Figure (4) - Earthenware - First half 17th century
Are you interested in this item?This item is up for auction at Catawiki. Please click on "respond to advert" (orange button) to get redirected to the Catawiki website. Catawiki’s goal is to make special objects universally available. Our weekly auctions feature thousands of unusual, rare, and exceptional objects you won’t find in just any store. Group of terracotta heads composed of 4 elements:The first two 2 pieces, the head of an elderly woman and the fat and bold man’s one, are from the 19th century. They are finely modelled down to the smallest details in the peasant or aristocratic hairstyles; the attention to detail can be seen in the deep furrows on the skin of the shepherds, burned by the sun, or in the curve of the mouth that, depending on the role of the character, poses astonishment, contentment or resignation.The eyes are coloured glass, which makes them particularly clear and expressive.The other 2 items are made at the beginning of the 900 and come from the school of San Gegorio Armeno, are less detailed than the first 2 and do not have glass eyes.The heads are 6 cm high suitable for 35 cm bodies.For now they rest on small metal supports.Lorenzo Mosca (from to ) is considered an amateur with a rare sensitivity, he created figures for cribs without reminiscent of tradition, his works are created with decisive and rapid blows. His ability to interpret the subject led him to success and to endless requests for production, and the consequent system of "cables" from his followers; The windows of the amateurs are embellished. E 'in the eighteenth century that the sacred reconstruction takes the highest value. Under Charles the III of Bourbon true works of art are born. The sovereign himself always dedicated particular attention to the setting up of the nativity scene, with the help of his wife, Maria Amalia. Those who could afford it, commissioned their own statuettes to illustrious artists of the period such as Giuseppe Sanmartino, Lorenzo Vaccaro, Giuseppe Gori, Nicola Vassallo, Lorenzo Mosca. Many eighteenth-century Neapolitan pastors signed by these artists are kept in the windows of museums, even in New York and Munich. Others are on display in the windows of enthusiastic collectors who win the coveted statues by paying respectable sums.Shipping via UPS and/or DHL couriers. Accurate packaging. Read more