Venanzio Zolla (Colchester, 18 March 1880 - Turin, 10 August 1961). Oil painting on cardboard dating back to the early 1900s, signed on the lower left.
    Period: Early 19th century Measurements: In frame H 40 X L 35.5 / Table H 26.5 X L 22 cm
  • Out of stock
    "Ecstasy of St. Francis" oil on canvas from the 17th century, in a coeval frame. Work in excellent condition. The scene of the painting refers to the famous episode in the life of Saint Francis that took place on the Verna mountain in the summer of 1224, when the Saint received the stigmata. Period: 17th century Measurements: Framed H 84.5 x W 66.5 x D 4.5 cm / Canvas H 68 x W 51 cm
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    "Ed ecco un cavallo bianco (And finally a white horse)", a not numbered litograph, signed on the lower right by Giorgio De Chirico. This artwork is included in the "Apocalypse" volume, curated by R. Carrieri, Edizioni della Chimera, Milano. The founder of the metaphysical school, Giorgio de Chirico is mostly known for his metaphysical paintings, created from 1909 to 1919. These nostalgic representations have deeply influenced the Surrealist movement and its artists, among which André Breton, Salvador Dalì and René Magritte. De Chirico's artworks explore various themes, among which alientation; nostalgia and the myth. De Chirico refused, later in his career, his previous metaphysical style and focused his research on traditional painting techniques, preferring the neo-Classic and neo-Baroque style, influenced by Raffaello, Luca Signorelli and Peter Paul Rubens. The surrealists publicly criticised this further anti-moidernist development in De Chirico's work and for that the artist ceased his participation and belonging to the group. Measurements: In frame H53 x W45,5 x D1,5 cm / Litograph H32 x W25 cm.
  • Out of stock
    Nice charcoal on paper applied on canvas by Oreste Pizio (1879, Turin - 1938, Nole) representing a female nude. Signed and dated 1918 by the author. In a golden frame with ovalized fillets from the end of the 19th century.
    Period: 1918 Measurements: In frame H 90 x L 65 / Canvas H 61 x L 43 cm
  • Out of stock
    Pair of gallant scenes, retouché by Otto Wilhelm Eduard Erdmann (7 December 1834, Leipzig - 9 December 1905, Düsseldorf) He was a German genre painter in the Rococo Revival style. The retouché technique uses a print as a base, but thanks to hand-made retouches and finishes, it returns a physical and external appearance similar to a completely painted picture.
    Period: Second half of the 19th century Measurements: In frame H 38 x L 30 / Tablet H 15 x L 11,5 cm
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    "Glory of St. Benedict" mixed media on paper by Pietro Annigoni (1910-1988), on the reverse side cartouche of the IInd Biennale of Sacred Art of Pescara. Measurements: In frame H 99.5 x W 78.5 x D 10 / Paper H 80 x W 60 cm
  • Out of stock
    Gondolas in Venice, Erma Zago (1880-1942), oil on tablet, signed on the lower left, with a dedication on the back. Dating from the early 1900s.
    Period: Early 1900s Measurements: In frame H 39 x W 46.5 / Canvas on wood H 19 x W 26.5 cm
  • Out of stock
    Beautiful bronze animal sculpture depicting a group of lions by Clovis Edmond Masson (1838, Paris - 1913). Signed by the author on the basement.
    Period: Second half of the 19th century Measurements: H 60 x L 46 x P 30 cm
  • Out of stock
    "Head of Satyr" - Bronze sculpture by Vincenzo Gemito (Naples, 16 July 1852 - Naples, 1 March 1929), Italian sculptor, designer and goldsmith. In Naples he was known as "’ o crazy sculptor " because he was tormented and marked by profound psychic imbalances; in reality his name was Vincenzo Gemito (Naples 1852 - 1929), a goldsmith and sculptor who, due to his condition, was often forced to take long breaks from his creative activity. His life was not simple right from the start: he was abandoned to his fate by his parents after being deposited in the wheel of exposures of the Annunziata plant. In fact, his real surname was Genito - "generated" - usually associated with orphans, but due to a mistake by a scribe the N became an M. Adopted and raised in a very poor family, from an early age Gemito proved to be gifted with immense talent for the plastic arts. His watchful eye loved to dwell above all on the scenes of the Neapolitan slums and his favorite subjects were children dressed in rags, commoners and players. The Gallerie d’Italia in Naples houses one of the most important nucleus of the artist's works, coming from the collection of the lawyer Gabriele Consolazio: terracotta, bronzes and drawings produced between the 1870s and the 1920s of the following century. The young heads modeled in terracotta - such as the impressive "Scugnizzo", "Fiociniere" and "Moretto" - testify to his tendency towards naturalism. Much more sophisticated are the bronze portraits of famous people, such as that of the Spanish painter Mariano Fortuny and his contemporary Domenico Morelli. His tireless plastic research is represented in particular by the "Philosopher's head" and the later "Neapolitan girl's bust", characterized by a sensual classicism that recalls the seductions and virtuosity of ancient Hellenistic sculpture. The drawings made with different materials and procedures are no less splendid: Gemito, in fact, knew how to master pencil, charcoal, ink, watercolor, sanguine and white tempera with the same skill. The engaging self-portraits are exhibited at Palazzo Zevallos Stigliano, merciless evidence of the painful changes in his physiognomy over the years; another important series on display consists of the figures of women where it is possible to observe the style research inspired by seventeenth-century models that made Vincenzo Gemito the last follower of Neapolitan naturalism.
    Period: '900 Measurements: H 42 x W 23 x D 23 cm
  • Out of stock
    Miniature oil painting on wooden tablet depicting the holy family dating back to the 19th century
    Period: 19th century Measurements: In frame H 47 X L 35 / Tablet H 13.5 X L 9.5 cm
  • Out of stock
    "Interior studio", painting by Aldo Carpi de 'Resmini (Milan, 6 October 1886 - Milan, 27 March 1973), oil on canvas signed and dated 11 - 19 - 1960 on the lower right. Aldo Carpi, the famous Italian painter, has a very peculiar history, in fact he was deported to Gusen, a satellite camp in Mauthausen, Austria, where only 2 percent of the prisoners managed to survive. He was saved thanks to his talent and was the author - at the risk of his life - of the only real "live" diary inside an extermination camp. A vertical man, a Righteous who has known and suffered the most atrocious sufferings, but who has never bent to "recognize the active presence of" evil "in the hearts of his fellow men", as the famous art critic Mario De wrote Micheli. Period: 1960s Measurements: In frame H 89 x W 119 x D 5 Canvas H 60 x W 90 cm
  • Out of stock
    "Interior with sheperd and sheep". Oil on tablet by Giuseppe Gheduzzi (Crespellano (BO) May 1889 - Turin May 1957). Giuseppe Gheduzzi was born in Crespellano (BO) on 12 May 1889. Son of the painter Ugo, from whom he learned, like his brothers Cesare, Mario and Augusto, the first rudiments of art. He made his debut in Vignola in 1907 with the painting Alpine landscape. He refined his training in Turin at the Albertina Academy as a pupil of Andrea Marchisio and Paolo Gaidano. After leaving the Academy, he collaborates with his father for the realization of the sets for the Teatro Regio. Giuseppe is a skilled landscape painter: he paints Venetian glimpses and panoramas, views of the Piedmontese lakes and valleys and of the Ligurian Riviera. Unlike his brother Cesare, however, he also excels in interior paintings with figures and orientalist themes. Particularly appreciated by the public and critics are in fact his genre scenes and the paintings depicting interiors of workshops of artisans, antique dealers and stables. During his life Giuseppe participated in many reviews of the Promoter of Fine Arts in Turin and in the Circolo degli Artisti in Turin, and made several personal exhibitions. He died in Turin on May 21, 1957. Period: 1930s Measurements: In frame H 36 x W 28 x D 3 / Canvas H 20 x W 11,5 cm
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