Welcome to my Blog
This is a place where the visitors are confronted with their search for a personal touch and where they have an opportunity to get acquainted with a skilled expert, who has turned durability and tradition into a personal passion.
I hope this will become a valued and rich source of inspiration and knowledge. Please Leave comments and enjoy your visit. Please note text and pictures on this blog are Copyright protected.

Showing posts with label Rococo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rococo. Show all posts

Tuesday, 26 January 2021

A wooden carved Rococo mirror frame | Large wooden rococo style mirror | Carved and Gilded mirror over a chimney | Architectural woodcarving

A wooden carved Rococo mirror frame |  Large wooden rococo style mirror | Carved and Gilded mirror over a chimney | Architectural woodcarving
Carving a Rococo mirror frame |
 Patrick Damiaens, ornamental woodcarver

Carving a Rococo style mirror in wood

Wooden mirror for above a mantelpiece 
Gilded Rococo mirror frame

A blogentry from this site:

We always start with a design, my creation of a Rococo mirror frame was based on an example made in polyester. This polyester copy had been hanging in my client's living room for 25 years. 
If you think long term, polyester is not a good investment, it hasn't had a long life, small and medium sized parts and pieces broke off from the mirror for quite some time now, the whole Rococo mirror was actually falling apart, and becoming sprinkly. 
So it was time to replace it and the only option was for the customer to make an (improved) copy of the polyester model.

It is always nice to be able to make a nice design, this Rococo mirror is meant as decoration for a marble mantelpiece, sometimes you can see this kind of mirrors in a wooden trumeau, this one is about 2 meters high and 120 wide and intended for a house in the Netherlands. 
Rococo is one of the more difficult styles to reproduce. Horizontal lines are almost non-existent, they are replaced by delicate curves, long drawn or pulled acanthusleaf motifs and many rocailles motifs merge into one another. Asymmetry is the strong point of this style. 
The effect is capricious, marvelous, captivating and enchanting. It is a style that appeals more to the senses, less to the intellect and emphasizes beauty over content.

Carving a Rococo frame | A wooden carved Rococo mirror frame |  Large wooden rococo style mirror | Carved and Gilded mirror over a chimney | Architectural woodcarving | Rococo frames custom made

Carving a Rococo frame | A wooden carved Rococo mirror frame |  Large wooden rococo style mirror | Carved and Gilded mirror over a chimney | Architectural woodcarving | Rococo frames custom made


Placing a drawing on the wood 


The preparation of the lime wood construction of the mirror, the sawing and the various operations with the router has taken a lot of time. Accuracy is important in every phase at this stage and that starts with transferring the drawing of the Rococo mirror to lime paper, by means of carbonless paper or hand film, the design of the Rococo mirror is transferred to the wood. 
Remember this drawing is very important and you should definitely check it carefully (on lime paper and on the wood) to make sure that all the lines of the design are present. 
Even a not unimportant..., a bad design or drawing can only lead to a bad end result. All stages in this phase of the creation are linked to each other, if you forget something or if you prepare something badly, this will have consequences at a later stage. 
The four separate parts are glued to an MDF board, between the wood of the mirror and the MDF board is a newspaper or ordinary paper glued, this will ensure that after finishing the cutting work the part of the mirror is easily detached from the MDF board.





Practical mounting


The carving of the ornaments happens in this case with the drawing and the polyester example on the workbench. With an altimeter we take crucial measurements on the original and transfer these reference heights to the lime wood. 
The large frame is cut first and then serves as a reference for and Rococo design of the ornaments, these ornaments have specific names, such as rocaille, acanthus leaf motif, agraphe, etc.... Each stage in the carving of an ornament is important but we start with the rough shaping of the whole and gradually refine it, until we are satisfied with design and finishing. 
When the visible front of each part, in this case four pieces, is ready we turn the piece around, put it in a blanket and start cutting the back, the excess wood behind the ornament is removed and the Rococo ornament begins to come loose visually, you look sideways no longer against a mass of wood, and all attention goes to the ornament itself. What remains are the four transitions of the parts, making sure that mouldings and ornaments merge smoothly into one another.

Carving a Rococo frame | A wooden carved Rococo mirror frame |  Large wooden rococo style mirror | Carved and Gilded mirror over a chimney | Architectural woodcarving | Rococo frames custom made




This Rococo mirror frame will still be provided with gold leaf, but that's another specialisation that will be done by another craftsman.

Rococo


The rococo style is a European style period that reached its peak between 1730 and 1760. The name rococo is derived from the French word rocaille: an asymmetrical shell motif that was widely used in the mid-18th century on furniture, doors, panelling, etc.. 
The word rocaille goes back to the French words roc (rock) and coquilles (shells) and indicates that it is mainly a decorative style.
Rococo originated in France as a reaction to the severe classicist baroque of around 1700. 
The subsequent Rococo style is characterised by grace, elegance, charm, wit and playful eroticism. The style remained popular for over seventy years in the eighteenth century. After that, the style of neoclassicism gradually made its appearance and the rococo style disappeared.


As many styles have received their names in art history, the name rococo was initially intended to be mocking. The word refers to decorative shell shapes from the Baroque period. 
Despite the many commissions, the Rococo artists were severely criticised. Opponents felt that their works of art were not serious enough in terms of content. Moreover, it was thought to be too much in the service of the decadent upper class. Therefore, the Rococo was mainly regarded as a decorative style. 


WIKI 

Rococo, less commonly  Late Baroque, is an exceptionally ornamental and theatrical style of architecture, art and decoration which combines asymmetry, scrolling curves, gilding, white and pastel colors, sculpted molding, and trompe l'oeil frescoes to create surprise and the illusion of motion and drama. It first appeared in France and Italy in the 1730s and spread to Central Europe in the 1750s and 1760s. It is often described as the final expression of the Baroque movement.

The Rococo style began in France in the first part of the 18th century in the reign of Louis XV as a reaction against the more formal and geometric Style Louis XIV. It was known as the style rocaille, or rocaille style. It soon spread to other parts of Europe, particularly northern Italy, Bavaria, Austria, other parts of Germany, and Russia. It also came to influence the other arts, particularly sculpture, furniture, silverware and glassware, painting, music, and theatre.



Carving a Rococo frame | A wooden carved Rococo mirror frame |  Large wooden rococo style mirror | Carved and Gilded mirror over a chimney | Architectural woodcarving | Rococo frames custom made



Carving a Rococo frame | A wooden carved Rococo mirror frame |  Large wooden rococo style mirror | Carved and Gilded mirror over a chimney | Architectural woodcarving | Rococo frames custom made

Carving a Rococo frame | A wooden carved Rococo mirror frame |  Large wooden rococo style mirror | Carved and Gilded mirror over a chimney | Architectural woodcarving | Rococo frames custom made

Carving a Rococo frame | A wooden carved Rococo mirror frame |  Large wooden rococo style mirror | Carved and Gilded mirror over a chimney | Architectural woodcarving | Rococo frames custom made

Carving a Rococo frame | A wooden carved Rococo mirror frame |  Large wooden rococo style mirror | Carved and Gilded mirror over a chimney | Architectural woodcarving | Rococo frames custom made

Carving a Rococo frame | A wooden carved Rococo mirror frame |  Large wooden rococo style mirror | Carved and Gilded mirror over a chimney | Architectural woodcarving | Rococo frames custom made

Carving a rococo frame | A wooden carved Rococo mirror frame |  Large wooden rococo style mirror | Carved and Gilded mirror over a chimney | Architectural woodcarving

Rococo wooden ornaments | A wooden carved Rococo mirror frame |  Large wooden rococo style mirror | Carved and Gilded mirror over a chimney | Architectural woodcarving

Patrick Damiaens | A wooden carved Rococo mirror frame |  Large wooden rococo style mirror | Carved and Gilded mirror over a chimney | Architectural woodcarving

A wooden carved Rococo mirror frame |  Large wooden rococo style mirror | Carved and Gilded mirror over a chimney | Architectural woodcarving

A wooden carved Rococo mirror frame |  Large wooden rococo style mirror | Carved and Gilded mirror over a chimney | Architectural woodcarving

A wooden carved Rococo mirror frame |  Large wooden rococo style mirror | Carved and Gilded mirror over a chimney | Architectural woodcarving

patrick damiaens ornamental woodcarver
https://www.patrickdamiaens.info




Wednesday, 7 March 2018

Church of Saint-Nicholas in Eupen, Belgium | Confessional chairs Liège style | Church interior from the 18th century


Church of Saint-Nicholas in Eupen, Belgium | Confessional chairs Liège style | Church interior from the 18th century
Church of Saint-Nicholas in Eupen, Belgium

Church of Saint-Nicholas in Eupen, Belgium | 
Confessional chairs Liège style 

 Church interior from the 18th century


As well as being rich in works of   art, the Church of Saint Nicholas at Eupen is also interesting for its special architectural features.

Eupen


Eupen is a city and municipality in the Belgian province of Liège, 15 kilometres (9 miles) from the German border (Aachen), and from the Dutch border (Maastricht) is a stone's throw from the "High Fens" nature reserve (Ardennes). The town is also the capital of the Euroregion Meuse-Rhine.
First mentioned in 1213 as belonging to the Duchy of Limburg, possession of Eupen passed to Brabant, Burgundy, the Holy Roman Empire and France before being given in 1815 to Prussia, which joined the German Empire in 1870. In 1919, after the First World War, the Treaty of Versailles transferred Eupen and the nearby municipality of Malmedy from Germany to Belgium.
German remains the official language in Eupen, and the city serves as the capital for Belgium's German-speaking Community.

Eupen, Belgium

History
According to the records, there was a chapel at Eupen in 1213, witch was replaced by a church during the 14th and 15th centuries.
The present church was built in 1720-1726 to the plans of the architect L.Mefferdatis of Aachen and consecrated in 1729. all that remains of the former church is the southern tower which has been incorporated into the new building's facade. during the 19th century it was decided to make this very simple facade more grandiose, and the work was carried out by the architect L. von Fisenne of Gelsenkirchen in 1897-1898.


Architecture
Since that time the church has had two symmetrical towers flanking an dominating the central part, all in Baroque style. The transformed tower of the earlier church is the one to the south. The entrance door in the middle of the facade is that of 1724 church, and the new facade was built in the same style.
Saint- Nicholas is of the hall-church type, that is to say with three naves op equal height and without transpet or ambulatory. 

Church of Saint-Nicholas in Eupen, Belgium | Confessional chairs Liège style | Church interior from the 18th century

This type of construction avoids the need to support the arches, making flying buttresses unnecessary.
The nave of the church is made from heavy stones partially from the earlier building. The windows are large and semi-circular with stone frames. The choir is in seven sections and is crowned with a tall pinnacle. The roof is in slate.
Inside, the arched ceilings of the three naves are decorated with some retrained stucco work. The columns of the bays are cylindrical and of polished stone.

Church of Saint-Nicholas in Eupen, Belgium


Church interior from the 18th century

Furnishings
The interior decoration is in the Baroque style and the antique furnishings are especially typical of Liège. (Liège style furniture). Of particular interest are the many works of art inside the church, like the imposing and well-proportioned high altar (1740-1744), with its statues of Saint Nicholas and Saint Lambert and its sumptuous framework. The two side altars (1770) are equally remarkable. Two richly decorated niches shelter fine statues of the Virgin and Saint Joseph from the 19th century.

Confessional chairs Liège style

Confessional chairs Liège style, detail




Other furnishings worth seeing include: the pulpit (1730), four confessionals (1758), beautiful, elegant
panelling, two huge candlesticks, the organs ( 1760-1762), pews in the great nave, etcc..  The statues of the apostles (1640) against the columns come from a church in Köln, Germany.

Outside, against the northern tower, ia a very fine Christ on a Cross (1852)
Also noteworthy are the elegant sculptured stone pillars standing in front of the church, linked together by the latticework railing of the ancient cemetery (1767)



Church of Saint-Nicholas in Eupen, Belgium | Confessional chairs Liège style | Church interior from the 18th century
Church interior from the 18th century

Church of Saint-Nicholas in Eupen, Belgium | Confessional chairs Liège style | Church interior from the 18th century

Church of Saint-Nicholas in Eupen, Belgium | Confessional chairs Liège style | Church interior from the 18th century

Church of Saint-Nicholas in Eupen, Belgium | Confessional chairs Liège style | Church interior from the 18th century
Church of Saint-Nicholas in Eupen, Belgium

Church of Saint-Nicholas in Eupen, Belgium | Confessional chairs Liège style | Church interior from the 18th century

Church of Saint-Nicholas in Eupen, Belgium | Confessional chairs Liège style | Church interior from the 18th century

Church of Saint-Nicholas in Eupen, Belgium | Confessional chairs Liège style | Church interior from the 18th century

Church of Saint-Nicholas in Eupen, Belgium | Confessional chairs Liège style | Church interior from the 18th century

Church of Saint-Nicholas in Eupen, Belgium | Confessional chairs Liège style | Church interior from the 18th century

Church of Saint-Nicholas in Eupen, Belgium | Confessional chairs Liège style | Church interior from the 18th century


https://www.patrickdamiaens.info

Our FB Page

Sunday, 3 July 2016

Hunting lodge FALKENLUST in Brühl, Germany | German Rococo interiors | Schloss Falkenlust near Cologne


Hunting lodge FALKENLUST in Brühl, Germany

Hunting lodge FALKENLUST in Brühl


German Rococo interiors 
Schloss Falkenlust near Cologne


A blogentry from this site:

Already for many years I occasionally go with a few students ornamental woodcarving on a fieldtrip. Château Versailles is one of the places where they are looking the most forward to, but this time I have chosen for some beautiful German destinations. 
End of June (2016), it seemed to be a good idea to visit the castles of Brühl, 'Augustusburg Palace and Falkenlust hunting lodge'. Two fine examples of German Rococo with breathtaking Rococo interiors. These two castles are located not so  far from the Belgian border near Cologne. From my hometown Maaseik (in Belgium) it is 1:15h by car.


Hunting lodge Falkenlust

The Prince Elector and Archbishop of Cologne, clemens August (1700-1761), a member of the Bavarian Wittelsbach dynasty, laid the foundation stone for 'Schloss Falkenlust' in 1729. The main reasons for his choice of the site were its beauty and its favourable position for falconry. 
The basic floor-plan and elevations of the main building, and its overall concept, can be attributet to François de Cuvilliés, and the interiors to Michael Leveilly. The hunting lodge was ready for use as early as 1733.


Falkenlust Castle, garden side



Hunting lodge FALKENLUST in Brühl, Germany


A walk trough Falkenlust

The entrance from the courtyard leads into the vestiule. In the niches are statues of nymphes and satyrs, probably by Kirchhoff and Dierix. The nymphs bear symbols of falconry, and the satyrs appear as guardians of the herons which are important for falconry as quarry. In the ceilling: The coat oa arms of Clemens August.

Proceed straight ahead into the salon. The wall covering consists of Dutch wall-tiles from Rotterdam. Above the fireplace is a painting of Clemens August in the uniform of a falconer. The other paintings on the walls show members of the Wittelsbach family.
To the right is the dining room. The wainscoting paintings: Biarelle, around 1745. The plasterwork decoration of the ceilling: Morsegno and Castelli, around 1733. Above the fireplace is a painting of Karl albrecht, the brother of Clemens August and Prince Elector of Bavaria (born in 1697 and crowned as Emperor Karl VII in 1742, died in 1745). The furniture includes two card-tables in coloured scagliola marble.


Falkenlust Brühl

German Rococo interiors |  Schloss Falkenlust near Cologne

To the left of the salon is the (guest's) bedroom, with a ceilling by Castelli and Morsegno, around 1733. Above the fireplace: a painting of Maria Arnalia, the wife of Karl Albrecht.
Return through the vestibule and walk to the right. 
The wardrobe has a wall-covering in leather and dates from 1745. On the side opposite the window, there is a toilet niche behind the right-hand door.


Continue straight ahead, and you will come to the Lacquer Cabinet, which has wooden wainscoting with a lacquer painting of Chinese motifs, sometimes reffered to as Indian. 
Above the fireplace is a portrait of Clemens August in aristocratic dresing gown ( Joseph Vivien, 1725). The ceilling decoration: Artario 1733.



Falkenlust Brühl, Lacquer Cabinet

Returning through the vestibule, you will arrive at the staircase. The walls are covered by more than 10000 dutch tiles from Rotterdam, specially produced for Schloss Falkenlust. They display the Bavarian coat of arms colours of white and blue with initials C.A. on falcon hoods and varous other motifs relating to falconry. The ceilling decoration: Castelli and Morsegno, around 1732, the ceilling painting Laurents de la Roque, 1736.




The upper Apartment


Upper vestibule: 
In the niches: angelic figures (Putti) with falcons and herons. The plinths on which the groups of figures stand show the four Elements (artists: Dierix and Le Clerc, following a model by van Helmont, around 1733). Above the doors are stucco bas-relief figures of a river god and two river goddesses. The ceilling painting shows Aurora and Diana personifying the morning and the evening.

Upper Vestibule, Falkenlust


To the right is the Grand upper Salon, stucco work by Morsegno, 1731/32.
On the right-hand side of the salon is the Cabinet Chinois pour le Café.
The ceiling decoration: Castelli and Morsegno, 1733. Above the fireplace: a portrait of Johann Theodor, Cardinal of Liège and brother of Clemens August, in the uniform of a falconer.
On the left-hand side of the Salon is the bedroom, with a ceiling decoration by Castelli and Morsegno, 1731. In the corners are respresentations of good and bad falconers with their birds. In the middle of the ceiling is a personification of night, in a star-spangled mantle and bat wings, accompanied by bats. A small putto shows the morning star.

German Rococo interiors |  Schloss Falkenlust near Cologne

The portrait above the fireplace is of Clemens August's brother Ferdinand Maria, Duke of Bavaria.
On the wall opposite the windows is a painting of Pope Clements by Georg Desmarées.
Return through the Vestibule, and turn to the right.
Wardrobe with a wall covering in waxcloth, around 1730-40. Continue straight ahead to the mirror Cabinet, mainly designed by Cuvillliés. 
The ceilling decoration is by Artario. This room is mainly furnished with Chinese porselain. The cabinet is given particular mention in the diary of the young Moart, who visited Schloss Falkenlust in 1763.

German rococo, Falkenlust |  The Mirror Cabinet

The Chapel is located outside in the park. It is built in the style of a grotto and took ten years to its completitaion. It was dedicated to Maria aegyptiaca in 1740. The interior is the work of Peter Laporterie.

Schloss Falkenlust, the Chapel

Falkenlust | The interior of the chapel, in the style of a grotto



https://www.patrickdamiaens.info

Our FB Page