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Boxing Danny Williams signed 12x8 colour photo. Daniel Peter Williams (born 13 July 1973) is a British professional boxer. He has challenged once for the WBC heavyweight title against Vitali Klitschko in 2004. At regional level, he has held multiple heavyweight titles, including the Commonwealth title twice between 1999 and 2006; the British title twice between 2000 and 2010; and challenged once for the European title in 2003. As an amateur, he won bronze medals at the 1993 European Championships and 1994 Commonwealth Games. Williams is best known for scoring an upset knockout victory against Mike Tyson in 2004. Good condition Est.
Patinated 'bronze' fantasy dagger, the 26cm blade, hilt and scabbard cast with dragons L50cm overall; hand forged iron spearhead L29.5cm; and a stiletto blade (3)Condition Report:Dagger in good condition consistent with being modern.Spear head very rusty - almost relic condition.Stiletto blade rusty.
Red Cross - various cloth and metal badges etc including shoulder titles for E.R. Yorkshire, Mobile VAD badges, three-year service medal, RAMC cap badge, rank pips, enamelled badges etc, some named to D.E. Murden; together with Hull Auxilliary Fire Service blazer badge, bronze and silver long service medals to N.H. Murden, buttons and metal AFS badges etcCondition Report:All in reasonably good condition consistent with age and use.
19th century French white marble mantel clock, the cuboid body surmounted by a gilt bronze figure of Napoleon, over a white enamel dial with Roman numerals, inscribed Rossi Norwich, enclosing a French brass eight-day movement striking on a bell; stepped base with gilded beaded and bobbin-turned edges H44cmCondition Report:Looks to be in reasonably good condition with a number of small chips around base edge/corners.Bobbin turned edging a little loose.Rod in Napoleon's hand looks to be a replacement.Working condition unknown.Lacking back door panel.
19th century Artillery officer's sword/sabre, with 80cm plain curving fullered steel blade, gilt bronze hilt with crossed cannons to the langets, beaded knuclebow and wire-bound grip L93cm overallCondition Report:Blade very rusty.Hilt in good condition with minor losses to gilding.No scabbard.
FRENCH SCHOOL (CIRCA 1820) A SET OF THREE DESIGNS FOR ALLEGORICAL CLOCKS: CALLIOPE CROWNING VIRGIL, CHRONOS AND CUPID Pen, ink and washes over a lithographic base 66 x 49cm (25 x 19¼ in.) (3) Literature: C. Plante, Designs for Gilt Bronze Objects from the French Restoration 1814-1830, London, 2002, pp. 70-71, 78-79, 94-95.
λ ERIC SCHILSKY (BRITISH 1898-1974) BUST OF DAVID ANTHONY Bronze Height (excluding base): 32 cm (12½ in.) Provenance: Ida Affleck Graves (1902-1999), Private Collection, commissioned a bust of her son David Anthony either gifted by Schilsky or purchased direct from the artist Thence by descent, Anna Marks, Private Collection (sister of the sitter) Inherited by the present owner in 2020 David Anthony tragically passed away, age 27, in an avalanche. Ida Affleck Graves carved a career as a novelist, artist and sculptor catapulted by the support of the Bloomsbury group. Graves was born in Mysuru, India in 1902, daughter of Colonel Douglas H. McDonnel Graves and Mabel Alice Petley. Graves was educated at boarding school in Eastbourne from the age of 6 and continued her studies in Surrey. Graves studied English literature at the University of London and took a keen interest in sculpture, attending evening classes at Chelsea College of Arts. By 1920s, Graves was mixing with other creatives in London and joined the Bloomsbury Group forming close relationships with artists such as Bernard Meninsky, Eric Schilsky and Elsie Farleigh. Graves was a keen writer and poet. In 1929, Hogarth Press, run by fellow Bloomsbury members, Virginia and Leonard Woolf, published her first collection of poems titled 'The China Cupboard and Other Poems'. Graves went on to publish a number of novels sometimes using the pseudonym Affleck Graves. She had great success with novels such as 'Elarna Cane' and 'Ostrobogulous Pigs'. Grave had two children with her first husband Herbert Henry Marks, Anthony and Anna. The present lots illustrate her children through sculpture and painting.
λ ERIC SCHILSKY (BRITISH 1898-1974) BUST OF ANNA Bronze Height (excluding base): 24cm (9¼in.) Provenance: Ida Affleck Graves (1902-1999), Private Collection, commissioned a bust of her daughter Anna either gifted by Schilsky or purchased direct from the artist Thence by descent, Anna Marks, Private Collection (the sitter) Inherited by the present owner in 2020 Ida Affleck Graves carved a career as a novelist, artist and sculptor catapulted by the support of the Bloomsbury group. Graves was born in Mysuru, India in 1902, daughter of Colonel Douglas H. McDonnel Graves and Mabel Alice Petley. Graves was educated at boarding school in Eastbourne from the age of 6 and continued her studies in Surrey. Graves studied English literature at the University of London and took a keen interest in sculpture, attending evening classes at Chelsea College of Arts. By 1920s, Graves was mixing with other creatives in London and joined the Bloomsbury Group forming close relationships with artists such as Bernard Meninsky, Eric Schilsky and Elsie Farleigh. Graves was a keen writer and poet. In 1929, Hogarth Press, run by fellow Bloomsbury members, Virginia and Leonard Woolf, published her first collection of poems titled 'The China Cupboard and Other Poems'. Graves went on to publish a number of novels sometimes using the pseudonym Affleck Graves. She had great success with novels such as 'Elarna Cane' and 'Ostrobogulous Pigs'. Grave had two children with her first husband Herbert Henry Marks, Anthony and Anna. The present lots illustrate her children through sculpture and painting.
λ JAMES WOODFORD (BRITISH 1893-1976) HEAD STUDY, PURPORTED TO BE ANTHONY QUAYLE Bronze Height 24cm (9¼in.) Together with a study of a baby's head in plaster, 16cm (6 1/4in.) (2) James Woodford (1893-1976) was a British sculptor who experimented in stone, wood and bronze. Woodford studied at Nottingham School of Art and the Royal College of Art. In 1953, Woodford was awarded an O.B.E. Woodford's most notable work was the Queen's Beasts commissioned for the Queen's Coronation at Westminster Abbey in 1953. The works are now held at Kew. Condition Report: Bronze is attached to the wooden base with a screw, which is slightly loose. A few scratches and abrasions, particularly on the tip of his nose and his right cheek where the bronze is visible underneath the patina. The wooden base with scratches on the front and signs of mould. The plaster cast with several scratches, the largest one approx. 3 cm on the back of the head and one of approx. 4 cm on its left cheek. Loss of plaster to the left ear. Most of these damages are covered by the paint layer, suggesting they are old. The wooden base with signs of mould. Condition Report Disclaimer
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350105 item(s)/page