The bound hands of 'Vanishing Dream'.
    Aqueduct and Viaduct from England to Wales
    Chic Chocolate and Snooty Fox
    Quote of the Day
    HFF  to you all.
    Latch and bolt
    Chirk clock tower door
    No gardening today.
    Harmony in Nature
    Snowdrops at Chirk
    Xanthoria parietina
    Colours on a bench.  Xanthoria parietina
    Alicia in Cromer
    Time Warp
    Shrewsbury floods 4 days ago.
    HFF from Shrewsbury Station before the floods
    Shrewsbury floods February 27
    Flooding at the English Bridge
    Well Worn Bear Steps
    Blackthorn blossom.  Prunus spinosa
    The Dana
    HFF from Shropshire.
    Dance of the swan
       Obsessive Compulsive Disorder.  OCD
    HFF from the buffer zone
    The old eye, ear and throat hospital, Shrewsbury
    Irregularity
    Williamson Park Butterfly House
    Ashton Memorial
    Ashton Memorial
    Commit no nuisance
    Theatre Severn.  The Welsh Bridge.
    On the beach
    Tractor
    Row your boat
    Christmas morning in  Shrewsbury
    Circles of confusion.
    The last HFF of 2019
    Our village through rose tinted glass
    Bring me sunshine
    Happisburgh on the first day of Advent
    Padlocked
    HFF  to you all.
    Winter's signature
    Iced fungi
   
 
  
 
  
  
See also...
 
     
   
 
 
 Keywords 
 
 Authorizations, license
- 
   Visible by: Everyone
- 
  All rights reserved
- 
 
  
  
 434 visits
Lucchesi Bronze Nymph
 
  
 This Luccesi nymph is titled  ‘Vanishing Dream’.
Andrea Carlo Lucchesi (1860 – 1924) was an Anglo-Italian sculptor born in London, whose father, from Tuscany, was a sculptor before him. Lucchesi trained at the West London School of Art and then at the Royal Academy. He started exhibiting in 1881. Lucchesi was an exponent of the late 19th-century British New Sculpture movement, a school based on naturalism and symbolism. His work, often mysterious and provocative, featured many female nudes; he considered the female figure to be “nature’s masterpiece”.
There are four bronze nymphs by Lucchesi in the grounds of Chirk Castle. The statues were installed in the gardens by Lord and Lady Howard de Walden, who leased the castle from the Myddelton family from 1911 to 1946.
Courtesy of: geotopoi.wordpress.com/2012/09/18/lucchesi-bronze-nymphs-chirk-castle

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Andrea Carlo Lucchesi (1860 – 1924) was an Anglo-Italian sculptor born in London, whose father, from Tuscany, was a sculptor before him. Lucchesi trained at the West London School of Art and then at the Royal Academy. He started exhibiting in 1881. Lucchesi was an exponent of the late 19th-century British New Sculpture movement, a school based on naturalism and symbolism. His work, often mysterious and provocative, featured many female nudes; he considered the female figure to be “nature’s masterpiece”.
There are four bronze nymphs by Lucchesi in the grounds of Chirk Castle. The statues were installed in the gardens by Lord and Lady Howard de Walden, who leased the castle from the Myddelton family from 1911 to 1946.
Courtesy of: geotopoi.wordpress.com/2012/09/18/lucchesi-bronze-nymphs-chirk-castle

Daniela, Gudrun, Nora Caracci, Erhard Bernstein and 7 other people have particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
- RSS feed
- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
-   Help & Contact
 |
 Club news
 |
 About ipernity
 |
 History  |
 ipernity Club & Prices  |
 Guide of good conduct
 Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria
- 
 Facebook
 X

 
   
 
 
Sign-in to write a comment.