Cafetiere in the Piranesi Taste in Silver Gilt
Print
2011 (printed and published)
2011 (printed and published)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Pablo Bronstein is an internationally renowned artist who specialises in drawings of architectural subjects, witty and whimsical fantasies which bring together 18th-century styles and motifs with inspirations from the 1980s, in a distinctly Post-modern manner. Born in Buenos Aires, he lives and works in London where he studied at the Slade School of Art, and later at Goldsmith's. To accompany his recent solo exhibition at the ICA, Bronstein has created two versions of a hand-coloured etching, Cafetière in the Piranesi Taste 2011 (this one is 'Silver Gil't, the other was 'Wedgwood Blue').
Cafetière in the Piranesi Taste depicts a fanciful version of a coffee pot in the style of 18th-century Italian artist Giovanni Battista Piranesi. Piranesi was famous for his fictitious images of monuments, many in a state of near-collapse, and he also designed replica Roman objects for the Grand Tour tourist trade, a style which subsequently influenced the decorative arts of the period. Bronstein's coffee pot, depicted as a building within a landscape, is both a play on scale and a reflection of the social hierarchy represented through objects. Prints by Piranesi are well-represented in the V&A collection.
Cafetière in the Piranesi Taste depicts a fanciful version of a coffee pot in the style of 18th-century Italian artist Giovanni Battista Piranesi. Piranesi was famous for his fictitious images of monuments, many in a state of near-collapse, and he also designed replica Roman objects for the Grand Tour tourist trade, a style which subsequently influenced the decorative arts of the period. Bronstein's coffee pot, depicted as a building within a landscape, is both a play on scale and a reflection of the social hierarchy represented through objects. Prints by Piranesi are well-represented in the V&A collection.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Cafetiere in the Piranesi Taste in Silver Gilt (assigned by artist) |
Materials and techniques | Etching coloured by hand. |
Brief description | Print by Pablo Bronstein entitled 'Cafetiere in the Piranesi Taste in Silver Gilt', etching coloured by hand. London, 2011. |
Physical description | Print depicting a fanciful version of a coffee pot in the style of 18th century artist Giovanni Battista Piranesi, as a building within a landscape. |
Dimensions |
|
Copy number | 73/85 |
Marks and inscriptions | Pablo Bronstein 2011 73/85 (Singature; date; edition number; all in pencil) |
Summary | Pablo Bronstein is an internationally renowned artist who specialises in drawings of architectural subjects, witty and whimsical fantasies which bring together 18th-century styles and motifs with inspirations from the 1980s, in a distinctly Post-modern manner. Born in Buenos Aires, he lives and works in London where he studied at the Slade School of Art, and later at Goldsmith's. To accompany his recent solo exhibition at the ICA, Bronstein has created two versions of a hand-coloured etching, Cafetière in the Piranesi Taste 2011 (this one is 'Silver Gil't, the other was 'Wedgwood Blue'). Cafetière in the Piranesi Taste depicts a fanciful version of a coffee pot in the style of 18th-century Italian artist Giovanni Battista Piranesi. Piranesi was famous for his fictitious images of monuments, many in a state of near-collapse, and he also designed replica Roman objects for the Grand Tour tourist trade, a style which subsequently influenced the decorative arts of the period. Bronstein's coffee pot, depicted as a building within a landscape, is both a play on scale and a reflection of the social hierarchy represented through objects. Prints by Piranesi are well-represented in the V&A collection. |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.1281-2011 |
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Record created | November 10, 2011 |
Record URL |
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