Any help would be appreciated!
Dan
Just venturing a guess here. Looks Italian and might be
a picture of the Virgin Mary with the Christ child. It
could be old but you should really have it looked at by
a professional who specializes in antique art. Make sure
that the specialist you hire can discern forgeries from
the genuine article.
It's hard to see the portrait, you should have it cleaned
and restored by a professional.
Good luck,
Kat
--
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>I recently purchased this huge Oil Painting at a local charity auction for
>almost nothing. It is in the style of the old masters but is unsigned.
>Follow this link for a page I made containing photographs of the painting:
>http://www.zoomnet.net/~blent62/painting.html
>
>Any help would be appreciated!
Have it PROFESSIONALLY cleaned and then appraised. It appears to
be (dark picture, really DARK!) a Madonna and child, but it could
be anything from a Victorian copy of something to a genuine 17th
century Madonna and bambino.
Tsu Dho Nimh
If we are what we eat, I'm fast, cheap and easy
>Hi Kat,
>Let's talk antiques!
>Just wondering what basis you have for
>thinking it might be Italian. Is there some
>set of criteria it meets to be said to be so?
Because it looks italian? Check the nose on the
Madonna - is that an Italian schnozz or not?
> Tsu Dho Nimh
===
You GOTTA be kidding me.
13 Ghosts
> Because it looks italian? Check the nose on the
>Madonna - is that an Italian schnozz or not?
LOLROTF
just love that rip in the "canvas" ... busting a gut day.
Yea, get checked-out.
Ronnie
=====
Dan,
I believe you have a copy of Raphael's Madonna of the Chair.
Here is a link with a photo:
http://www.transporter.com/mcc/aboutpic.htm
This painting seems to have been particularly popular in the nineteenth
century, when thousands and thousands of copies were produced.
Jane
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Share what you know. Learn what you don't.
>This painting seems to have been particularly popular in the nineteenth
>century, when thousands and thousands of copies were produced.
>
I was in a friend's shop today and he had this very painting in an
oval frame ....... price he was asking, £175 .. said I could have it
for a oner (a 100 pounds) .... er .. he still has it. ;>
Ronnie
=====
Brian <bri...@janics.com> wrote:
Grant Menzies
*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*
Il faut choisir
*=*=*=*=*=*=*=*
>Well, I have watched this for a while, and I have got to stick my neck
>out. It seems as if this is definitely a repro, and it is not canvas or
>paint, from what I can see. That rip is something I have never seen in
>canvas, and there is just no indication that there is any real paint
>under that layer of crackled Gesso. Generally, I have also never seen
>quite that pattern of crackle form from age. It just seems way off from
>what I would expect from either a copy or even a good canvas print.
_______
Hey, Brian, just how far does that neck of yours stretch? You've
stuck it out now with four copies of the same post.
Marshall
>Hey, Brian, just how far does that neck of yours stretch? You've
>stuck it out now with four copies of the same post.
>
Well it beats copying belated e-mail messages to the ng.
Ronnie
=====
Marshall>>
It's a divided drop-leaf neck. ;)
>Well, I have watched this for a while, and I have got to stick my neck
>out. It seems as if this is definitely a repro, and it is not canvas or
>paint, from what I can see. That rip is something I have never seen in
>canvas, and there is just no indication that there is any real paint
>under that layer of crackled Gesso. Generally, I have also never seen
>quite that pattern of crackle form from age. It just seems way off from
>what I would expect from either a copy or even a good canvas print.
Brian -
And with the dark JPG of the entire picture, just what were you
using to make the pattern of crackle distinct enough for
examination? I'd like a copy of that browser or graphics
program.
Tsu Dho Nimh
Women don't make fools of men -- most of them are the do-it-yourself types.
The painting is "MaDonna and Child" Raphael was the painter of the original. Your is a paint "over" a print . The colors should be more bronze, with earthtones. I had one in a Round Frame . It was a litho from Chicago dated 1919/ and I had a smaller one in a round frame set in a square frame that was "Sunday Painted" over in oil dated 1918 and signed S.Pratter on the back . The oil tends to crack with a pattern, due to the surface being varished or laquered that the paints are applied to. Are you sure its an oil? Are there chips or even areas due to dryness or heat>sun? At the tear, can you see the layers of oilpaints that have been applied to the canvass? Is the canvass "stretched" in a professional manner? Are the "metal" inserts shaped like a L ,U, I, V or T? Is the canvass high quality? Is the picture and frame made for each other, a good fit?When held up to the light and looking at the back of the painting [canvass] does the picture reverse or stay the same , like an xray /shadow? I hope this answers your question. Sincerely. DMAP