Overdoor

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Carved and inlaid Late Baroque supraporte in Toruń, Poland
Carved and inlaid Late Baroque supraporte in Toruń, Poland

An "overdoor" (or "supraporte") is a painting, bas-relief or decorative panel, generally in a horizontal format, that is set within ornamental mouldings placed over a door.[1]

The overdoor is usually architectural in form, but may take the form of a cartouche in Rococo settings, or it may be little more than a moulded shelf for the placement of ceramic vases, busts or curiosities. An overmantel serves a similar function above a fireplace mantel.[citation needed]

From the end of the sixeenth century, at first in interiors such as the Palazzo Sampieri, Bologna, where Annibale Carracci provided overdoor paintings, overdoor paintings developed into a minor genre of their own, in which the trompe l'oeil representations of stone bas-reliefs, or vases of flowers, in which Jean-Baptiste Monnoyer specialized, were heightened by sotto in su perspective, in which the light was often painted to reproduce the light, diffused from below, that was entering the room from its windows. Overdoors of allegorical subjects were favoured through the end of the eighteenth century.[citation needed]

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[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Ching, Francis D.K. (1995). A Visual Dictionary of Architecture. New York: John Wiley and Sons, p. 63. ISBN 0-471-82451-3. 
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