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Pair of Italian Rococo Silver Gilt Marble Top Console Tables
Newel Gallery
306 East 61st Street, 3rd Floor
NY - 10065
Pair of Italian Rococo Silver Gilt Marble Top Console Tables
Newel Gallery
306 East 61st Street, 3rd Floor
NY - 10065
Apron
A structural support placed at right angles to the underside of a shelf, chair seat, or table top to provide additional weight bearing strength and often decorative flourishes.
Gesso
A white paint created by combining plaster of paris, gypsum, or chalk with a white glue. It is used to prepare various surfaces for oil painting and is treated most often as a base coat, though it is sometimes left decoratively as a primary finish on wooden furniture. As a finish, it works best on porous woods and creates a chalky, gray/white tone. It may also be cast to make repeating ornamental forms in relief to be applied to wood panels, plaster surfaces, etc.
Rococo
Rococo is an artistic movement in French design originating in the 18th century after Baroque. It is notable for asymetrical styles and tended to be over-ornamented. The name is derived from the French words rocaille and coquille rock and shell, both prominent motifs in this decoration.
Apron
A structural support placed at right angles to the underside of a shelf, chair seat, or table top to provide additional weight bearing strength and often decorative flourishes.
Gesso
A white paint created by combining plaster of paris, gypsum, or chalk with a white glue. It is used to prepare various surfaces for oil painting and is treated most often as a base coat, though it is sometimes left decoratively as a primary finish on wooden furniture. As a finish, it works best on porous woods and creates a chalky, gray/white tone. It may also be cast to make repeating ornamental forms in relief to be applied to wood panels, plaster surfaces, etc.
Rococo
Rococo is an artistic movement in French design originating in the 18th century after Baroque. It is notable for asymetrical styles and tended to be over-ornamented. The name is derived from the French words rocaille and coquille rock and shell, both prominent motifs in this decoration.
Apron
A structural support placed at right angles to the underside of a shelf, chair seat, or table top to provide additional weight bearing strength and often decorative flourishes.
Gesso
A white paint created by combining plaster of paris, gypsum, or chalk with a white glue. It is used to prepare various surfaces for oil painting and is treated most often as a base coat, though it is sometimes left decoratively as a primary finish on wooden furniture. As a finish, it works best on porous woods and creates a chalky, gray/white tone. It may also be cast to make repeating ornamental forms in relief to be applied to wood panels, plaster surfaces, etc.
Rococo
Rococo is an artistic movement in French design originating in the 18th century after Baroque. It is notable for asymetrical styles and tended to be over-ornamented. The name is derived from the French words rocaille and coquille rock and shell, both prominent motifs in this decoration.