A Gilt Metal Mounted Breche Violette Marble Lamp Base, in Louis XVI style, of baluster form with cast stiff-leaf borders on square plinth52cm high including fittingsThe underside of the top rim of marble with two sections or repair, the smallest square section of the base, with an area of restoration near one corner and with other corner and edge chips and two internal floor cracks worked to the surface, the lower square plinth with numerous corner and edge chips, another small section of repair, wiring not tested
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100+ Front of House cards and stills, no complete sets, titles to include Bless This House, The Blue Lamp, The Aristocats, The Lost Command, Gone with the Wind, Doctor at Large, Sweeny 2, Steptoe and Son, Follow a Star, Stand up Virgin Soldiers, Checkpoint, The Music Lovers and others, all 10 x 8 inches (100+).
Flemish school, pps.s.XVI."Annunciation".Oil on panel.Restorations and faults.Twentieth century frame, following sixteenth century models.Faults and xylophages in the frame.Measurements: 74.5 x 61 cm; 88.5 x 74 cm (frame).In this painting, of excellent workmanship, we can appreciate a style rooted in the Flemish tradition, to which the Italian influence is added. The best of the two traditions converged in the painting of Pieter Coecke, whose models the present painter closely followed, being a contemporary of his. See the compositional and formal similarity between this Annunciation and Coecke's Annunciation (dated around 1525, Escalona Altarpiece, Toledo). The archangel Saint Gabriel appears to the Virgin, who was immersed in reading, as can be seen from the closed book on the table and her gesture of surprise. The distribution of the space, as well as the silent dramaturgy with which the two characters communicate, is similar to that of Coecke. The canopied bed is on the right, behind the Virgin, and the Holy Spirit is inscribed in a golden oval. Separating the supernatural element from the domestic interior allows the painter to describe every detail of the room without interruption: the delicacy of the furnishings, the fabrics, cushions and velvets. The sensuality of the draped robes of the two figures and the stylisation of their canons also stand out. The bronze lamp hanging from the ceiling, the golden rod carried by the angel, wrapped in a phylactery, are all expressed with the subtle language characteristic of the Flemish school, while at the same time combining Italian solutions, for example in the perspective traced through the floor tiles that take us into the sacred privacy of the room.

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