Joseph de Levis and Company: Renaissance Bronze-Founders in Verona

by Charles Avery

0 ratings • 0 reviews • 0 shelved
Book cover for Joseph de Levis and Company

Bookhype may earn a small commission from qualifying purchases. Full disclosure.

Joseph de Levis applied his distinctive signature (between 1577 and 1605) to a whole range of fantastic, Mannerist, bronze artefacts, some 45 in all. They range from large church-bells - some still in situ - and miniature table-bells, to mortars, inkstands, perfume-burners, door-knockers, firedogs, statuettes, and even a portrait-bust. Joseph's sons and nephews continued the family business into the seventeenth century, signing a similar range of artefacts in an early Baroque style. This book provides a unique cross-section of the production of a hard-working and resilient renaissance foundry. Frequently inscriptions and coats-of-arms specify his wide-ranging clientele, from civic and church authorities, to guilds and confraternities (all-important in society at the time), nobility, merchants and connoisseur-collectors. Bronzes by the De Levis dynasty are now dispersed among museums in Europe, the USA and Israel, and in Old Master collections, notably that of the late Robert H. Smith, whose foundation purchased in 2002 the eye-catching Ewer from the Salomon de Rothschild Foundation in Paris for GBP276,000.This well illustrated catalogue raisonne is important both art-historically and from the perspective of the Jewish Diaspora in Renaissance Italy.
  • ISBN10 1781300488
  • ISBN13 9781781300480
  • Publish Date 15 September 2016
  • Publish Status Active
  • Out of Print 4 March 2021
  • Publish Country GB
  • Imprint Philip Wilson Publishers Ltd
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 240
  • Language English