Paul Mitchell Ltd

Paul Mitchell Ltd Paul Mitchell Ltd provide antique and handmade replica frames for Old and Modern master paintings

Paul Mitchell Ltd have over 40 years’ experience in providing antique and bespoke frames for museums, private collectors, dealers, auctioneers and art agents worldwide, examples of which can be viewed under 'Distinguished pictures framed'

Paul Mitchell Ltd aims to optimise the presentation of a painting by judicious frame selection. The company’s extensive inventory from the 15th to the 20th cent

ury, comprises Italian, Spanish, French, British and North European frames. Together with past records, these provide clients with a wide selection from which they can choose an original or commission a high quality handmade replica frame, made by master craftsmen.

Reframing ZURBARÁN Still Life with Lemons, Oranges and a Rose, 1633This is an extraordinary still life, in which the fru...
19/12/2025

Reframing ZURBARÁN Still Life with Lemons, Oranges and a Rose, 1633

This is an extraordinary still life, in which the fruit and flowers are vividly realistic but also somehow outside the passage of time and decay, and are simultaneously infused with Catholic symbolism. The lemons refer to the Virgin and her bitter grief at Christ’s death; the oranges are a variant on the apple which caused the Fall of Adam and Eve; the rose and orange blossom, like the white cup of water, stand for the Virgin’s sweetness and purity. The three grouped objects signify the Trinity. The painting as a whole is quite large for a domestic altarpiece (62.2 x 109.5 cm), and may have been painted for one of the monasteries or convents for which Zurbarán worked - perhaps for a refectory, where the fruit would be both appropriate and a spur to meditation.

The refined technique and layered meanings in this work had unfortunately been overpowered by the weighty and busy 19th century copy of a Renaissance garland frame - carved, gilded, fighting with the painted colours, and casting a dense shadow over the delicate orange leaves at the top.

It was rescued by the frame offered by Paul Mitchell Ltd - a 17th century reverse profile Spanish frame with minimal ornament, its frieze canted back towards the wall and painted in subdued browns and blacks. These colours may be intended to suggest tortoiseshell - an exotic, precious and costly material appropriate for a sacred work, but here only represented, in an economic form suitable for a monastery or a convent. In this plainly constructed frame with its suggestion of an opulent finish the painting shines again: strange, hyper-real and fraught with profound significance.

Reframing DAVID BOMBERG The Old City and Cathedral, RondaPrivate Collection (courtesy of Bonhams London)This townscape o...
16/08/2023

Reframing DAVID BOMBERG The Old City and Cathedral, Ronda

Private Collection (courtesy of Bonhams London)

This townscape of Ronda, near Málaga in southern Spain, is alive with the intense light and shadows and the colours of the Mediterranean, and expressive of Bomberg’s revelling in its difference from the grimy London of his childhood. The tumble of roofs cascading down the vertiginous street is painted in a patchwork of vibrant colour, which was half drowned out by the gaudy halo of the previous frame. Someone had chosen a cheap, shiny, high street moulding for this picture which competed with it both in colouring and in its tonal register – the burnished gold of the finish a blinding distraction from the careful construction of light and shade amongst the walls of the old town.
 
Paul Mitchell re-framed this painting in an early 20th century British artist’s frame, with a wide concave profile. It retains its original finish, with charcoal grey tempera on the outer scotia, and a matt gesso on the inner frieze. The softness of the old gesso admirably reflects the luminosity of the sunlit walls, and the charcoal paint echoes the deep shade between the buildings. This monochrome finish is the perfect combination – at once a mirror and a foil, opening up the image to the viewer, rather than blocking it off with a harsh metallic barrier.

See: https://www.paulmitchell.co.uk/works-framed/bomberg/

Slides taken from one of our London Art Week exhibition presentations, demonstrating how the frame interacts with the pa...
03/07/2023

Slides taken from one of our London Art Week exhibition presentations, demonstrating how the frame interacts with the painting:

Slide 1: Illustrating why portraits tended to be given frames with centre and corner cartouches, as the focal lines between these points - diagonals and vertical crosses - emphasise the visual highlights of the single figure.

(Top Sir Godfrey Kneller, Lady Brownlow, 1688, Lincolnshire, Belton House; bottom: Diego Velázquez Don Pedro de Barberana, Minneapolis Institute of Art)

Slide 2: The common case where a landscape painting has been re-framed in a portrait frame turned on its side! The large corner and centre cartouches have no purpose here, but instead distract your attention from the composition.

Paul Mitchell re-framed the painting in a period 17th century Netherlandish Cabinetmaker’s frame, contemporary to the artist. It enhances the perspective and harmonises with the artist’s palette allowing our calm contemplation of the subject.

(Hobbema, Wooded Landscape with Watermill, c.1665, Minneapolis Institute of Art)

Slide 3: The French 18th century portrait frame was eventually restored to its original painting by Francesco de Mura Self-portrait, Minneapolis Institute of Art

LONDON ART WEEK EXHIBITION:

Form and Function of European Picture Frames from the 15th-20th century

TOURS SCHEDULE & BOOKING:

Please note tours are free and will be held during London Art Week, from 30th June to 7th July 2023.
Two tour slots are available each day of the week (including weekends): 11am and 3pm.
To book your place, please email [email protected]

LONDON ART WEEK EXHIBITION:Form and Function of European Picture Frames from the 15th-20th centuryAmongst many other top...
27/06/2023

LONDON ART WEEK EXHIBITION:

Form and Function of European Picture Frames from the 15th-20th century

Amongst many other topics, we will illustrate and discuss the evolution and variations of the Salvator Rosa / Carlo Maratta frame profile

Slide 1: Diagrams inside the frame are copies of the original drawings and their captions produced for the article ‘Frame in the Macmillan Dictionary of Art, now published separately as A History of European Picture Frames by Paul Mitchell and Lynn Roberts

Slide 2: Our enriched late 17th-early 18th century carved ‘Salvator Rosa’ frame

Slide 3: Salvator Rosa and Carlo Maratta frames on exhibit at our gallery

Slide 4: Refer to slide 1

TOURS SCHEDULE & BOOKING
Please note tours are free and will be held during London Art Week, from 30th June to 7th July 2023.
Two tour slots are available each day of the week (including weekends): 11am and 3pm.
To book your place, please email [email protected]

Reframing PICASSO Still lifeCourtesy of Waddington CustotWe know how interested Picasso was in the process and effects o...
20/06/2023

Reframing PICASSO Still life
Courtesy of Waddington Custot

We know how interested Picasso was in the process and effects of framing his work from the numbers of paintings, prints and collages he produced with their own integral or applied frames. From his 1912 oval Still Life with Chair Caning, which has rope ‘framing’ it (in a replay of Turner’s nailing ship’s cable around a display of marine paintings), to his 1957 portrait of his wife Jacqueline with a Baroque gilt frame painted around it, he continually experimented with various methods of presentation. All of them tend to have the proportions and indications of ornament of the classical or Baroque styles he had grown up with; even the rope frame suggests a gilded gadrooned moulding.

When it comes to finding the appropriate frame for a Picasso which has lost or never had an original frame, therefore, it could be said that the artist has pointed out his preferences. This still life, with a vase of iris and bowl of fruit posed on a window-sill, is already building on memories of a Renaissance window opening onto a landscape, and of classical – sometimes symbolic - still life arrangements of fruit and flowers; it plays with the idea of a frame within a frame. The setting chosen to respond to these references is our 17th century Bolognese half-flower cassetta, with a twisting leaf-bud at the sight edge, and a plain frieze painted in a warm chestnut shade of ochre.

The carved and gilded ornament of flowers and leaves has a melting, curvaceous softness which echoes the painted forms of fruit, flowers and trees, and the rich tones of brown and gold provide a foil to the cooler shades of sky and hills, window frame and fruit: the perfect complement to a modern classic.

See: https://www.paulmitchell.co.uk/works-framed/picasso/

Reframing CÉZANNE Chestnut Trees at Jas de Bouffan for the Minneapolis Institute of ArtCézanne’s work has suffered from ...
03/05/2023

Reframing CÉZANNE Chestnut Trees at Jas de Bouffan for the Minneapolis Institute of Art

Cézanne’s work has suffered from the same 19th-20th century reframing thrust of dealers eager to sell avant-garde paintings to wealthy American collectors (to put it simply) as the other Impressionists, but with far less reason. Renoir always liked Baroque French frames for the Rococo-like elements in his work, and a shallow swirl of small gilded ornament is perhaps not completely unsuited to Monet’s or Pissarro’s brushwork and pale sunny colours; but Cézanne’s concentration on the geometry of space, form and structure seems utterly alien to the 18th century French frames (or even worse, their 19th century copies) in which his work is often imprisoned.

This carefully choreographed painting of chestnut trees at the artist’s family home (Mont Sainte-Victoire looming like a steel axe-blade behind) had been fitted into a Louis XIV frame which was too large for it by means of an ugly light gold inlay, distracting the viewer’s attention almost as much as the scrolling pattern and emphatic corners and centres.

It was rescued by means of another antique frame – but this time a perfectly plain Louis XVI NeoClassical pattern from Paul Mitchell, with a wide restful scotia or hollow, and a gently-sanded frieze. The repeated parallel lines of the mouldings provide a subtle background echo of the bare, upright tree trunks and the horizontal bands of grass, path and wall, whilst the warm gilding creates a satisfying foil for the painted greens, blues and greys. A pairing of classical frame and innovative composition reminiscent of the way in which (for instance) Gauguin’s work can shine in a similarly plain Louis XV frame; see: https://www.instagram.com/p/CaZ8eNioVXY/?hl=en

See: https://collections.artsmia.org/art/802/chestnut-trees-at-jas-de-bouffan-paul-cezanne

We very much enjoyed giving the esteemed SIMON GILLESPIE STUDIO a tour of our gallery, comprising the following:A guide ...
25/04/2023

We very much enjoyed giving the esteemed SIMON GILLESPIE STUDIO a tour of our gallery, comprising the following:

A guide to the exemplary antique frames hanging on our stairwell.
An examination of the Salavator Rosa / Carlo Maratta frame style, with its many variations of ornament and finish.
Demonstrations of how we select an appropriate frame for a work of art.
The stages of making a handmade replica, and the most important part - patinating the frame appropriately.
A short presentation of our unique photographic archive, comprising over 50,000 photos of framed paintings and related decorative arts from institutions, houses and churches in 24 countries!
A review of the archive's functions: establishing historically authentic framing solutions; material for our two major publications; essays in exhibition catalogues; magazine articles and the cataloguing of major collections.

We look forward to offering further tours during London Art Week.

Reframing VERMEER Allegory of the Catholic Faith, c.1670-72The Metropolitan Museum of ArtThis mysterious painting, execu...
28/02/2023

Reframing VERMEER Allegory of the Catholic Faith, c.1670-72
The Metropolitan Museum of Art

This mysterious painting, executed after the Protestant Vermeer’s marriage to a Catholic woman, is one of only two (possibly three) religious subjects in his oeuvre, and may have been produced for a Catholic patron or for one of the hidden churches around Delft. It may also have been set inside such a makeshift church, since it seems to site its personifications and symbols in the same sort of domestic setting as his other paintings. Just as the subject may owe much to Vermeer’s devout Catholic mother-in-law and her daughter, so the original frame of this work probably involved the artist’s family, since his brother-in-law was a framemaker.

Unfortunately, at some point in its journey towards the Met, a collector or dealer expressed the value put upon Vermeer’s work by enshrining it in an anachronistic early 18th century French Régence giltwood frame, carved with large corner and centre cartouches. These set up focal lines across the canvas which interfered with rather than strengthening the compositional lines, whilst the gilding competed with the pictorial surface, flattening the illusion of layered space.

When The Allegory of Catholic Faith was transferred to its present frame – a meticulous replica of our rare contemporary frame, made of ebonized and polished pearwood – the complex spatial recession of this painted interior was immediately re-established. The importance of the colourful tapestry curtain as a mediator of space, perspective and meaning becomes clear; and the echo of the ebony frame of the Crucifixion in the background underlines its significance to the allegory. Vermeer’s brother-in-law would have approved...

See: https://www.paulmitchell.co.uk/works-framed/johannes-vermeer-1/
Hidden churches: http://www.essentialvermeer.com/delft/delft_today/schipluiden.html

Reframing HENRI ROUSSEAU Exotic Landscape, 1910Norton Simon FoundationOne of Henri Rousseau’s most charming jungle-scape...
15/02/2023

Reframing HENRI ROUSSEAU Exotic Landscape, 1910
Norton Simon Foundation

One of Henri Rousseau’s most charming jungle-scapes, this sunlit and decorative painting derived from the artist’s visits to the Parc Zöologique, Paris, rather than (as he maintained) from army service in Mexico. It was executed in 1910, but entombed for many years in a very unsuitable 18th century collector’s frame, laden with beautifully produced but completely anachronistic carved ornament, intended to contain the portrait of a gentleman with a curling spaniel’s ear wig, or of a beruffled and belaced lady. The detail and richness of the ornament, as well as its gilding, had nothing in common with the clean colours and forms of Rousseau’s work, and frame and painting fought for the viewer’s attention, rather than blending into one united work of art.

The solution suggested to the Museum was a late 19th century artist’s frame with a bolection or reverse profile, which pushed the picture plane forward, away from the wall and towards the spectator. It was very plainly constructed from stained and polished oak, the sight edge decorated with a guilloche ornament, moulded in plaster and gilded. The colouring of the oak echoed the earthy browns in the painting, and acted as a foil to the strong greens and blues; whilst its linear shape and texture reflected the naturalism and simplicity of Rousseau’s art. Definition was given to the whole by the gilded sight edge, which added a subtle decorative twist and picked up on the touches of orange, beige and yellow across the canvas.

Since the size of the frame was not the same as that of the painting, it was used as the model for a hand-carved replica which reproduced the original exactly. Released from its imprisonment in a sophisticated ancien régime antique, Rousseau’s primitive Eden blooms and glows against the clean lines of its new home.

Reframing Sir Anthony Van Dyck’s portrait of Pomponne II de Bellièvre, Seattle Art Museum  - read more …Pomponne de Bell...
02/02/2023

Reframing Sir Anthony Van Dyck’s portrait of Pomponne II de Bellièvre, Seattle Art Museum - read more …

Pomponne de Bellièvre belied his flamboyantly romantic name in his career, which included posts as French Ambassador in the courts of the Netherlands, Italy, and Britain - where he was commissioned to act as peacemaker between Parliament and Charles I, and where Van Dyck’s portrait was painted.

It is the portrait of a significant statesman, who wears luxurious silks and linens made into a severely minimal costume of black-&-white, relieved only by a red sash. The challenge was to frame this image so as to suggest the status and importance of the sitter, whilst subduing ornament, tone and colour in relation to Bellièvre’s comparatively sombre dress.

The answer was a contemporary Baroque frame with a bolection profile which pushes the picture surface forward, towards the viewer, retreating in a softly curving ogee to the wall. It is enriched on the ogee with a band of lambrequin-like lobed leaf tips, giving the effect of a decorative valance in the French style; whilst the top moulding (also the sight edge) is carved into a garland of imbricated bay leaves, centred with clasps and rosettes. The bay leaves carry a symbolic suggestion of achievement and victory, very suitable for an ambassador.

The frame is finished in black and gold, reflecting on a more sober scale the strong contrasts of black, white and red in the painting, but also enhancing the decorative effect of the lambrequin ogee. This is rich, ornamental frame, but not overwhelmingly so; it is also Italian – but then Bellièvre was a diplomat of international standing. It is a setting which solves all the puzzles of framing such a stunning but problematic portrait; it presents the subject both as powerful official and as representative of the French king.

See https://www.paulmitchell.co.uk/works-framed/sir-anthony-van-dyck-6/

How do you frame a painting by Giuseppe Arcimboldo?His career spans the second half of the 16th century, and the work fo...
17/01/2023

How do you frame a painting by Giuseppe Arcimboldo?

His career spans the second half of the 16th century, and the work for which he’s remembered – portrait caricatures formed out of eccentric still life arrangements - encapsulates the playful and anarchic spirit of Mannerism, and contemporary love of puzzles and visual puns.

Looked at upside-down, this is a faithful depiction of fruit in a basket with a napkin at the back, rather weirdly arranged but otherwise unremarkable; the right way up, it’s a portrait of a well-fed, ruddy-faced merchant, with beetling brows, bushy hair, drinker’s nose and immaculate cravat.

Many of these caricatures were painted for the court of the Holy Roman Emperor in Bohemia, and were taken by the Swedish army during the invasion of Prague in the 1630s, at which point their frames were discarded and we don’t know what form they would have taken. So the choice of frame for this portrait plays to the aesthetic, chronological and regional aspects of Arcimboldo’s painting (he was born and died in Milan): a north Italian cassetta veneered in walnut, with gilded beading. It adds a small visual pun in the likeness of the aged walnut to dark figured marble (just the sort of arriviste imitation an aspiring merchant might embrace), whilst the beading echoes the ringlet-like grapes, and the foliate corners and centres, the vine leaves.

The framed painting works both as a piece of decorative art, and as a satirical cartoon, skewering the smug nouveau riche.

See: https://www.paulmitchell.co.uk/works-framed/giuseppe-arcimboldo/

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