AN ITALIAN IMPERIAL PORPHYRY 'AMPHORA' VASE AND COVER
AN ITALIAN IMPERIAL PORPHYRY 'AMPHORA' VASE AND COVER
AN ITALIAN IMPERIAL PORPHYRY 'AMPHORA' VASE AND COVER
AN ITALIAN IMPERIAL PORPHYRY 'AMPHORA' VASE AND COVER
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AN ITALIAN IMPERIAL PORPHYRY 'AMPHORA' VASE AND COVER

ATTRIBUTED TO FRANCESCO ANTONIO FRANZONI (1734-1818), CIRCA 1770, THE PLINTH PROBABLY ORIGINAL

Details
AN ITALIAN IMPERIAL PORPHYRY 'AMPHORA' VASE AND COVER
ATTRIBUTED TO FRANCESCO ANTONIO FRANZONI (1734-1818), CIRCA 1770, THE PLINTH PROBABLY ORIGINAL
Of Grecian amphora form, with circular spreading socle and square base, on a verde antico and black marble plinth
21¼ in. (54 cm.) high; 7 1⁄8in. (18 cm.) wide; 6 1⁄3 in. (16 cm.) deep
Provenance
Collection Salomon Goldschmidt; his sale, Paris, Galerie Georges Petit, 19 May 1888, lot 174; where purchased by Henri-Jules Stettiner (1842-1912), Paris.
Private Collection, France.
Collection of M. Covo (antique dealer, Paris,1970s).
Parisian art market.
Acquired from Steinitz, Paris, 2019.

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Lot Essay


This impressive vase is identical in form and size to a marble vase and cover, firmly attributed to Franzoni, in the Pio Clementino Museum, Galleria degli Candelabri in the Vatican – and shares the distinctive bifurcated handles popular in the late 18th century. A further pair of vases, of identical form, but lacking covers, previously in the Wrightsman Collection are now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (see Accession Number 2019.283.43). Franzoni (1734-1818) was one of the most celebrated restorers of Antiquities, primarily working in the Vatican collections for Pope Pius VI. One of his most famous achievements was the Sala degli Animali in the Museo Pio-Clementino, often referred to as a 'stone zoo', due the extraordinary assembly of carved marble animals.

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