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JOHANN ZOFFANY (1733-1810) Edward Townsend Singing 'The Beggar'

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JOHANN ZOFFANY (1733-1810) Edward Townsend Singing 'The Beggar' painted in 1796, oil on mahogany panel, 76.2 x 63.5 cm; 30 x 25 inches, in its original eighteenth-century carved frame.Provenance: Johann Zoffany;Zoffany sale, Robins, 9th May 1811, lot.89;Henry Harris;Harris sale, Robins, 12th July 1819, lot.6;Thomas Wilkinson (1762-1837);Jane Anne Brymer (1804-1870), daughter of the above;William Ernest Brymer (1840-1909) of Ilsington House;Wilfred John Brymer (1883-1957); son of the aboveConstance Mary Brymer (1885-1963), sister of the above;John Hanway Parr Brymer (1913-2005); nephew of the above;Maureen Brymer (1924-2021) by inheritanceExhibited: London, Royal Academy, 1796, no.85 (‘Mr Townsend as the beggar in the pantomime of Merry Sherwood’);London, Royal Academy, Exhibition of Works by the Old Masters, 1893, no.44 (‘An Actor’)Literature: Victoria Manners and George Charles Williamson, John Zoffany RA: His Life and Works 1735-1810, London, 1920, p.276; Mary Webster, Johann Zoffany, New Haven and London, 2011, p.585 Martin Postle, Johann Zoffany RA: Society Observed, exh. cat., New Haven (Yale Center for British Art), pp.44-45, reproducedThis little-known theatrical portrait is one of the finest works by Johann Zoffany from the end of his career. Depicting the comic actor Edward Townsend singing ‘The Beggar’, a song by the playwright John O’Keeffe written and set to music by William Reeve for Merry Sherwood, or Harlequin Forester by William Pearce, an entertainment on the theme of Robin Hood. Zoffany captures Townsend with his mouth open wide in the midst of the song. This unusually animated portrait is rendered with Zoffany’s characteristic attention to the minute details of costume and physiognomy. Zoffany was a pioneer of theatrical portraiture, where individual actors are portrayed in the roles for which they were most celebrated, it is a genre which was uniquely developed in Britain in the eighteenth century. Here the comic singer Edward Townsend is shown on stage singing in the midst of William Pearce’s popular pantomime Merry Sherwood. But rather than merely being an illustration of the entertainment, Zoffany paints a portrait of Townsend en role, exploiting a complex layer of relationships between audience and actor, viewer and painting. Zoffany’s theatrical portraits are regarded as some of his most innovative and beguiling works and only a handful remain in private collections, of which this is one of the finest. Preserved in outstanding condition and painted on a mahogany panel, this portrait has not been on the open market since the early nineteenth century and has not been exhibited in public since 1893.By 1796 Johann Zoffany was at the height of his powers as a portrait painter, particularly paintings of complex conversation groups and interiors scenes, rich with domestic and decorative details. Recently returned from a period spent in India, where he had completed a series of remarkable images of European and Indian sitters, including Colonel Maudaunt’s Cock Match now in the Tate, London. Zoffany re-established himself as one of London’s leading portrait painters. Zoffany had found success in London in the 1760s producing a series of remarkable and hugely popular portraits of famous actors. Zoffany worked particularly closely with David Garrick, commemorating his most celebrated theatrical roles in a series of largely comic portraits.The comic singer Edward Townsend sang The Beggar at the first performance of Pearce’s popular pantomime Merry Sherwood at Covent Garden on 21 December 1795. Townsend made the song popular and it became a favourite peace in his repertoire: he sang it at his benefit on 20 May 1796, and was still rendering it at Covent Garden in June 1800. The entertainment, and Townsend’s performance, were an immediate sensation. The success of the pantomime may well have prompted Zoffany to paint Townsend and to submit the painting for the annual exhibition at the Royal Academy in 1796, where the painting is described in the exhibition catalogue as: ‘Mr Townsend in the Beggar, full of expression and character, and a striking resemblance.’ The painting was hugely admired by contemporaries at the annual exhibition. The critic Anthony Pasquin noted: ‘Mr Townsend, the Comedian in the Character of a Beggar. Zoffany. This portrait is eminently characteristic, with a strict adherence to the minutiae of the stage dress. The countenance partakes of all the muscular whim of the original contour and expression of this supplicating visage.’Robin Simon has noted that in his theatrical portraits, such as this, Zoffany’s: ‘nuanced approach enabled him to create a distinctive effect: that of depicting the actors both in and out of character at the same time. This duality lies at the heart of his achievement; but it also reflects the contemporary practice of a number of leading comic actors who, in a tradition that survives in the British pantomime, would interact, sometimes even verbally, with the audience during performance.’[1] There is a sense that in the present portrait Zoffany has caught Townsend totally absorbed in his performance. It is this duality which made Zoffany’s theatrical portraits so publicly successful.The present painting has not been publicly exhibited since 1893, when it was lent to the Royal Academy’s annual exhibition of old master paintings, as a consequence it has remained largely unknown to scholars. Mary Webster, in her authoritative 2011 monograph on Zoffany, assumed the painting was missing. The present portrait remained in Zoffany’s collection and was included in his posthumous auction in 1811. It was acquired in 1820 by Thomas Wilkinson the son of Jacob Wilkinson who was one of Zoffany’s most important supporters. A Director of the East India Company, Wilkinson acquired The Watercress Girl by Zoffany in 1780 and its pendant, The Flower Girl. Zoffany also painted his portrait in 1782 (The Chequers Trust) and Wilkinson, in turn, was one of those who supported Zoffany’s petition to travel to India. The painting passed to Thomas Wilkinson’s daughter Jane Anne, who married the Reverend William Thomas Parr Brymer, the painting has remained by descent in the Brymer family ever since.
JOHANN ZOFFANY (1733-1810) Edward Townsend Singing 'The Beggar' painted in 1796, oil on mahogany panel, 76.2 x 63.5 cm; 30 x 25 inches, in its original eighteenth-century carved frame.Provenance: Johann Zoffany;Zoffany sale, Robins, 9th May 1811, lot.89;Henry Harris;Harris sale, Robins, 12th July 1819, lot.6;Thomas Wilkinson (1762-1837);Jane Anne Brymer (1804-1870), daughter of the above;William Ernest Brymer (1840-1909) of Ilsington House;Wilfred John Brymer (1883-1957); son of the aboveConstance Mary Brymer (1885-1963), sister of the above;John Hanway Parr Brymer (1913-2005); nephew of the above;Maureen Brymer (1924-2021) by inheritanceExhibited: London, Royal Academy, 1796, no.85 (‘Mr Townsend as the beggar in the pantomime of Merry Sherwood’);London, Royal Academy, Exhibition of Works by the Old Masters, 1893, no.44 (‘An Actor’)Literature: Victoria Manners and George Charles Williamson, John Zoffany RA: His Life and Works 1735-1810, London, 1920, p.276; Mary Webster, Johann Zoffany, New Haven and London, 2011, p.585 Martin Postle, Johann Zoffany RA: Society Observed, exh. cat., New Haven (Yale Center for British Art), pp.44-45, reproducedThis little-known theatrical portrait is one of the finest works by Johann Zoffany from the end of his career. Depicting the comic actor Edward Townsend singing ‘The Beggar’, a song by the playwright John O’Keeffe written and set to music by William Reeve for Merry Sherwood, or Harlequin Forester by William Pearce, an entertainment on the theme of Robin Hood. Zoffany captures Townsend with his mouth open wide in the midst of the song. This unusually animated portrait is rendered with Zoffany’s characteristic attention to the minute details of costume and physiognomy. Zoffany was a pioneer of theatrical portraiture, where individual actors are portrayed in the roles for which they were most celebrated, it is a genre which was uniquely developed in Britain in the eighteenth century. Here the comic singer Edward Townsend is shown on stage singing in the midst of William Pearce’s popular pantomime Merry Sherwood. But rather than merely being an illustration of the entertainment, Zoffany paints a portrait of Townsend en role, exploiting a complex layer of relationships between audience and actor, viewer and painting. Zoffany’s theatrical portraits are regarded as some of his most innovative and beguiling works and only a handful remain in private collections, of which this is one of the finest. Preserved in outstanding condition and painted on a mahogany panel, this portrait has not been on the open market since the early nineteenth century and has not been exhibited in public since 1893.By 1796 Johann Zoffany was at the height of his powers as a portrait painter, particularly paintings of complex conversation groups and interiors scenes, rich with domestic and decorative details. Recently returned from a period spent in India, where he had completed a series of remarkable images of European and Indian sitters, including Colonel Maudaunt’s Cock Match now in the Tate, London. Zoffany re-established himself as one of London’s leading portrait painters. Zoffany had found success in London in the 1760s producing a series of remarkable and hugely popular portraits of famous actors. Zoffany worked particularly closely with David Garrick, commemorating his most celebrated theatrical roles in a series of largely comic portraits.The comic singer Edward Townsend sang The Beggar at the first performance of Pearce’s popular pantomime Merry Sherwood at Covent Garden on 21 December 1795. Townsend made the song popular and it became a favourite peace in his repertoire: he sang it at his benefit on 20 May 1796, and was still rendering it at Covent Garden in June 1800. The entertainment, and Townsend’s performance, were an immediate sensation. The success of the pantomime may well have prompted Zoffany to paint Townsend and to submit the painting for the annual exhibition at the Royal Academy in 1796, where the painting is described in the exhibition catalogue as: ‘Mr Townsend in the Beggar, full of expression and character, and a striking resemblance.’ The painting was hugely admired by contemporaries at the annual exhibition. The critic Anthony Pasquin noted: ‘Mr Townsend, the Comedian in the Character of a Beggar. Zoffany. This portrait is eminently characteristic, with a strict adherence to the minutiae of the stage dress. The countenance partakes of all the muscular whim of the original contour and expression of this supplicating visage.’Robin Simon has noted that in his theatrical portraits, such as this, Zoffany’s: ‘nuanced approach enabled him to create a distinctive effect: that of depicting the actors both in and out of character at the same time. This duality lies at the heart of his achievement; but it also reflects the contemporary practice of a number of leading comic actors who, in a tradition that survives in the British pantomime, would interact, sometimes even verbally, with the audience during performance.’[1] There is a sense that in the present portrait Zoffany has caught Townsend totally absorbed in his performance. It is this duality which made Zoffany’s theatrical portraits so publicly successful.The present painting has not been publicly exhibited since 1893, when it was lent to the Royal Academy’s annual exhibition of old master paintings, as a consequence it has remained largely unknown to scholars. Mary Webster, in her authoritative 2011 monograph on Zoffany, assumed the painting was missing. The present portrait remained in Zoffany’s collection and was included in his posthumous auction in 1811. It was acquired in 1820 by Thomas Wilkinson the son of Jacob Wilkinson who was one of Zoffany’s most important supporters. A Director of the East India Company, Wilkinson acquired The Watercress Girl by Zoffany in 1780 and its pendant, The Flower Girl. Zoffany also painted his portrait in 1782 (The Chequers Trust) and Wilkinson, in turn, was one of those who supported Zoffany’s petition to travel to India. The painting passed to Thomas Wilkinson’s daughter Jane Anne, who married the Reverend William Thomas Parr Brymer, the painting has remained by descent in the Brymer family ever since.

The Autumn Auction

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Use of inverted commas around a word, or phrase indicates that the piece, or object, may not be what it is purporting to be, or may be an old-fashioned term of art no longer in use. If you are in doubt, our specialists are available prior to the auction to offer guidance and advice. With Chinese ceramics and works of art, if the catalogue states that an object in question bears a mark, but does not state ‘and of the period’, it indicates that we believe the lot in question may not date from the period suggested by the mark. Clearly, references to the colour of jade are subjective and again, buyers are advised to inspect personally any items on which they intend to bid to ensure the colour meets with their expectation.

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The term basically used in conjunction with a date (ie. basically 18th century) indicated that, in our opinion, the item may .have undergone restoration, repair, or alternation. It also indicates that only an element of the piece may date from the period stated in the description. The absence of the term basically does not imply that an item is without restoration, repair, or alternation.

Paintings, Drawings and Prints

A work catalogued with the forenames(s) and surname of recognised designation of an artist is, in our opinion, a work by the artist, e.g. NICHOLAS CHEVALIER

Attributed to NICHOLAS CHEVALIER

. . . in our opinion a work of the period of the artist which may be in whole or in part the work of the artist.

Studio of NICHOLAS CHEVALIER

. . . in our opinion a work by an unknown hand, which may have been executed in the studio of the artist.

Circle of NICHOLAS CHEVALIER

. . . in our opinion a work from the period of the artist and showing his influence.

Follower of NICHOLAS CHEVALIER

. . . in our opinion a work executed in the style of the artist but not necessarily by a pupil.

Manner of NICHOLAS CHEVALIER

. . . in our opinion a work of the artist but of a later date.

After NICHOLAS CHEVALIER

. . . in our opinion a copy of any date after a work by the artist.

Signed/inscribed/date NICHOLAS CHEVALIER

. . . in our opinion the work has been signed/inscribed/dated by the artist.

Bears signature/inscription/date NICHOLAS CHEVALIER

. . . in our opinion the signature/inscription/date are probably not by the hand of the artist.

The addition of a question mark after any of the catalogue terms in the above gloassary indicates an element of doubt.

The term 'ascribed to' may in certain cases be used to denote a traditional attribution based on style.

A work catalogued as 'School' accompanied by the name of a place or country and a date mean that in our opinion the work was executed at that time and in that location, e.g. Dutch school, circa 1700.

All reference to signatures, inscriptions and dates refer to the present state of work, i.e. as at the time of inspection for the purpose of cataloguing.

The use of inverted comas around the name of an artist, or date, in connection with a signature, or inscription (ie. Signed "Nicholas Chevalier") indicates that the signature, or inscription, may have been added by another hand.

Artist's Resale Right

From mid February 2006 living artists are entitled by law to receive a resale royalty each time their work is resold by or to an art market professional. An art work must be resold for more than 1,000 Euros to qualify for the right. The rates payable are calculated as a percentage of the hammer price and are set out in a sliding scale from 4% to 0.25%. The charge is exclusive of VAT. The auctioneers reserve the right to pass all of the cost to the person buying the qualifying art work.

Coloured Gem Stones

Prospective buyers of coloured gemstones should be aware that some stones might have been treated to enhance their colour or clarity. Sapphires and rubies are commonly heat-treated and emeralds are commonly oiled. In the case of oiling, this may need to be redone after a period of years. The international jewellery trade has generally accepted these methods.

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Duke's carries on business with bidders, buyers and all those present in the auction room prior to or in connection with a sale on the following General Conditions and on such other terms, conditions and notices as may be referred to herein.

1. Definitions

In these Conditions:

a. "auctioneer" means the firm of Duke's or its authorised auctioneer, as appropriate;

b. "deliberate forgery" means an imitation made with the intention of deceiving as to authorship, origin, date, age, period, culture or source but which is unequivocally described in the catalogue as being the work of a particular creator and which at the date of sale has a value materially less than it would have had if it had been in accordance with the description;

c. "hammer price" means the level of bidding reached (at or above any reserve) when the auctioneer brings down the hammer;

d. "terms of consignment" means the stipulated terms and rates of commission on which Duke's accepts instruction from the sellers or their agents;

e. "total amount due" means the hammer price in respect of the lot sold together with any premium, Value Added Tax chargeable and any additional charges payable by a defaulting buyer under these Conditions;

f. "sale proceeds" means the net amount due to the seller, being the hammer price of the lot sold less commission at the started rate, Value Added Tax chargeable and any other amounts due to us by the seller in whatever capacity and however arising;

g. "you", "your", etc. refer to the buyer as identified in Condition 2.

h. The singular includes the plural and vice versa as appropriate

2. Bidding Procedures And The Buyer

a. Bidders are required to register their particulars before bidding and to satisfy any security arrangements before entering the auction room to view or bid;

b. the maker of the highest bid accepted by the auctioneer conducting the sale shall be the buyer at the hammer price and any dispute about a bid shall be settled at the auctioneer's absolute discretion by reoffering the Lot during the course of the auction or otherwise. The auctioneer shall act reasonably in exercising the discretion.

c. Bidders shall be deemed to act as principles

d. Once made, no bid may be withdrawn

e. Our right to bid on behalf of the seller is expressly reserved up to the amount of any reserve and the right to refuse any bid is also reserved.

3. Increments

Bidding increments shall be at the auctioneer's sole discretion.

4. The Purchase Price

The buyer shall pay the hammer price together with a premium thereon of 25% plus VAT on the premium at the rate imposed by law.

5. Value Added Tax

Value Added Tax on the hammer price is imposed by law on all items affixed with an asterisk or double asterisk. Value Added Tax is chargeable at the appropriate rate prevailing by law at the date of sale and is payable by buyers of relevant Lots. *VAT payable at 5.00% on the hammer price and 20% on the buyers premium.

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1. Immediately a Lot is sold you will:

a. give to us, if requested, proof of identity, and

b. pay to us the total amount due in cash or in such other wats as is agreed by us.

2. Any Payments by you to us may be applied by us towards any sums owing from you to us on any account whatever without regard to any direction of you or your agent, whether express or implied.

7. Title And Collection Of Purchases

0. The ownership of any Lots purchased shall not pass to you until you have made payment in full to us of the total amount due.

1. You shall at your own risk and expense take away any lots that you have purchased and paid for not later than 5 working days following the day of the auction or upon the clearance of any cheque used for payment after which you shall be responsible for any removal, storage and insurance charges.

2. No purchase can be claimed or removed until it has been paid for.

8. Remedies For Non-Payment Or Failure To Collect Purchased

0. If any Lot is not paid for in full and taken away in accordance with the Conditions or if there is any other breach of the Condition, we, as agent for the seller and on our own behalf, shall at our absolute discretion and without prejudice to any other rights we may have, be entitled to exercise one or more of the following rights and remedies:

a. to proceed against you for damages for breach of contract;

b. to rescind the sale of that Lot and/or any other Lots sold by us to you;

c. to resell the Lot (by auction or private treaty) in which case you shall be responsible for any resulting deficiency in the total amount due (after crediting any part payment and adding any resale costs). Any surplus so arising shall belong to the seller;

d. to remove, store and insure the Lot at your expense and, in the case of storage, either at our premises or elsewhere;

e. to charge interest at a rate not exceeding 1.5% per month on the total amount due to the extent it remains unpaid for more than 3 working days after the sale;

f. to retain that or any other Lot sold to you until you have to total amount due;

g. to reject or ignore bid from you or your agent at future auctions or to impose condition before any such bids shall be accepted;

h. to apply any proceeds of sale of other Lots due or in future becoming due to you towards the settlement of the total amount due and to exercise a lien (that is a right to retain possession of) any of your property in our possession for any purpose until the debt due is satisfied.

1. We shall, as agent for the seller and on our own behalf pursue these rights and remedies only so far as is reasonable to make appropriate recovery in respect of breach of these conditions

9. Third Party Liability

All members of the public on our premises are there at their own risk and must note the lay-out of the accommodation and security arrangements. Accordingly neither the auctioneer nor our employees or agents shall incur liability fir death or personal injury (exept as required by law by reason of our negligence) or similarly for the safety of the property or persons visiting prior to or at a sale.

10. Commission Bids

Whilst prospective buyers are strongly advised to attend the auction and are always responsible for any decision to bid for a particular Lot and shall be assumed to have carefully inspected and satisfied themselves as to its condition we will if so instructed clearly and in writing execute bids on their behalf. Neither the auctioneer nor our employees or agents shall be responsible for any failure to do so save where such failure is unreasonable. Where two or more commission bids at the same level are recorded we reserve the right in our absolute discretion to prefer the first bid so made.

11. Warranty Of Title And Availability

The seller warrants to the auctioneer and you that the seller is the true owner of the property consigned or properly authorised by the true owner to consign it for sale and is able to transfer good and marketable title to the property free from any third party claims.

12. Agency

The auctioneer normally acts as agent only and disclaims any responsibility for default by sellers or buyers.

13. Terms Of Sale

The seller acknowledges that Lots are sold subject to the stipulations of these Conditions in their entirety and on the Terms of Consignment as notified to the consignor at the time on the entry of the Lot.

14. Descriptions And Condition

0. Whist we seek to describe lots accurately, it may be impractical for us to carry out exhaustive due diligence on each lot. Prospective buyers are given ample opportunities to view and inspect before any sale and they (and any independent experts on their behalf) must satisfy themselves as to the accuracy of any description applied to a lot. Prospective buyers also bid on the understanding that, inevitably, representations or statements by is as to authorship, genuineness origin date, age, provenance, condition honesty and reasonably held and accept liability for opinions given negligently or fraudulently. Subject to the foregoing neither we the auctioneer nor our employees or agents nor the seller accept liability for the correctness of such opinions and all conditions and warranties, whether relating to description, condition or quality of lots, express, implied or statutory, are hereby excluded. This Condition is subject to the next following Condition concerning deliberate forgeries and applies save as provided for in paragraph 6 "information to buyers".

1. Private treaty sales made under these Condition are deemed to be sales by the auction for purposes of consumer legislation.

15. Forgeries

Notwithstanding the preceding Condition, any Lot which proves to be a deliberate forgery (as defined) may be returned to us by you within 21 days of the auction provided it is in the same condition as when bought, and is accompanied by particulars identifying it from the relevant catalogue description and a written statement of defects. If we are satisfied from the evidence presented that the Lot is a deliberate forgery we shall refund the money paid by you for the Lot including any buyer's premium provided that

0. if the catalogue reflected the accepted view of scholars and experts as at the date of sale or

1. you personally are not able to transfer a good and marketable title to us, you shall have no rights under this condition.

The right of return provided by this Condition is additional to any right or remedy provided by law or by these Conditions of Sale.

16. General

We shall have the right at our discretion, to refuse admission to our premises or attendance at our auctions by any person.

0. any right to compensation for losses liabilities and expenses incurred in respect of and as a result of any breach of these Conditions and any exclusions provided by them shall be available to the seller and/or the auctioneer as appropriate.

1. Such rights and exclusions shall extend to and be deemed to be for the benefit of employees and agents of the seller and/or the auctioneer who may themselves enforce them.

2. Any notice to any buyer, seller, bidder or viewer may be given by first class main or Swiftmail in which case it shall be deemed to have been received by the addressee 48 hours after posting.

3. Special terms may be used in catalogue descriptions of particular classes of items in which case the description must be interpreted in accordance with any glossary appearing at the commencement of the catalogue.

4. Any indulgence extended to bidders, buyers or sellers by us notwithstanding the strict terms of these Conditions or of the Terms of Consignment shall affect the position at the relevant time only and in respect of that particular concession only; in all other respects these Conditions shall be constructed as having full force and effect.

5. English law applies to the interpretation of these Conditions.

Live Bidding

Duke’s Auctioneers offer an online bidding service via the-saleroom.com for bidders who cannot attend the sale.

In completing the bidder registration on www.the-saleroom.com and providing your credit card details and unless alternative arrangements are agreed with Duke’s Auctioneers you:

1. authorise Duke’s Auctioneers, if they so wish, to charge the credit card given in part or full payment, including all fees, for items successfully purchased in the auction via the-saleroom.com, and

2. confirm that you are authorised to provide these credit card details to Duke’s Auctioneers through www.the-saleroom.com and agree that Duke’s Auctioneers are entitled to ship the goods to the card holder name and card holder address provided in fulfilment of the sale.


3. Buyers registering to bid through saleroom.com must submit credit/debit card details to register. Duke’s at it’s discretion, will take a deposit of maximum £500 sterling from the registered credit /debit card. If the buyer is unsuccessful this deposit will be refunded. If successful the deposit will be taken off the invoice.

IMPORTANT: The deposit will be subject to variables in exchange rates and bank charges that the buyers bank might levy. Duke’s will not be liable for these charges.
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