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M. Markley Antiques 281.748.2266













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Antique Cabinets - Item 9121 Baldachin
(Statue Holder)

(scroll
down for additional photos)
Item 9121
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Gothic Style Religious Statue Holder (Baldachin or Niche)
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Dimensions
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Width 22
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Height 54
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Depth 22
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Wood
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Walnut with Gold Leaf
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Country
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France
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Circa
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1880
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Price
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$1,895
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Description
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This baldachin (also known as a baldaquin or
baldachino) dates from the 19th century in France and most likely
served as an enclosure for a saint’s relic or religious statue in a church or
chapel. The term “baldachin” means
“canopy” and is derived from the Italian word “baldachino” which referred to
the rich fabric of silk and gold brocade that was used to create canopies in
church processions or otherwise used to call attention to whatever it
enclosed. The ultimate derivation of
the word is from Old Italian “Baldacco” referring to the city of Baghdad which
was famous in the Middle Ages for its brocade fabrics used in canopies. As canopies became more permanent and were
made of other materials, such as wood or metal, the term expanded to include
them in their non-fabric forms as well.
Some experts also refer to a wood or metal baldachin as an
“ecclesiastical niche.” Large
examples of baldachins include that by Bernini over the main altar at St.
Peters in Rome and The Albert Memorial in London’s Hyde Park. Similar to the Albert Memorial, this
baldachin is in the Gothic style but also incorporates Renaissance elements
such as the basic structure of four rounded arches. It is made of solid walnut and chestnut and hand carved. The gracefully curved canopy structure is
supported by four fluted columns, each with a different, intricately carved
capital which has been gold-leafed.
The four corners of the canopy are defined by spires atop windowed
turrets in a decidedly Gothic revival style, crowned by three-dimensional
fleur-de-lys. This exquisite design of
the spires will be familiar to anyone who has visited the Royal Law Courts in
London (designed by G.E. Street in 1868).
Atop the canopy is a gold-leafed cross in the Celtic rather than the
Roman style, which may signal the baldachin’s source is Brittany, the region
of France whose cultural heritage is tied to the Celtic peoples of the
British Isles.
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Reference
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Aldrich,
Megan, Gothic Revival (Phaidon Press, London, 1994); Brooks, Chris, The
Gothic Revival (Phaidon Press, London, 1999); Viollet-le-Duc, Eugène, Le
Mobilier Médiéval (Georges Bernage, editor) (Editions Heimdal, 2003)
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Uses
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This
baldachin is ideal for displaying any number of items, including more
traditional and religious ones as well as statues, figurines, manuscripts,
ceramics, etc. Instead, and because
of the grace and beauty possessed by the baldachin in its own right, the
inner space can be left free and open to the viewer’s imagination.
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