-
Out of stock
Oil painting on wood by Alessandro Lupo (1876-1953) with a beautiful golden frame. Signed by the author on the upper left side, it bears the title on the back. Subject: "Camogli" Technique: Oil on board Period: Early 1900s Measurements: Frame H 40 x L 46 cm / Board H 14,5 x L 19,5 cm -
Out of stock
Period: 1950s Measurements: H 121 x Ø 40 cm50's hourglass floor lamp, in opaline -
Out of stock
Period: 1960s / 1970s Measurements: H 60 x Ø 40 cmVenini chandelier in chromed metal and Murano glass, dating back to the 60s / 70s -
Out of stock
Period: Late 1800s Measurements: H 116 x Ø 100 cmBrass chandelier, dating back to the end of the 19th century, with 5 light points. Beautiful workmanship with volutes and lion heads. Glass lampshades are missing -
Out of stock
Period: 1940s / 1950s Measurements: H 75 x Ø 47 cmMurano glass chandelier with three light points, dating back to the 40s / 50s. Made up of two pieces, conical upright and cup -
Out of stock
Period: Second half of the 19th century Measurements: In frame H 38 x L 30 / Tablet H 15 x L 11,5 cmPair 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. -
Out of stock
Period: 1935 Measurements: In frame H 50 x L 42 / Drawing H 36 x L 28 cm"Ballerinas", watercolor drawing by Charles Emmanuel Jodelet (1883-1969), signed on the lower right and dated 1935. -
Out of stock
Epoca: '800 Measurements: In frame H 90 x L 78,5 / Canvas H 78,5 x 65 cm"Madonna del divinatore" oil on canvas by Raphael, reproduction of the 19th century. The original is kept in the Capodimonte museum. Restored -
Out of stock
Period: 1920s approx Measurements: H 88 x L 147 x D 38 cmConsolle with marble top, lacquered in cream tones, decorated in burgundy. -
Beautiful example of the engraved map of Nicolas Sanson d'Abbeville from 1650. Nicolas Sanson (1600-1667), sometimes called Nicolas Sanson d'Abbeville or Sanson d'Abbeville, was the most important French cartographer of the 17th century. Tooley called Sanson "the founder of the French school of cartography". He started making cards at the end of 1620, and in 1630 he worked with Melchior Tavernier. Subsequently, Sanson worked in concert with the publisher Pierre Mariette, with whom he published his great atlas: general maps of all parts of the world (1658). After Sanson's death in 1667, his son Guillaume ran the business in collaboration with Alexis Hubert Jaillot. Guillaume has established himself as a full-fledged very important French cartographer.Period: 1650 Measurements: In frame H 65 X L 79 / Paper H 44 X L 56 cm