Display cabinet - 1920-1940 - Venetian Crystal Cabinet





€500 | ||
|---|---|---|
€480 | ||
€460 | ||
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Cristalliera Veneziana dating to 1930–1940 in a Venetian Luigi XV-inspired style with Rococo and Art Deco elements, made from walnut wood with burl walnut veneer and glass panels, 180 cm high by 108 cm wide by 24 cm deep, Italian origin, in good used condition with minor age-related marks and stains, lockable.
Description from the seller
Glass cabinet dated between 1920 and 1940 in Venetian style, with a reinterpreted Louis XV influence incorporating elements typical of Rococo taste and Art Deco.
The display cabinet features distinctive decorative and structural elements, including a contoured crest with a central carved shell and a violin-shaped profile, cabriole legs with scroll feet, and walnut / walnut burl veneering.
The central front features a mirrored panel and a side display cabinet with diamond-printed glass, typical of the first half of the twentieth century.
The cabinet harkens back to an eighteenth-century style, very fashionable in productions for the upper-middle-class segment of the early 1900s.
Aged walnut wood, with walnut burl inlays on the doors, was shellacked many years ago and certainly needs polishing. The hardware is bronze. The back bears the consumption tax stamps for furniture in force at the time, as well as the chalk signature of the selling shop, Briola.
Glass cabinet dated between 1920 and 1940 in Venetian style, with a reinterpreted Louis XV influence incorporating elements typical of Rococo taste and Art Deco.
The display cabinet features distinctive decorative and structural elements, including a contoured crest with a central carved shell and a violin-shaped profile, cabriole legs with scroll feet, and walnut / walnut burl veneering.
The central front features a mirrored panel and a side display cabinet with diamond-printed glass, typical of the first half of the twentieth century.
The cabinet harkens back to an eighteenth-century style, very fashionable in productions for the upper-middle-class segment of the early 1900s.
Aged walnut wood, with walnut burl inlays on the doors, was shellacked many years ago and certainly needs polishing. The hardware is bronze. The back bears the consumption tax stamps for furniture in force at the time, as well as the chalk signature of the selling shop, Briola.

