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Featured in this lot we have a James Haughey framed Montana landscape watercolor print. James M. Haughey (1915-2007) was an American artist who specialized in watercolor landscape paintings as well as being a lawyer. Haughey was born and raised in Kansas, but in 1943 he moved to Billings, Montana with his legal practice and served as Montana's State Senator from 1961-1971. The watercolor displays a beautiful Montana landscape showing two log cabin ranch buildings with the corner of a ranch home visible. The two out buildings show single story log cabin style construction and feature three horses on hitching fences outside. The ranch home shows a corner of a padeo with a large barrel and hanging cooking pot. The buildings are set on a grassy field with rolling hills turning to wonderful snow covered mountains in the background. The piece is signed in the bottom right reading "James Haughey A\VS". The print is set into a custom wood frame with a green border around the art. The piece shows good condition overall with some light wear across the frame. The frame measures 18 3/4" wide by 14 3/4" tall with the art measuring 11 3/4" wide by 7 3/4" tall.
A collection of 19th century copper Kitchen-warecomprising an oval fish kettle with twin carrying handles, the strap handled cover initialled R, , a cylindrical cooking pot and cover with strap handles, a smaller cylindrical pot and cover of canister form with swing handle, an open cooking pot and a larger mixing bowl, both with with twin carrying handles, a kettle, and two skimmers, the largest cooking pot and cover, 40cm high, the smallest pot, 16cm high, the largest skimmer, 50cm long (8)This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: TPTP Lots denoted with a 'TP' 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
A collection of iron cooking implementsTo include a wrought iron game crown, 22cm high, a large wrought iron down-hearth skillet or pan, the handle with heart terminal, 41.5cm high to tip of handle, another smaller wrought iron down-hearth skillet or pan, 25.5cm high, an 18th/19th century iron fire blower, 89cm high, a wrought iron kettle tilter, with wooden handle terminal, 39cm wide, a wrought iron pot hook, of three hooks, 27cm high, a small wrought iron hook, with wrythen stem, 14cm high, and a wrought iron pot hook, with attached chain, 42cm high, (8)This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
An unusual and good 17th century cast brass ladle, with maker's marksThe handle stamped nine times with 'EC' or 'EG' beneath a crown, and ending in a human face beneath a pierced terminal, a two-pronged hook or stand to the reverse, 12cm bowl diameter x 41cm high Footnotes:Literature: Leaded bronze skillets by two English founders - Richard Poope of Chilham and John Palmar of Canterbury - were cast with handles terminating in human faces. Another, by John Diamond, was probably made in the South-East. All of these founders were active in the 17th century.Two skillets attributed to Edmund Giles, active in Lewes at the end of the 16th and the beginning of the 17th century, were cast with similar handle terminals. One is in a private collection, the other in Lewes Museum [Cat. No. OR 121]. See R. Butler & C. Green, English Bronze Cooking Vessels & their Founders 1350 - 1830 (2003), p. 46 [John Diamond], pp. 68 - 70 [Edmund Giles], p. 81 [John Palmar] & p. 85 [Richard Poope].Why this brass ladle is stamped nine times along the length of its handle is unclear. The marks have been struck down its centre, and some effort has been made to space them regularly: the gap between each mark is between 2cm and 2.5cm. Multiple marks, although usually in a cluster, are not unknown. See, for instance, a brass skimmer stamped six times, and another stamped three times, by the maker known only by the initials 'DT' [R. & V. Butler, A Study Collection of Marked Domestic Brass and other Base Metalware c. 1600 - c. 1900, p. 29, Numbers 41 & 42].Each of the marks to this ladle appear to have been struck with the same punch, although all, being struck by hand, and with varying force, have slight differences in appearance. No two of the struck marks to this ladle are exactly the same and some read with the initials 'EC', whilst one looks more like 'EG'. This brazier's mark does not appear in the 'Study Collection'. The marks overall shape and the crowned initials are reminiscent of mid- to late 17th century silversmith's and pewterer's marks.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Rare Nineteenth-Century Iron Works Studio Catalogue Illustrated Catalogue of Statuary, Fountains, Vases, Settees, etc. For Parks, Gardens and Conservatories, Manufactured by the J.L. Mott Iron Works New York: E.D. Slater, 1875. First edition. Folio. Profusely illustrated with dozens of examples of fountains, basins, benches, and other statuary from the J.L. Mott Iron Works studio. Original full brown cloth-covered flexible boards, stamped in blind and in gilt, lightly worn; front hinge repaired; scattered wear and chipping to plates; dampstaining along top and bottom edge of front paste-down, as well as faintly present on first few leaves, and in bottom gutter at rear; rear free endpaper loose; in modern full brown cloth portfolio. Together with: "Lamp Pillars. Supplement to Illustrated Catalogue of Ornamental Department of the J.L. Mott Iron Works, 1877".J.L. Mott Iron Works was established in 1828 in by Jordan L. Mott, originally producing coal fueled cooking-stoves. Mott's son, J.L. Mott Jr., expanded the manufactoring of the company to include fountains, basins, benches, and other decorative statuary. Their grand designs were famously showcased at the 1876 Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia, featuring a 25 foot tall cast iron fountain. Avant garde artist Marcel Duchamp memorably used one of Mott's urinals for his 1917 readymade "Fountain".
[Cookery] Manual of Cookery by Florence George 1921, The Wright Cookery Book 1911, The New Century Cookery Book by Charles Senn 1901, Mrs. Beeton’s Cookery Book, The Book of Plain Cooking 1913, Cookery Recipes 1910, French Dishes for English Tables, Thrift Cook Book, Coffee and Waffles 1926, Invalid Cookery by Mrs. Arthur Webb, New Glutton or Epicure 1912 and others (22)
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