A 17TH CENTURY 'NONSUCH' BED HEAD OR OVERMANTEL PANEL. A fine carved and marquetry overmantel or part bedhead, with three marquetry panels of architectural 'Nonsuch' type buildings with arches, scrolling ornaments and pinnacles with swans swimming in the foreground, the panels within profusely carved oak surrounds with overhanging foliate cornice, two male and two female figures terminating in lion masks with broad rings in their mouths, surrounded by scrolling foliage and scrolls. 70cm high, 154cm wide.
We found 35023 price guide item(s) matching your search
There are 35023 lots that match your search criteria. Subscribe now to get instant access to the full price guide service.
Click here to subscribe- List
- Grid
-
35023 item(s)/page
A REGENCY BRASS INLAID MAHOGANY BRACKET CLOCK. With a circular convex white enamelled dial with Roman numerals and a single train fusee timepiece movement, the drum topped case with gadrooned cresting and brass finial, the dial above fluting and architectural base with pendulum window flanked by tapering columns and plinth base, 49cm high, 33cm wide and 14cm deep, with key and pendulum.
Alex the Cleaniphant A riverside scene of Worcester using bright coloursH1600mm x L2150mm x W800mm, weight 40kg Artist: Shilpi Sharma Design Inspiration: ‘Alex the Cleaniphant’ pays tribute to all the key workers and domestic heroes who have been working day and night to ensure our wonderful Worcester stays sparkly clean during the pandemic. The design is inspired by all the cleaning products we are using and incorporates their colours, shapes and designs along with ones which reflect local architectural heritage and buildings, residences, and the river. Sponsor: Specsavers
A 19th century Irish Killarney marquetry and yew room centre tea or silver table, hinged rectangular top inlaid with an oval reserve of Muckross Abbey, County Kerry, Ireland, bordered by trailing sprays of seamróg shamrocks, outlined throughout with barber-pole stringing and parquetry banding, enclosing further titled architectural landscapes of Innisfallen Abbey, Shooting The Rapids At The Old Weir Bridge, Ross Castle, Ross Cottage, Flesk Castle and Glena Cottage, above a deep frieze inlaid with oak leaves and acorns, tapered square legs, 80.5cm high, 81cm wide, 44cm deep, c.1850
A 19th century oak bracket clock, 15.5cm square brass dial with silvered chapter ring engraved with Roman and subsidiary Arabic numerals, matted centre, putti to spandrels, twin winding holes, eight-day movement striking on a gong, the architectural case with pointed arched pediment with incise-carved entablature above a rusticated frieze, flanked by reeded Corinthian pilasters, shallow bracket feet, pierced 42cm high, c.1890
Textiles - an Arts and Crafts table cover, embroidered in red with a young boy and girl within an architectural niche decorated with flowers, 65cm x 45cm, c.1890; a Victorian pin cushion, worked in coloured wools with a bird perched on a branch, 10cm wide, c.1880; a canvas work picture; a Chinese silk runner; table linen; etc
A 19th century giltwood and mahogany looking glass, in the manner of William Kent, architectural swan neck pediment centred by a cartouche-shaped finial, the volutes terminating in flowerhead bosses, rectangular mirror plate flanked by flowering and fruiting foliage, shaped apron, 154cm high, 71cm wide
* Curtains. A pair of shaped pelmets, Miss Frith, Kensington, London, circa 1890s, 2 matching stiffened glazed chintz pelmets, with a cream pattern of architectural motifs (carved plaques, Grecian urns, flower baskets), flower sprays, volutes, and putti, on a pink ground, self pleated edging to top and fringed braid to lower edge, each with woven label on verso 'Miss Frith. Decorators. Kensington 0140, 32 Beauchamp Place. Brompton Road. London. S.W.3.', 41 x 240cm (16 x 94.5ins) and 40 x 211cm (15 .75 x 83ins), together with 3 seat covers and 5 remnants in the same fabric, including 2 lined and interlined pieces (being the lower portion of a pair of curtains), some small marks, both approximately 62 x 164.5cm (24.5 x 65ins), and another shaped glazed chintz pelmet, with pink and green rose pattern on a dark cream ground, fringed braid to lower edge, a little dusty and worn in places to top edge, 32 x 170cm (12.5 x 67ins), plus other items similar, including: a pair of lined pale pink damask curtains trimmed with tufted braid, faded and occasional small marks, lining stained and with 1 or 2 tears, each approximately 204.5 x 142cm (80.5 x 56ins), with matching triple-pleated pelmet (faded) and 2 seat covers; a pair of lined blue silk curtains, slightly faded to one edge, each approximately 213 x 112cm (84 x 44ins), plus a third curtain slightly smaller, an ungathered pelmet, and some remnants, all in the same fabric; a large square floral glazed chintz cushion cover; a piece of red damask with tasselled braid to 2 sides, partially frayed, wrapped in newspaper annotated in ink 'Old Red Damask Great grandmother Winants', and a reversible puce pink/black satin cloth edged with metallic braid on both sides and with a lattice-covered large weighted finial at each cornerQty: (-)NOTESThe Frith sisters, Misses Louise (born 1851) and Fanny (born 1855), were the daughters of the artist William Powell Frith. In the 1891 census both women listed their occupation as 'decorating furniture', and Kelly’s Post Office London Business Directory from 1892 to 1896 lists the pair as interior decorators. The Frith sisters were also connected to the Working Ladies Guild, and a Miss Frith wrote an interior decoration column for the Lady’s Pictorial. Between about 1890 and 1895 Louise and Fanny, along with Lady Mary Louisa Monckton (née Long), traded from 18 Fulham Road under the name 'The Spinning Wheel', and occasionally 'Monckton and Frith', and they dealt in furniture and antiques as well as undertaking interior decoration.
Four items of Russian silver, comprising: an oblong cigarette case, maker's mark JAL (unknown), St Petersburg late 19th century, engraved with an architectural cartouche in Old Russian style, 11.2cm (4 3/8in) long; a circular footed salt cellar, maker's mark FB (Cyrillic, not traced), Moscow 1886, 84 zolotniki, presentation engraved and dated 24/VII/1896; a small salt by Gustav Klingert, 1896-1908 Moscow Kokoshnik mark, 84 zolotniks, applied with a foliate reserve, engraved with initials, 3.5cm diameter; and a Soviet silver gilt and enamel tea strainer, 1927-58 St Petersburg mark, .916 standard, 11.5cm (4 1/2in) long, 270g (8.7 oz) gross (4) Condition Report: Cigarette case - Marks partially rubbed, hinge tight, slight gap when closed, engraving clear Footed salt - Marks clear, slight knock to foot rim, slightly wobbles, engraving crisp Small salt - Marks clear, stands well Tea strainer - Marks partially obscured, scratches and knocks to the enamel All with light scratches and wear commensurate with age and use Condition Report Disclaimer
A SCOTTISH OAK LONGCASE CLOCK19th CenturyWith silvered engraved dial, inscribed ‘R. Warden Aberdeen’, Roman hours and Arabic minutes, twin train movement, pendulum and weights, 44cm wide, 25cm deep, 206cm highCondition reportThe case: with architectural hood, replaced glass to front and sides.Replaced handle. Crossbanding and moulding to the door, which is slightly bowed and currently locked, no key. Repair to the top hinge.Various other scuffs, shrinkage and general wear as to be expected with use and age. The dial: general tarnishing, scuffs and general signs of wear commensurate with use and age. The movement: will need to be inspected, no guarantee of it’s working order. Two weights, two winding keys and a pendulum with the lot
* Follower of Mary Beale (1633-1699). Portrait of a young girl, oil on canvas, trimmed, re-lined, and laid over board, half-length portrait of a young girl with auburn ringlets, wearing an orange and white gown embellished with jewels, a pearl necklace and pearl drop earrings, and a bejewelled pearl band in her hair, within a trompe l'oeil architectural cartouche, rubbed with some surface loss, 76 x 62.5cm (30 x 241/2 ins)Qty: (1)NOTESThe particularly English feature of the painted architectural frame recalls the work of Mary Beale, a copyist of Sir Peter Lely as well as an independent portraitist. Beale's portraits are often similarly enclosed by moulded cartouches, and Lely himself occasionally used the device. In Lely's case the frame would have been painted in later by a studio hand, whereas Mary Beale's sons were known to add the frame after the portrait had been painted.
A Victorian onyx mantel clock of architectural from with applied gilt metal mask head decoration to the top, the circular dial set with Roman numerals and flanked on each side by two gilt metal Corinthian columns, raised on stepped plinth base, with Japy Frères movement, height 33cm, width 39.5cm, depth 14cm.
A 19th century black slate eight day mantel clock, the enamel dial with Roman numerals and movement striking on a bell, in architectural case, height 39cm.Additional InformationThe clock includes bell but does not include a pendulum or a key, we cannot guarantee that the clock is in full working order, metal mounts with general tarnishing, a few slight nicks here and there to the case and the dial is lightly grubby.
A 19th century black slate eight day mantel clock, of architectural form with visible escapement and Roman numeral chapter ring and movement striking on a gong, height 30cm.Additional InformationWe cannot guarantee that the clock is in full working order, the clock includes a pendulum but does not include a key, the glass to the bezel is cracked and broken, and there a few chips to the case.
Two 19th century black slate eight day mantel clocks, each of architectural form and with a Roman numeral dial and French movement, one striking on a bell, the other on a gong, tallest 31cm (2).Additional InformationBoth include a pendulum. The clocks are not guaranteed to be in full working order. Each are lightly grubby throughout with a few small chips here and there.
A Victorian black slate and rouge marble mantel clock of architectural form, in the Aesthetic Movement style with applied gilt mounts flanking the circular dial set with Roman numerals, with Japy Frères movement, engraved with presentation plaque dated 1875 to the front, height 26cm, width 30cm, together with an Edwardian inlaid mahogany mantel clock, the white enamelled dial set with Arabic numerals, height 30cm (2).Provenance: The marble example was purchased from William Mansell, London.
A Swedish Louis XVI style gilt wood cartel type eight day wall clock, the Roman numeral dial signed Westerstrand, with movement striking on a bell, within an architectural case surmounted by a rose, height 54cm.Additional InformationWe cannot guarantee that the clock is in full working order. Case with some light wear and rubbing here and there.
TIMOTHY RICHARDS; three stoneware architectural sculptures representing 'Chew Magna Doorway', '10 Downing Street' and 'Jane Austen Doorway', each with original box.Additional InformationJane Austen Doorway is slightly at fault (af) as the fence has separated from the main body of the piece. 10 Downing Street with minor bending to the fence in parts.
Berthold Lubetkin and Margaret LubetkinUnique sofa, designed for the Penthouse flat, Highpoint Two, Highgate, London, 1936-1938Norwegian yew, sandblasted pine, Cowhide, leather, chromium-plated metal. 77 x 196 x 80 cmFootnotes:ProvenanceBerthold Lubetkin, Penthouse flat, Highpoint Two, Highgate, LondonThence by descentBonhams, London, New Bond Street, 'Important Design', 21 November 2018, lot 169Acquired from the above by the present ownerLiteratureLionel Brett, The Things We See Houses - No. 2, Houses, Middlesex, 1947, p. 49 for the armchairs and daybed'Tall Order', The Architects' Journal, June 1985, illustrated p. 55John Allan, Berthold Lubetkin: Architecture and the tradition of progress, London, 2016, illustrated pp. 303, 305, 307, 562The Victoria and Albert Museum, London, Collections, https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O1458096/-armchair-berthold-lubetkin, (accessed September 2021) for the armchairHighpoint by Nick Wright'There are only four kinds of artistic activity: fine art, music, poetry and ornamental pastry cooking, of which architecture is a minor branch.' So began Berthold Lubetkin's speech to the Art Worker's Guild in 1932. Over a fifty-year career he baked many fine pastries.His origins are opaque. A passport showing his birthplace as Warsaw in 1903 was false. He was born in Georgia, a colonial outpost of Tsarist Russia, in 1901. During the Russian revolution he enrolled as a student at the Stroganov School of Applied Art. He studied carpet design in Berlin, architecture in Warsaw, concrete construction in Paris under August Perret, though achieved few if any formal qualifications. Nonetheless, he worked on the Soviet Pavilion in the Paris Exposition of 1925 and, in partnership, with Jean Ginsburg whose bona fide degree facilitated planning permission, had built an apartment block on Rue de Versailles by the age of 30.Arriving in Britain with two passports, no family or verifiable CV, he was free to become the architect of his own identity. His nationality was International, his faith communism, the denomination Modernism. The penguin pool he designed for Regent Park Zoo became instantly emblematic of the movement. More commissions came; suburban houses in Plumstead, a beach house in Aldwyck, a bungalow cut into the chalk hills of Whipsnade. Then, following the Tottenham factory designed for Gestetner Ltd, he designed Highpoint. 'Nothing,' he said, 'is too good for the ordinary person' and Highpoint is the physical embodiment of that ideal. New materials, concrete, glass, and steel were presumed impervious to the elements, the elemental design to fashion. Although undeniably 'an achievement of the first rank' to quote Le Corbusier, Highpoint now appears very much of its time. Rather than housing the workers of an office equipment manufacturer the apartments were sold to private individuals whilst the white-washed concrete appears an homage to white liner modernism, new in Britain but rehearsed the decade prior on the Mediterranean coast and already rust streaked.It is the adjacent Highpoint II which appears the more prescient, bridging as it does the stark modernity of its elder sibling on one side with Georgian Highgate on the other. Indeed, it's startling to realise that what one takes to be a low linear building shares a roofline with its high-rise neighbour and this dual aspect continues throughout. The choice of Staffordshire blue brick nods to the Victorian engineers such as Brunel whom Lubetkin admired. The glass bricks of the stair wells were contemporary. Then there are the caryatids. Classical figures cast at the British Museum support the modernist portico, these draped ladies passed water though pipes cast within but remain a source of debate. Are they 'pastry decoration'? Are they a recreation of the figures on a childhood home? Or are they the earliest post-modern joke, an acknowledgement that a function of architecture is to entertain? In 1951 Lubetkin wrote 'for too long modern architectural solutions were regarded in terms of abstract principles, with formal expression left to itself as a functional resultant. The principles of composition, the emotional impact of the visual, were brushed aside as irrelevant. Yet this is the very material with which the architect operates.' Alessandro Mendini said much the same fifty years after Highpoint's construction.Preeminent among the residents of Highpoint II was Lubetkin himself who had designed the penthouse for his family and the apartment displays the same meld of old and new. A vaulted ceiling recalls the breakfast room at John Soane's Pitzhanger, suspended from it was a mobile made and installed by Alexander Calder. Expansive glass affords views of London, in the free space below was a suite of furniture designed in the vernacular style of Lubetkin's native Georgia.John Allen writes of Lubetkin: 'No longer content merely to revere the grand tradition of architects who design their own furniture – Aalto, Le Corbusier, Mies, Rietveld – he now steps up to join it. The low chairs and sofa were unique pieces of soft sculpture made personally by Lubetkin and his wife Margaret from hand chosen lengths of Norwegian yew and cow hide from Argentina.' Such a quest seems indulgent but careful selection of the timber is necessary to the design. The rear posts all require the same curvature, even the knots are regularly spaced to create symmetrical aprons and, as with the building for which they were designed, the traditional and avant-guard coexist; fitted into the rustic frames are airfoil sections adjusted via engine-turned bosses.These pieces of furniture are of real architectural significance - evidenced by the Victoria and Albert Museum's acquisition of the third chair. They were designed by the architect responsible for much of Britain's post-war social housing and the Finsbury Health Centre, effectively the first hospital for the NHS. They drew on his early life in Georgia yet sit well in his home on top of Britain's preeminent modernist building. Indeed, so attached was Lubetkin to the furniture that on leaving Highpoint in 1955 the suite went with him. Images of the farm cottage to which he relocated show sofa and chair wedged beside the hearth. Then when he retired to a terraced Georgian house in Bristol the pieces again accompanied him. Throughout a transient life it was as though this suite represented home more than any building. Perhaps home had always been Georgia.Bonhams wishes to thank Nick Wright, co-author, Cut and Shut: The History of Creative Salvage, London, 2012.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: TPTP Lot will be moved to an offsite storage location (Cadogan Tate, Auction House Services, 241 Acton Lane, London NW10 7NP, UK) and will only be available for collection from this location at the date stated in the catalogue. Please note transfer and storage charges will apply to any lots not collected after 14 calendar days from the auction date.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Ubunji KidokoroArmchair, designed 1937Bamboo, brass.73.5 x 56 x 77 cmFootnotes:Literature'Mostra d'arte in Giappone', Domus, no. 269, April 1952, p. 41Japan Living Design, Tokyo, Architectural Materials Research Co., Ltd., Tokyo, 2002, pp. 76, 77Mary McLeod, ed., Charlotte Perriand: An Art of Living, New York, 2003, p. 105This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: TPTP Lot will be moved to an offsite storage location (Cadogan Tate, Auction House Services, 241 Acton Lane, London NW10 7NP, UK) and will only be available for collection from this location at the date stated in the catalogue. Please note transfer and storage charges will apply to any lots not collected after 14 calendar days from the auction date.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
λ Paul Mount (British 1922-2012)Untitled (Male and Female form)Polished bronze on slate baseSigned (to side of base)Height: 34cm (13¼ in.)Conceived circa 1960s.Provenance:Sale, Christie's online, 2 December 2016, lot 5Purchased from the above sale by the present ownerMount is renowned for his ability to fuse two juxtaposed design styles, combining the futurist and geometrical forms of modernism together with the more grounded and natural style of hand carved African sculpture. Mount was born in Newton Abbot, Devon. He studied at Paignton School of Art followed by attendance at the Royal College of Art. His education was cut short when he was called for service in 1941. Mount served in the Friends Ambulance Unit in north Africa and France. One of the most influential periods in Mount's career was his move to Lagos, Nigeria in 1955. He set up an art department at Yaba Technical Institute. He was keen that his students learnt tangible skills, and so he employed a wood-carver from Benin. This sparked his interest in sculpture further and he began experimenting with materials such as iroko and ebony. Despite this, his interest in architectural and furniture design prevailed and commissions continued to roll in. In 1960 Mount produced a screen wall at the Swiss Embassy in Lagos. In 1962, Mount returned to England and moved to Nancherrow in Cornwall. Inspired by Barbara Hepworth and her assistants Denis Mitchell and John Milne, Mount looked towards the natural landscape like the Cornish modernists. However, his interest in architectural design and machinery encouraged more angular designs with influences from mainland Europe such as Basque and Eduardo Chillida. First London show was held at the Drian Gallery in 1965 and his first solo exhibition at Marlborough Fine Art 10 years later. "The way that two shapes relate, is as important as the way two people relate" Paul Mount Condition Report: There is some tarnishing to the gold surface, minor scratches, nicks, and scuffs throughout with some losses and rubbing to extreme edges at both bases. Would benefit from a clean and polish.Condition Report Disclaimer
λ Lynn Chadwick (British 1914-2003) Walking Cloaked Figures VIIIBronze with a black patina and polished bronzeEach stamped with the Lypiatt Foundry mark and numbered 795S and 1/9 (inside the cloaks)Height: 28cm (11 in.)Conceived in 1980 and cast in a numbered edition of 9.Provenance:Private Collection, London (acquired in 1983)Thence by descent to the present ownersLiterature:Lynn Chadwick (exhibition catalogue), Fondation Veranneman, Kruishputen, Belgium, 1980, illustration of another cast n.p. Dennis Farr & Eva Chadwick: Lynn Chadwick Sculptor, With a Complete Illustrated Catalogue 1947-2003, Farnham, 2014, p. 343, no. 795 (illustration of another cast)For additional videos or images of the pieces included in this lot please contact the department on pictures@dreweatts.com Together with his contemporaries Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth, Jacob Epstein and Eduardo Paolozzi, Chadwick is inextricably associated with the British Modernist Sculpture movement of the mid-20th century. Initially specialising in architectural design both before and after the Second World War, by 1946, Chadwick had started to move away from the intangible world of design instead finding himself increasingly drawn to the tangible nature of objects. A year later, in 1947, Chadwick made his first mobile. Encouraged by his employer at the time, Rodney Thomas, these wire, metal, copper, and brass shapes were first used to decorate the exhibition stands of Thomas' company and then later turned into 'stabiles' by adding ground supports. Around 60 mobiles were created between 1947 and 1952.Although very few of these mobiles survive today, this was clearly the very beginning of what would eventually evolve into Chadwick's signature bronze and steel abstract figures that we know so well today. In 1951, Chadwick was commissioned by the Arts Council of Britain to produce a large-scale sculpture for the Festival of Britain, The Fisheater, which went on to be exhibited at the Tate Gallery until 1952. It was also at this time that Chadwick was asked to present to the selection committee of the XXVI Venice Biennale who selected him together with seven other emerging British artists including Kenneth Armitage, Robert Adams, and Eduardo Paolozzi to exhibit in Venice that year. It was after this exhibition that Chadwick really established his reputation as a member of the New British Sculptors. In 1956, Chadwick returned to the Venice Biennale, this time winning the International Sculpture Prize - the youngest artist ever to do so. During this period Chadwick became increasingly interested in form with his designs becoming more identifiable as figures; their thin and tapering legs and geometric heads, in Chadwick's words 'adding flesh to the skeletons'. By the 1960s, Chadwick was experimenting with bronze casting and by the 1970s, he had established a visible vocabulary of sexual differentiation - triangle or diamond heads for female and square or rectangular heads for male. In addition, the technique of adding polished facets to his figures both added texture and accentuated specific parts of anatomy. This is clearly demonstrated in Walking Cloaked Figures VIII which also combines the artist's timeless architectonic forms with elements of the human, animal and mechanical. The use of clothing, specifically flaring cloaks helps to add a sense of movement to the work. There is no real narrative to Chadwick's works, but it is perhaps the stoic silence and anonymous strength which makes his works so intriguing and timeless.Chadwick remained active until only a few years before his death in 2003, aged 88. Throughout his career and beyond Chadwick remains a recognised household name. In 1964, he was awarded a CBE, and later in 1984 made Officer de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres in France. In 2001 he was appointed Senior Academician at the Royal Academy of Arts, London. His work is held in major collections and galleries around the world including the Tate Gallery, London, and Museum of Modern Art, New York.Condition Report: In overall good original condition. Some surface dirt, notably to crevasses. May benefit from a light clean. Condition Report Disclaimer
Frederick Rhead (British), a Foley Intarsio 'Night and Day' Earthenware Mantel clock,c.1897-1900, blurred printed pottery marks to reverse, no. 3160.The architectural form centred with a clock dial (replacement electric movement), colourfully painted with lilies, a sun motif and sailing boats and inscribed 'Carpe Diem', flanked by portraits of women and flowers, one inscribed 'Dies' and the other 'Nox',29 cm high, 27.5 cm wide, 12 cm deep,Literature: Watkins, Harvey & Senft, 'Shelley Potteries - The History and Production of a Staffordshire Family of Potters', Barrie & Jenkins, 1980 & 1986, p.59, colour pl.III (similar clock illustrated)There is a chip to the top outer edge of the right hand roof peak. The is a largish, old chip to the back, bottom right of the base. There is some glaze shrinkage along the bottom edge of base and the pottery marks on the back are blurred - but this is how it was made/fired. The clock is a replacement electric movement and currently appears to work.Please note Rosebery's do not guarantee the working condition, duration or timekeeping of clocks offered for sale.

-
35023 item(s)/page