£5,000 - £7,000
AN IMPORTANT AND LARGE PAIR OF ELIZABETHAN OAK CARYATID AND ATLANTA FIGURAL TERMS, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1570-1590. The pair of classical interior architectural Terms in the Mannerist style, originally fixtures from a Hall Screen, 83cm high. The draped female Caryatid with ornate Ionic capital, having one hand on her breast the other wrapped in her cloak, mounted on a block support. With companion male Atlanta with Ionic capital above a finely featured face and elaborate elongated beard grasped by his hand, also draped in a cloak with similarly covered arm and hand. The design of these English Renaissance figures is taken from European architectural prints and design books from the Low Countries, Germany and France, all from the mid 1560s 1570s. A suite of pattern books by the Dutch commercial artist and designer Jan (Hans) Vredeman De Vries being notably popular, titled Architectura published in 1565. These designs can be found in numerous of the new high status Elizabethan houses throughout Britain, notably at Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire, Wollaton Hall, Nottingham, Montacute House, Somerset, Longleat, Wiltshire, Burton Agnes Hall, East Yorkshire, Knole House, Kent, Guildhall, Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Middle Temple Hall Screen, London, identifying a small sample of locations, 83cm high and 82cm high Note - For further detailed information see: Anthony Wells-Cole, Art and Decoration in Elizabethan and Jacobean England The Influence of Continental Prints, 1558-1625.
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