Description:
Gilded leather panel
Dutch manufacture, First quarter of the 18th century (1720–1728)
This refined gilded leather panel, created in the first quarter of the 18th century, fully expresses the decorative taste and fashion of the era. The composition develops around a central axis characterized by a fan and palmette motif; ribbons, grids, leaves, and flowers intertwine harmoniously, forming two large lateral cartouches.
The light blue and gold tones lend the surface an extraordinary luminous richness. The inner bands of the cartouches are further embellished with painted veining decorations. The work exemplifies the evolution of gilded leather craftsmanship in the Netherlands at the beginning of the 18th century.
Comparative examples of this design are preserved as wall coverings in two rooms of the former Court of Bruges (1728) and at Oxburgh Hall (Great Britain). Individual panels are present in the collections of the Het Vleeshuis Museum in Antwerp, the Deutsches Tapetenmuseum in Kassel (inv. 86/86), and the Württembergisches Landesmuseum in Stuttgart (inv. E3464).
Era: 18th century, 1720–1728 Dimensions: 103 × 145 cm Manufacture: Netherlands
Provenance: Private collection