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Modern Painting Signed B. Porcheddu Mixed Technique Italy 1942
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ARARNO0245866
Modern Painting Signed B. Porcheddu Mixed Technique Italy 1942

Three Drinkers and an Angel 1942

ARARNO0245866
Modern Painting Signed B. Porcheddu Mixed Technique Italy 1942

Three Drinkers and an Angel 1942

Mixed media on board. Signed lower right. On the back further signature, title and date. Beppe Porcheddu, an important Italian illustrator and ceramist, was also a painter. In his evolutionary artistic path "it would seem that the artist has poured "the illustrator" into the painter and vice versa "the painter has prevailed in the illustration". From his first production, alongside his aptitude for the grotesque, Porcheddu showed a natural inclination for what was defined as a "perfect trio of symbols of a world (the medieval one) that expressed itself through metaphors like no other previous civilization" . In this panel, that tendency towards the grotesque is well expressed in the figures of the three drinkers, presented with crude features, clear lines and marked angles, while the figure of the angel appears evanescent, blurred, framed in the single light that comes from the open door.

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998.00£

Shipping for Italy: Free
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Antique Painting '900 Genre Scene with Figures Mixed Technique
ARARNO0198678
Antique Painting '900 Genre Scene with Figures Mixed Technique

ARARNO0198678
Antique Painting '900 Genre Scene with Figures Mixed Technique

Mixed media on canvas. The large scene, painted in the unique reddish-pink range, features two large figures on the right, while the entire left side is occupied by a desert landscape, with the waves of the dunes fading into the distance. The two figures depict a seated horseman, wearing a turban and Saracen dress, being fed by a maiden in Western dress, who is handing him a tray laden with food, while on the shelf below is a basin of water, ears of corn and various fruits. This could be one of the many representations of the story of Angelica and Medoro, recounted by Ariosto in Orlando Furioso, which tells of the love between the Christian maiden and the Saracen knave wounded in a clash, who then fled together to Catai, thus triggering Orlando's madness. The work is presented in a frame.

In Cart

876.00£

Shipping for Italy: Free
In Cart