Calvet Mirror by Antoni Gaudi
Calvet Mirror by Antoni Gaudi
Calvet Mirror by Antoni Gaudi
Calvet Mirror by Antoni Gaudi
Calvet Mirror by Antoni Gaudi
Calvet Mirror by Antoni Gaudi
Calvet Mirror by Antoni Gaudi
Calvet Mirror by Antoni Gaudi

Calvet Mirror 1902

Antoni Gaudi

Gold LeafWoodGoldMetalBrass
203 ⨯ 74 ⨯ 26 cm
ConditionExcellent
€ 14.100

TERTIUS GALLERY

  • About the artwork
    A company that has always attributed such great importance to the author of the designs could never forget the great figures in history. That is why the BD catalogue of contemporary creations has always included those by admired classical masters. Antoni Gaudí (1852/1926) is, without doubt, the most internationally well-known Spanish architect. But is not only his buildings and brilliant architectural solutions that have travelled the globe. His integrated conception of architecture led him to pay attention, not only to structural calculations, but also to all the decorative elements, including furniture, that would form part of the building. The admiration felt by modern designers for the furniture designed by Gaudí has not gone unnoticed by BD which was the first company to rescue them from history by embarking on their serial production using traditional art and craft techniques and the same materials –varnished solid oak– in order to reproduce all the rich detail displayed by the originals when they were first produced.
  • About the artist

    Antoni Gaudí was a Barcelona-based Spanish architect whose free-flowing works were greatly influenced by nature.

    The son of a coppersmith, Antoni Gaudí was in 1852 and took to architecture at a young age. He attended school in Barcelona, the city that would become home to most of his great works. Gaudí was part of the Catalan Modernista movement, eventually transcending it with his nature-based organic style.

    Gaudí was born in Catalonia on the Mediterranean coast of Spain on June 25, 1852. He showed an early interest in architecture and went to study in Barcelona — Spain's most modern city at the time — circa 1870. After his studies were interrupted by military service, Gaudí graduated from the Provincial School of Architecture in 1878.

    Upon graduation, Gaudí initially worked in the artistic vein of his Victorian predecessors, but he soon developed his own style, composing his works with juxtapositions of geometric masses and animating the surfaces with patterned brick or stone, bright ceramic tiles and floral or reptilian metalwork. The salamander in Park Güell, for instance, is representative of Gaudí's work.

    During his early period, at the Paris World's Fair of 1878, Gaudí displayed a showcase he had produced, which impressed one patron enough to lead to Gaudí's work on the Güell Estate and Güell Palace, among others. In 1883, Gaudí was charged with the construction of a Barcelona cathedral called Basilica i Temple Expiatori de la Sagrada Familia (Basilica and Expiatory Church of the Holy Family). The plans had been drawn up earlier and construction had already begun, but Gaudí completely changed the design, stamping it with his own distinctive style.

     

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