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Italian Mid-Century Grotto Style Sea Shell Console Table
Newel Gallery
306 East 61st Street, 3rd Floor
NY - 10065
Italian Mid-Century Grotto Style Sea Shell Console Table
Newel Gallery
306 East 61st Street, 3rd Floor
NY - 10065
Grotto
Fantasy furniture designed in the late 19th and early 20th century in Venice, Italy. Grotto furniture tends to be parcel-silvered or poly-chrome with painted carved wooden frames with pictorial references to the sea and rock grottos most commonly motifs of scalloped shells, sea horses, dolphins, and triton horses.
Console table
Starting in the 17th Century, console tables were side table usually fixed to a wall with front legs for support. Frequently the backside of consoles are left undecorated as they are viewed only from the front or sides and were created with the intent of display, often serving as pier table underneath a large mirror. Contemporary references to console tables can also indicate a freestanding relatively tall, rectangular table that is placed against a entrance wall or sofa.
Grotto
Fantasy furniture designed in the late 19th and early 20th century in Venice, Italy. Grotto furniture tends to be parcel-silvered or poly-chrome with painted carved wooden frames with pictorial references to the sea and rock grottos most commonly motifs of scalloped shells, sea horses, dolphins, and triton horses.
Console table
Starting in the 17th Century, console tables were side table usually fixed to a wall with front legs for support. Frequently the backside of consoles are left undecorated as they are viewed only from the front or sides and were created with the intent of display, often serving as pier table underneath a large mirror. Contemporary references to console tables can also indicate a freestanding relatively tall, rectangular table that is placed against a entrance wall or sofa.
Grotto
Fantasy furniture designed in the late 19th and early 20th century in Venice, Italy. Grotto furniture tends to be parcel-silvered or poly-chrome with painted carved wooden frames with pictorial references to the sea and rock grottos most commonly motifs of scalloped shells, sea horses, dolphins, and triton horses.
Console table
Starting in the 17th Century, console tables were side table usually fixed to a wall with front legs for support. Frequently the backside of consoles are left undecorated as they are viewed only from the front or sides and were created with the intent of display, often serving as pier table underneath a large mirror. Contemporary references to console tables can also indicate a freestanding relatively tall, rectangular table that is placed against a entrance wall or sofa.