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Auction archive: Lot number 40

After the Antique: A |pair| of Medici and Borghese cast iron urns

Auction 20.05.2008
20 May 2008 - 27 May 2008
Estimate
£1,500 - £2,500
ca. US$2,946 - US$4,910
Price realised:
£3,200
ca. US$6,285
Auction archive: Lot number 40

After the Antique: A |pair| of Medici and Borghese cast iron urns

Auction 20.05.2008
20 May 2008 - 27 May 2008
Estimate
£1,500 - £2,500
ca. US$2,946 - US$4,910
Price realised:
£3,200
ca. US$6,285
Beschreibung:

After the Antique: A |pair| of Medici and Borghese cast iron urns
circa 1860 probably by the Handyside foundry 72cm.; 28ins high From the mid 17th to the late 19th Century the Medici and Borghese urns or |vases| were the most admired of all the antique models and were often paired together. The Medici urn is first recorded in 1598 in the inventory of the Villa Medici, Rome although there is evidence that it was there at least thirty years earlier. In 1780 it was removed to Florence and soon entered the Uffizi where it remains today. The vase was one of the most popularly reproduced antiquities being copied in marble, bronze, terracotta, alabaster and biscuit. It is believed that the original was executed in the second half of the first century A.D. The Borghese urn was first recorded in the garden of Carlo Muti in 1594 by Flaminio Vacca who added that it had been discovered along with the Silenus and Infant Bacchus on Muti~s estate near present day Casino Massimo. In 1645 the urn had found its way into the Villa Borghese where it stayed until purchased by Napoleon in 1807. By 1811 it was on display in the Louvre where it remains today. These urns are illustrated in the 1874 Handyside catalogue No 3 & 3A (see also footnote to lot 33)

Auction archive: Lot number 40
Auction:
Datum:
20 May 2008 - 27 May 2008
Auction house:
Summers Place Auctions
Stane Street
The Walled Garden
Billingshurst, West Sussex, RH14 9AB
United Kingdom
info@summersplaceauctions.com
+44 (0)1403 331331
Beschreibung:

After the Antique: A |pair| of Medici and Borghese cast iron urns
circa 1860 probably by the Handyside foundry 72cm.; 28ins high From the mid 17th to the late 19th Century the Medici and Borghese urns or |vases| were the most admired of all the antique models and were often paired together. The Medici urn is first recorded in 1598 in the inventory of the Villa Medici, Rome although there is evidence that it was there at least thirty years earlier. In 1780 it was removed to Florence and soon entered the Uffizi where it remains today. The vase was one of the most popularly reproduced antiquities being copied in marble, bronze, terracotta, alabaster and biscuit. It is believed that the original was executed in the second half of the first century A.D. The Borghese urn was first recorded in the garden of Carlo Muti in 1594 by Flaminio Vacca who added that it had been discovered along with the Silenus and Infant Bacchus on Muti~s estate near present day Casino Massimo. In 1645 the urn had found its way into the Villa Borghese where it stayed until purchased by Napoleon in 1807. By 1811 it was on display in the Louvre where it remains today. These urns are illustrated in the 1874 Handyside catalogue No 3 & 3A (see also footnote to lot 33)

Auction archive: Lot number 40
Auction:
Datum:
20 May 2008 - 27 May 2008
Auction house:
Summers Place Auctions
Stane Street
The Walled Garden
Billingshurst, West Sussex, RH14 9AB
United Kingdom
info@summersplaceauctions.com
+44 (0)1403 331331
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