forged-iron garden chair by Vittorio Corcos

forged-iron garden chair by Vittorio Corcos

12982

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Small wrought iron chair, with 12-petal seat, is supplied painted with rust Ovatrol finish.
On request it can be painted with enamel (1 coat of primer + 2 coats of enamel of the color you have indicated).
The surcharge for enamel painting is € 35.00 per chair, including VAT.

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60 Available

275,00 €



Data sheet


Height 35.04 in 89 cm
Depth 18.5 in 47 cm
Seat height 17.72 in 45 cm
Artist / Creator / Architect Vittorio Corcosa (Livorno, 4 ottobre 1859 – Firenze, 8 novembre 1933)
Diameter of the seat 13.78 in 35 cm
Where the original is kept Palazzo Foresti, Carpi - Modena - Italy
Manufacturing Recuperando srl
Material Ferro battuto / Forged iron
Note 01 Maximum backrest width 44 cm

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The production of this chair was inspired by Vittorio Corcos' painting "The Institutes in the Champs Elysees - 1892".
The painting is preserved and can be visited at the Palazzo Foresti in Carpi (MO)

PALAZZO FORESTI

Vittorio Amedeo Corcos was born to Jewish parents, Isacco e Giuditta Baquis, in Livorno. He trained at the Academy of Fine Arts of Florence under Enrico Pollastrini. Between 1878 and 1879 he worked under Domenico Morelli in Naples.
He then traveled to Paris where he met Léon Bonnat, and signed a contract with the Goupil & Cie, he was able to supplement his income as a portrait painter with illustrations for magazines. He frequented the circles of Giuseppe De Nittis. Between 1881 and 1886, he frequently exhibited at the Salon.
He returned to Italy in 1886, putatively to join the army, and settled in Florence. He converted to Catholicism and married a widow, Emma Ciabatti. In Florence, he made friends in the intellectual circles, and made portraits of Silvestro Lega, Giosue Carducci, and Pietro Mascagni. After 1900, he wrote for the Florentine Journal Il Marzocco. He also published a short story in the magazine Fanfulla della Domenica titled Mademoiselle Leprince. In 1904, he traveled to Potsdam to paint Emperor William II and other members of the German monarchy. During World War I, his son died in battle in 1916. In the 1920s he joined the Gruppo Labronico along with Plinio Nomellini and Ulvi Liegi.
He also painted portraits of Mussolini (1928); Countess Annina Morosini; Countess Nerina Volpi di Misurata; Carducci, Puccini and Mascagni; Queen Amélie of Portugal, Princess of Orleans;
In 1913, his self-portrait was accepted by the Uffizi museum.
He died in Florence in 1933. Source Wikipedia

Le Istitutrici ai campi Elisi, 1892, one of the vertexes of the artist from Livorno, depicting a scene set in a golden autumn day in one of the most fascinating places in Paris, testifies how much Corcos has maintained constant relations with the French capital, but also with England, and how his painting evolved towards ever more refined solutions in a continuous dialogue with European painting.
Source: https://www.stilearte.it/corcos

Private collection, Palazzo Foresti, Carpi. http://www.palazzoforesti.it/


 

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