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Pasquale Romanelli

Young Girl protecting a bird from a snake

Auction Closed

December 4, 05:31 PM GMT

Estimate

8,000 - 12,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

Pasquale Romanelli

Italian

1812 - 1887

Young Girl protecting a bird from a snake


signed: P. Romanelli

white marble, on a green marble column with revolving top

figure: 89cm., 35in.

column: 97.5cm., 38 1/4 in.

The Florentine sculptor Pasquale Romanelli achieved an international reputation for his finely carved marble figures. Romanelli began his training at the Accademia di Belle Arti in Florence under Luigi Pampaloni but was soon taught by the foremost Tuscan neoclassical sculptor, Lorenzo Bartolini. He subsequently became Bartolini’s collaborator and, upon the master’s death in 1850, the successor of his studio. Romanelli’s mythological and allegorical compositions were highly prized by a cosmopolitan clientele, and he exhibited select models in Paris. In addition to collectors’ marbles, Romanelli executed numerous important commissions for monuments, such as those to Vittorio Fossombroni in Arezzo, Masi in Pavia, and Demidoff in Florence. Romanelli’s final tribute to his master, Bartolini’s tomb monument, is housed in the Church of Santa Croce in Florence. After Romanelli’s death in 1887, his son Raffaello and grandson Romano continued his legacy which lives on to the present day; the Romanelli studio, now a private museum, remains a rare survival in Florence.


This beautifully carved allegorical figure of a girl protecting a bird relates to other seated female subjects by the sculptor, such as his Odalisque.