- Placido Columbani
Placido Columbani was Italian architectural designer who worked chiefly in
England in the latter part of the 18th century. He belonged to the school of the Adams and Pergolesi, and like them frequently designed the enrichments offurniture . He was a prolific producer ofchimney -pieces, which are often mistaken for Adam work, of mouldedfrieze s, and painted plaques for cabinets and the like.There can be no question that the English furniture designers of the end of the 18th century, and especially the Adams, Hepplewhite and Sheraton, owed much to his graceful, flowing and classical conceptions, although they are often inferior to those of Pergolesi. His books are still a valuable store-house of sketches for internal architectural decoration.
Published works
His principal works are:
*"Vases and Tripods" (1770)
*"A New Book of Ornaments, containing a variety of elegant designs for Modern Panels, commonly executed inStucco , Wood or Painting, and used in decorating Principal Rooms"
*"A variety of Capitals, Friezes and Cornickes, and how to increase and decrease them, still retaining their proportions" (1776)He also assisted
John Crunden in the production of "The Chimneypiece Maker's Daily Assistant" (1776).References
*1911
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