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Lot 147

A selection of modern cooking pans and crock by Descoware

Lot 113

A selection of pots pans and cooking dishes by Desco ware Belgium

Lot 382

A Box of Strawberry Pattern and Vine Pattered Tea and Dinner Wares, Denby Stoneware Plates and Cooking Pot etc

Lot 427

A Reproduction Cast Metal One Gallon Cooking Cauldron (Plus VAT)

Lot 1327

Mixed Collection of Approximately 114 Records 77's Titles including,The Eel, Home Cooking, Three Little Words, Blues Of Israel, Honeysuckle and Blues.

Lot 65

A VICTORIAN BRASS COOKING POT with an iron handle, a large brass jardiniere and a planter (3)

Lot 666

A collection of antique metal ware to include a copper kettle, a large brass jam pan, further cooking implements, candlesticks, etc

Lot 285

A Silver Plated Walker and Hall Cooking Pan with Removable Centre and Lid (Inscribed) To Frances Williams on Her Marriage, September 1914 from the Servants at Croyland

Lot 47

A North African Copper and Brass Hand Beaten Cooking Pot, 32cm Diameter

Lot 269

QUANTITY OF PANS, COOKING UTENSILS AND KITCHEN SUNDRIES

Lot 365

A Le Creuset cooking pot and lid

Lot 58

Two copper cooking pan, copper plaque embossed with a Yorkshire rose and a brass lamp stamped Shire.

Lot 329

A large quantity of old cooking pots.

Lot 1125

Sadji (Sha Qi, Sha Yinnian) (1914-2005), A still life with flowers and carrots, oil on canvas, dated 1945Dim.: 111 x 91,5 cm (the frame) Dim.: 98,5 x 78,5 (the painting) Provenance: A private collection, Belgium Sha Qi is known by many names: Born Sha Yinnian in the village of Sha, part of Yinxian County in Zhejiang, China (1932), he would also be dubbed Sad Ji in his European travels, and eventually called the Eastern Van Gogh by the end of his career. The intense beauty and tragedy that permeated his life and artwork was recognized during his early years, neglected in his later years, then fortunately rediscovered before his final days; so his prolific body of work continues to gain praise and excite the world of art today.  Sha Qi studied painting first at the Shanghai Arts School, then the Central University of China. His studies were interrupted, though, when Japanese armies invaded China. Sha Qi was not one to sit quietly by, and was arrested in 1933 after years of petitioning and demonstrations along with other Shanghai students. He spent a full year imprisoned by Kuomintang authorities, but after release he took a job at the Art Department of Central University in Nanjing. He worked then alongside his cousin and friend, Sha Menghai, who would go on to be a master calligrapher. It was at this same time Xu Beihong came into his life. Then Director of the Art Department, later to become President of Central Academy of Fine Arts (Beijing) and the Chinese Artists’ Association, Xu turned out to be a crucial guide and friend to Sha Qi, recognizing his talent and passion in art and spending the rest of their years together teaching, mentoring, promoting and protecting Sha. It was Xu that introduced Sha to the Belgium Royal Academy of Fine Arts, where he would learn Western painting under Professor A. Bastien (who also taught famous Chinese painter Wu Zuoren, 1908-1997).  With his excellent teachers, Sha Qi quickly found his way as an artist. In 1939, his grades in sketching, oil painting and sculpture classes won him a Golden Medal in Fine Arts. He held many solo shows in Brussels, and in 1940 he was showing alongside Pablo Picasso at Atriome. His painting titled “Girl Playing Flute” was purchased by the Royal Family of Belgium in 1942. During these years of study in Europe, Sha’s style developed from academically notable to stylistic, as exhibited in his painting “Studio at Royal Academy of Fine Arts”, one of the first to be accented by expressive brushstrokes that would soon become trademark of his work in Belgium. By the time he moved back to China in 1946, ‘Sad Ji’ was a well known and beloved artist in Europe.  At first Sha went right to work alongside his friend Xu to restore art education in their war-torn country, accepting a high-level position as professor at Beiping Special School of Art (later to grow into the Central Academy of Fine Arts). Unfortunately, he was not able to maintain the position when he fell very ill. It would seem the impact of war and prison, plus the emotional blow of his wife leaving him with their only son, pushed Sha over the edge. He was diagnosed with Schizophrenia, and the disease took a heavy toll on him. When word spread of his illness, Xu and Premier Zhou Enlai, in honor of his contributions to his country, made arrangements for the government to support Sha through a life-time monthly stipend. In a desperate state, with only his elderly mother to care for him, Sha’s ex-wife did eventually return their son, Tianxing, to live with him; and this was a great comfort to Sha in these long years of illness. After his friend, Xu, died in 1953, Sha seemed forgotten by his country and art community at large. Tianxing claims his father never stopped creating art during this time, though; often turning to old newspaper or wood, and using ash from cooking pots as paint. He would mostly hand out these pieces as gifts to neighbors, though anyone receiving his art during this time likely viewed him as nothing more than a madman, and would probably have burned or thrown away such works without understanding the value.  Sha’s old cousin and friend, Sha Menghai, the famed calligrapher, restored some of Sha Qi’s earlier Belgium works which had been donated in 1978 to the Zhejiang Provincial Museum where Menghai held position as Director. Later, Cousin Menghai would organize a major show with these and more of Sha’s works, exhibiting 50 pieces in a solo show (1983) that would travel to Shanghai, Beijing, and Hangzhou, where the China Art Museum would keep 3 paintings. The show served to remind the art world of this forgotten talent, and also gave Sha encouragement to create again.  Sha was invited to join the Shanghai Cultural-Historical Research Society in 1984, and the following year he showed his works throughout China and picked up the brushes again to create a new landscape series. His final works are now recognized as his most successful, “striking for their bold use of colors and the unusual spontaneity of strokes,” artist Yan Shanchun proclaimed.  In the last few years of his life, Sha Qi was too sick to understand that his fame was steadily spreading. When he passed away in 2005, he left behind a large and growing crowd of admirers, students, a loving son, and a sizeable body of work that clearly tells the story of an artist’s changing and maturing approach to a range of subjects as wide as life itself, from portraits to still lifes, animals to landscapes, reflecting all that could imaginably be reflected in art- including high abstraction in his latest works. Though much of his work is now recognized and preserved, we have yet to see what lingering artwork may still be revealed as the provenance of his life’s work continues to come to light, piece by piece. (source: Tobin Reese)We have more lots available exclusively on our website www.rm-auctions.com! Condition reports and high resolution pictures are available on our website at www.rm-auctions.com. Further questions are always welcome at info@rm-auctions.com

Lot 436

David Michuki (Kenyan, 20th-21st Century), Making cooking pots, signed, oil on canvas, 58 x 81 cm

Lot 136

A large 19th century Islamic brass Ramadan Feast 2-handled cooking pan with engraved geometric decoration, circa 1820-1850, diameter 107cm.

Lot 702

Book Selection: The RHS A-Z Encycl. of garden plants, Cecelia Ahern novel, Business, Fashion, cooking, John Paul II, 1979) etc

Lot 225

Various Royal Worcester Evesham pattern cooking and dinnerwares, and various other ceramics (3 boxes)

Lot 801

Copper hanging cooking pan

Lot 175

A 19th Century Congolese, Mangsetu Tribe, Cooking Spoon. Figural Handle Carved as a Scarred Gent. Break to Legs (Glued) 39cm Long

Lot 92

A Victorian Copper Oval Lidded Cooking Pan with Two Carryinng Handles, 42cm Wide

Lot 24

A quantity of Royal Worcester cooking dishes and bowls and seven glass avocado dishes

Lot 1964

A copper cooking pot with a copper lid and gas input and a brass fire screen.

Lot 501

Bronze cooking pot with Cast Iron feet and handles

Lot 279

A teak coffee table, footstool, brass slipper box, copper cooking pot and a newspaper rack

Lot 513

Thirty one Royal Albert Beatrix Potter figures, comprising; Benjamin ate a lettuce leaf, Mrs Rabbit and Peter, Mrs Tiggy Winkle washing, Peter with postbag, Lady Mouse, Peter with daffodils, Peter ate a raddish (x2), Mr Drake Puddleduck, John Joiner, Hunca Munca, No more twist, The old woman who lived in a shoe knitting, Rebeccah Puddleduck, Little Pig Robinson, Cousin Ribby, Ribby and the patty pan (x2), Lady Mouse made a courtsey, Pigling Bland, Goody Tiptoes, Mrs Rabbit, Mrs Rabit Cooking, Squirrel Nutkin, Mrs Ribby,Jemima Puddleduck feather nest, Mrs Tiggywinkle takes tea, Tom Thumb, Timmy Tiptoes, Mr Benjamin Bunny and Tommy Brock, all boxed (31) CONDITION REPORT: No obvious cracks or restoration.

Lot 671

A large brass cooking pot, 19th century with wrought iron handle, 43cm high, 38cm diameter (inc handle) with a further two handled preserve pan, 32.5cm diameter, 21cm high (2)

Lot 672

A collection of 19th century and later copper, brass and other cooking vessels and warmers, to include; a coper saucepan, a swing handled brass cooking pot, an embossed brass jardiniere, a copper vase a copper bed warmer etc (8)

Lot 107

QUANTITY OF VINTAGE COPPER & GALVANISED COOKING POTS

Lot 585

A collection of metalware, to include a brass cooking pot, various tools, wrought iron Arts and Crafts style forks etc.

Lot 50

Cast iron, oval section cooking pot with tin cover and swing handle.(B.P. 24% incl. VAT)

Lot 504

A cooker extraction canopy, together with a basket containing a wok and other cooking utensils

Lot 1831

Copper log bin with brass mounts, a large copper kettle on iron stand, a large copper cooking pot with iron swing handle, copper preserve pan and another log bin with lion mask handles and paw feet

Lot 2012

A box of books including One Pot Cooking, The Footpaths of Britain, etc

Lot 427

A large collection of Wedgwood mottled green oven to table ware including dinner plates, side plates, cooking pots etc (2 trays)

Lot 753

Royal Albery Beatrix potter figures. Mrs Tittlemouse, Little Pig Robinson, Foxy Whiskered gentleman, Lady mouse made a curtsy (2nds) and Mrs Rabbit cooking. All BP6a and boxed. (5)

Lot 193

Copper Cooking Pot - 13” Diameter

Lot 274

Six various unboxed Royal Albert Beatrix Potter figures, to include; Foxy Whiskered Gentleman and Mrs Rabbit cooking; together with an unboxed Royal Albert Beatrix Potter money-box Hunca-Munca (7)

Lot 690

A collection of mixed effects, to include; Trix building kits, iron cooking vessel and cover, various boxed and loose toys, droptrunk wall clock, two puppets etc

Lot 1821

A Victorian copper twin handled oval cooking pot and cover, by W S Adams & Son, 56cm wide; together with a similar twin handled colander; and a swing handled jug.

Lot 1379

•KURT JACKSON (b.1961) 7PM AND THE SMELL OF CHINESE COOKING, PULTENEY BRIDGE Signed and dated XII/ 06, inscribed with title, also signed and dated 2007 on the backboard, gouache 18 x 18.5cm. Exhibited: Bath, Victoria Art Gallery, River Avon Part 1, March-June 2007 ++ Good condition

Lot 52

CHRISTOPHER DRESSER (1834-1904) FOR ELKINGTON & CO., BIRMINGHAM SILVER AND EBONY TWO-PIECE TEA SERVICE,1882 comprising a TEAPOT, of sphere form, with ebony handle, raised on three tapered feet supports, 15cm high; and a MILK JUG, also of sphere form, with ebony handle and raised on three tapered feet supports, 8.5cm high, each with engraved cipher to one side and bearing stamped maker's marks to base FE (Frederick Elkington or Elkington & Co.), and hallmarks for London 1882 (2) Literature: Halén, Widar 'Christopher Dresser: A Pioneer of Modern Design', London, 1993, p. 146 and p. 148, fig. 166 for an illustration of a similar silver teapot dated 1885. Whiteway, Michael 'Christopher Dresser, Skira 2001, p. 162 and p. 171, fig. 206 Exhibition catalogue, 'Truth, Beauty, Power: Dr. Christopher Dresser 1834-1904, New York', Historical Design, 1998, p. 55 Lyons, Harry 'Christopher Dresser: The People's Designer', Woodbridge 2005, p.192, pl. 363. Note: Dresser was associated with Elkington from about 1865-1890, and, apart from the series of famous designs he produced for the firm in the 1880s, was also employed in an advisory capacity with their experiments in Japanese techniques such as cloisonné enamel and Komai Ware. His designs for the firm in the 1880s were inspired by the Japanese teapots and other cooking vessels which he would have admired on his famous trip to Japan in 1876-77 but also the metal wares that were being imported and exhibited in Europe in the 1870s. Dresser reviewed the Japanese section of the Vienna International Exhibition of 1873 and commented that "While the kettle is an object of use in every house in the land, we have to go to Japan to learn how to make one as it should be". The "square kettles and round kettles and polyhydric kettles" will have inspired him and the "breadth of treatment, simplicity of execution, and boldness of design" of the objects which he saw there and in Japan later on are reflected in the simplicity of line and undecorated nature of the famous designs he produced for Elkington's, Hukin & Heath and James Dixon at this time. The present example, shape 16611, is entered as July 1881 in the V&A archive and is identical to the set registered in 1880 by James Dixon of Sheffield (shape 2278).

Lot 141

Cast Pyrex cooking pot with lid

Lot 235

Large cast iron lidded cooking pot

Lot 39

A tray containing a Le Creuset lidded cooking pot, together with one other similar and a Le Creuset oven dish

Lot 237

Quantity of mid 20th century novels including Captain W E Johns, various Biggles novels, Percy F Westerman, Charles Morgan, Vicki Baum, French dictionary, the letters CH through to ESP, books in Italian, French, etc and various other volumes including cooking, Jane's Fighting Ships of 1914, etc (5 boxes)

Lot 330

Four Boxes of Kitchen Wares to Include Cutlery, Cooking Pots, Mixing Bowl, Teapots, Dinner Wares, Radio Etc

Lot 338

Miscellaneous to include gun case, cooking utensils & mirror

Lot 543

A metalware pepper in the form of a miniature cooking pot, a florally engraved metalware scent bottle and a small engraved sleeve and cover (3) CONDITION REPORT: Some dents and wear

Lot 781

A Victorian spherical copper cooking mould

Lot 151

A late 19th century Copper Kettle, the lid with acorn finial, marks to base for Geo. Robbins & Co., Birmingham, the handle marked '10'; 33cmH; a copper tankard, a copper ladle with wrought iron handle; and an early 19th century copper cooking pot; an aspic mould in the shape of a fish; a wrought iron trivet with turned wood handle (6)

Lot 152

A small pewter half pint tankard stamped 'ER 576'; another stamped 1/10 pint; one other ; a small copper jug, cooking pot and kettle, and an early carving fork (9)

Lot 32

Jr Walker & The All Stars, eleven albums including Road Runner, Rainbow Funk, A Gas, Hot Shot, Home Cooking and more - various years and conditions

Lot 318

A box containing plated goblets, vintage stoneware flagons, a lidded cooking pot, a pewter wall plate, etc

Lot 193

Stoneware Jug, Cooking Pots, Pipe Rack, Pot Lids, Glassware, Scales, etc.

Lot 367

Tray of assorted copper to include: large cooking pan; graduated ladles/measures; Art Nouveau design single handled conical jug; stylised fish mould etc.(B.P. 24% incl. VAT)

Lot 281

A COLLECTION OF ALUMINIUM COOKING PANS, LARGE EXAMPLES WITH LIDS, NON-STICK FRYING PANS, INCLUDING MEYER AND JONELLE (9)

Lot 358

Welsh slate cooking range panel

Lot 171

A cooking crock by Copco Denmark green and white enamel finish

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