Pair of neo-Moorish vases in chased and gilded bronze and br - Lot 118

Lot 118
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2500 - 3000 EUR
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Result : 4 550EUR
Pair of neo-Moorish vases in chased and gilded bronze and br - Lot 118
Pair of neo-Moorish vases in chased and gilded bronze and brown onyx, in the form of the Alhambra vase in vogue in the second half of the 19th century, notably under the impetus of Théodore Deck. Circa 1870/80 Height: 40 cm When Alexandre Delaborde published his Voyage pittoresque et historique de l'Espagne between 1806 and 1812, the depiction of two large Hispano-Moorish earthenware vases on display at the Alhambra Palace in Granada, Spain, struck a chord in many minds. From the early 19th century, Moorish Spain and its ancient ceramics fascinated French artists. The development of French expeditions and annexation programs led to a better understanding of Middle Eastern art. Orient. Orientalism, fashionable in painting from the 1820s onwards, became a fertile source of inspiration for ceramists and manufacturers of decorative objects from the 1860s onwards. In 1858, French ceramist Théodore Deck opened a workshop in Paris and specialized in this type of production. He rediscovered the turquoise blue of Iznik ceramics. At the London World's Fair in 1862, he achieved great success with his large Vase de l'Alhambra, a work that had fascinated European ceramists for many years. This Théodore Deck vase, with a technical virtuosity worthy of the finest Andalusian ceramists, is an edition dating from the late 1870s.
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