WILLIAM IV STATUARY MARBLE FIREPLACE SURROUND
English, c.1835
The moulded shelf sits above a tiered frieze flanked each side with a trio of bull’s eye roundels, the double pilaster jambs with stylised capitals mirroring the frieze, raised on block feet.
£5,750
AW022
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The paired pilasters framing each jamb are a characteristic feature of the William IV period, lending the composition greater architectural depth and refinement. Combined with the stepped frieze, they create a more sophisticated treatment of the fireplace opening than the plain, simplified surrounds that came to dominate later in the Victorian era.
During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the renewed enthusiasm for Classical architecture in Britain created an unprecedented demand for statuary marble. It became the material of choice for the finest English chimneypieces, favoured by architects and sculptors alike for its exceptionally fine grain and luminous white ground. Unlike more heavily figured marbles, statuary marble permits an extraordinarily crisp carve, allowing delicate mouldings and ornament to be defined by light and shadow without distraction. Its use was therefore reserved for the most ambitious and refined fireplaces, where both the quality of the carving and the purity of the material could be fully appreciated.
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Width 61¾” / 157cm
Height. 47½” / 120.5cm
Depth 10¼” / 26cm
Opening height 39⅛” / 99.5cm
Opening width 34⅞” / 88.5m