View full screen - View 1 of Lot 74. An Italian suite of giltwood seating furniture, Rome, early 19th century, attributed to Lorenzo Santi.

Property of a European Collector

An Italian suite of giltwood seating furniture, Rome, early 19th century, attributed to Lorenzo Santi

Lot Closed

May 23, 02:13 PM GMT

Estimate

12,000 - 18,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

An Italian suite of giltwood seating furniture, Rome, early 19th century, attributed to Lorenzo Santi


including one sofa and six armchairs, the arched backrests with beaded friezes centred with an eagle spreading its wings and perched on a laurel wreath issuing ribbons, above a frieze carved with laurel leaves, flanked on either side by a capital-headed fluted pilasters, the sofa's armrests supported by griffins, above curved paterae headed curved legs terminating in paw feet, the back legs of saber form, numbered to each seat rail with Roman numerals, the chairs respectively I, III, IIII, VI, XI, XIII, and the sofa V, some with a possible inventory number M.H/HW4/28.6, covered with a later silk pale pink and green upholstery


the sofa 186cm. wide

Part of an extensive suite made for Cardinal Joseph Fesch (1763- 1839), probably made for the Palazzo Buffalo Ferraioli, in Rome, around 1806.

Bought at auction in London in the 1940s by the current owner's grandmother.

Comparative Literature:

Lucy Wood, The Upholstered Furniture in the Lady Lever Art Gallery, 2008, Yale University Press, New Haven and LondonVol. II, no. 68, pp. 738-756.

Napoleon: la collection napoléonienne de la cité imperiale, Exposition Musée Fesch, Ajaccio, 03/05–30/12/2005,

Lucy Wood, 'Le mobilier du cardinal Fesch destiné au palais Buffalo Ferraioli', à Rome, p. 45-52.


This set of six chairs and sofa, stamped I, III, IIII, VI, XI, XIII, and V in Roman numerals on the inside of the seat-rails, was almost certainly part of the celebrated and much more extensive suite made for Cardinal Joseph Fesch (1763- 1839), probably made for the Palazzo Buffalo Ferraioli, in Rome, around 1806. The group of Fesch chairs are discussed extensively by Lucy Wood, op. cit. pp. 738-756. Most of the suite was later inventoried at his residence l’hôtel Hocquart de Montfermeil in Paris in 1815 and comprised ninety-six pieces. The Emperor’s emblem, the imperial eagle and the victory crown on the pediment possibly indicate that they were designed for an intended visit of his nephew, the Emperor Napoleon to Fesch’s palace in Rome.


Subsequently, part of the suite was catalogued for sale at Fesch’s Paris residence by Thiesson-Creteil, 17th June 1816 (and following days), lot 444, but apparently withdrawn. Joseph Bonaparte, King of Spain, his principal heir, probably inherited most of the suite in 1839. Within two years some of the furniture was acquired by Prince Anatole Demidoff for the Villa San Donato, Florence (as shown in two drawings of the ballroom there, by Fortuné de Fournier, dated 1841). This part of the suite was later sold from San Donato by Paul Demidoff (nephew and heir of Anatole Demidoff) in the celebrated Demidoff sale on 15th March 1880, lots 5, 143-144, 1082-1084. The furniture has subsequently been purchased in the main for public collections in Europe and the U.S.A. (for example Malmaison, France, the Philadelphia Museum of Art (mostly on loan to the White House), and the James Monroe Memorial Library in Virginia). Other remaining pieces appeared on the art market before the Second World War, especially at the Sangiorgi Gallery in Rome. A further group of fourteen pieces (chairs, armchairs and sofas) was bequeathed by Fesch to his home town, Ajaccio, Corsica, and remains at the Musée Fesch there.


It is worthwhile noting that the workshops and makers have not been identified, but designs for Fesch’s furniture were made by the brothers Lorenzo and Dionisio Santi, two architects from Sienna. A design for the present chairs was published by Santi (probably Dionisio) in Modèles de Meubles et de décorations interieurs, pour l’Ameublement…dessines par M. Santi (1828)–Plate 41.