Italian Hand Fan Naples, 18th C. The Victoria & Albert Museum |
Folding fans, like the one pictured above, were highly costly luxury items which became
popular throughout Europe in the mid-18th-century. In Paris at the time, there were almost two
hundred master fan makers working at any given moment. However, equally impressive examples were
created in Italy and Britain during the Eighteenth Century. Let’s take a look at this one which heralds
from Naples, Italy.
The leaf of this example is supported by tortoiseshell
sticks which are inlaid with tiny gold pins and strips (an artistic technique
which is called piqué). Piqué was
originally a specialty of Italian workshops who produced such stunning examples
for export throughout Europe.
One side of this fan’s lead
is painted with a fishing woman adorned in elaborate Rococo dress. The reverse
depicts the goddess Diana who is accompanied by three maidens.
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