Andrea Picchi


Andrea Picchi, was a well-known ebonist who framed works of art for aristocratic clients.

Works

For Olga Nikolaevna Romanova

For Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna Romanova, he framed a pair of tondi after paintings by Fra Angelico, executed by Diomede della Bruna, a Florentine painter born in 1839.

For Umberto I and Queen Margherita of Savoy

He also framed for Umberto I and his wife Queen Margherita of Savoy, two works by Tito Chelazzi - an oil painting of daisies and a mirror the royal couple had commissioned from this painter, he too a sought after artist by European royal families.

For the 1867 Paris Exhibition

After some years in Via della Vigna Nuova, Picchi moved to Via Maggio, 28, where he developed his artistry in carving ebony, a dense yet fine textured black wood. But his masterpiece in carving would be the exceptionally beautiful ebony and ivory cabinet in the style of the Italian Renaissance Picchi presented in the 1867 Paris Exhibition, though with "a marked similarity in this design to that of a 17th century cabinet"as Frederick Litchfiel points out in his History of Furniture. In fact, when comparing the pictures of the two cabinets in Litchfiel's book, one may doubt if it is a mere coincidence or not. Nevertheless Picchi's cabinet remains a jewel of carving and an example of mastering ivory and ebony.
Now in oblivion, only his oval stamp on the verso of some ebony framed works of the 19th century calls out "Andrea Picchi, ebanista, Via Maggio, No. 28, Firenze".