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Small mixed lot of ceramics to include Lladro figurine, 21 cm (h), Royal Albert Blossom Time teapot and stand with sugar bowl and cream jug, Aynsley, Wedgwood and similar.Condition Report: Teapot and stand are both 2nd quality pieces, teapot has a chip to the rim approximately 6 mm x 6 mm and some loss of gilding, sugar bowl and cream jug are 1st quality pieces, there are a couple of hairline cracks to the jug spout, some staining to the bowl interior and gilding loss to each
A collection of miscellaneous porcelain figurines, including three Royal Crown Derby animal paperweights, two Beswick Beatrix Potter figurines, a miniature Lladro figure of sleeping girl, a German Marquis by Waterford glass dolphin figurine, a pair of Staffordshire dalmatians and two Hummel figures, and a pressed amber spaniel (13)
Star Wars: A collection of assorted boxed Star Wars items to include: Micro Machines Slave I and X-Wing; Revell Chevrolet Monte Carlo, Darth Vader figurine, Episode I CommTalk Reader, Legacy Collection Hoth Speeder Bike Patrol, Elite Series Princess Leia, Episode I Card Game, Invasion of Theed Adventure Game, TIE Fighter 3D Model, AMT X-Wing, and Episode I Theed Hangar, plus five Star Wars comics. Generally appear in good condition, items are mostly sealed. Please assess photograph. (one box)
17th-18th Dynasty, 1580-1290 BC. A wooden shabti figurine with a large wedge-shaped face with the eyes, nose and mouth drawn in black; wearing a single-lappet wig in black detail; tapering body with a short kilt modelled in relief, small feet accentuated in black paint; six horizontal lines of painted hieratic text to the front with a short version of the shabti spell; accompanied by a custom-made display stand. See Manchester Museum, accession number 6038, for a stick-shabti dedicated to Teti-sa-Intef; National Museums Liverpool, accession number M13590, for a female-shaped stick-shabti. Whelan, P., Mere Scraps of Rough Wood? 17th-18th Dynasty Stick Shabtis in the Petrie Museum and other Collections, London, 2007, pp.131-132. 132 grams, 20.8cm (190 grams total, 22.5cm including stand) (8 (9)"). Acquired mainly during the 1950s-1970s. Collection of Hugh Stanley Russell (1924-2000"). Bonhams, London, 20 October 2005, lot 8 (part"). Private collection of Egyptologist Paul Whelan, Hertfordshire, UK. Accompanied by a copy of the relevant Bonhams catalogue pages and a copy of Whelan, P., Mere Scraps of Rough Wood? 17th-18th Dynasty Stick Shabtis in the Petrie Museum and other Collections, London, 2007, where this piece is published on pp.131-132. Unlike most shabtis, stick-shabtis are mainly found buried in open areas of tomb chapels, sometimes wrapped in linen and sometimes deposited in wooden coffins. Despite the crude carving, several of the found figurines seem to have been dedicated to wealthy people. Fine condition, split to centre.
Third Intermediate Period, 1069-702 BC. A bronze figurine of seated Isis wearing a tripartite wig, crown and uraeus, with the infant Horus on her lap; Horus with sidelock of youth; Isis's right hand on her breast preparing to suckle Horus; mounted on a custom-made stand. Cf. Andrews, C., Amulets of Ancient Egypt, London, 1994, item 18a. 215 grams, 10.5cm (4"). Acquired in the late 1990s-early 2000s. Private collection of Dr H.B., a Sussex lady. This lot has been checked against the Interpol Database of stolen works of art and is accompanied by AIAD certificate number no.11123-184256. [A video of this lot is available to view on Timeline Auctions Website.] Fine condition.
15th-16th century AD. An English carved oak figurine of a youthful monk with flowing hair wearing a floor-length tunic, scapula and cowl, standing on a domed base; the left arm bent and hidden in the folds of the sleeve, supporting a basket of fruit; the right arm bent and hand curled into a fist; iron nails to the sides and reverse. 2.6 kg, 51.5cm high (20 1/4"). The Howard Neville Collection of Early Works of Art and Textiles, Bonhams, Knightsbridge, London, 9 December 2009, lot 116 (part"). Property of a West London collector. Accompanied by a Bonhams lot ticket from sale 17771. Fair condition; some loss to rear of base.
New Kingdom, 19th Dynasty, 1292-1189 BC. A blue-glazed composition shabti figurine for prince Khaemwaset wearing a bag wig with the sidelock of a Sem-priest, face detailed in black; wearing an usekh collar, arms crossed at the chest holding flails, seed-bag on the back; a vertical column of hieroglyphic text to the front of the body and legs; accompanied by a custom-made display stand. 178 grams, 15.9cm (814 grams total, 22.7cm including stand) (6 1/4 (9)"). Old Spanish collection. Gallery Drees Archeo, Brussels 2009. Private collection of Egyptologist Paul Whelan, Hertfordshire, UK. Accompanied by a copy of the Gallery Drees Archeo invoice no.3387 with provenance as stated. This lot has been checked against the Interpol Database of stolen works of art and is accompanied by AIAD certificate number no.11067-182418. Khaemwaset was the fourth son of Ramesses II and has been described as the first Egyptologist because of his efforts of restoring monuments of earlier kings and nobles, including the statue of the son of King Khufu, Prince Kawab. He became a Sem-priest of Ptah in Memphis and during his time created an underground gallery for the burial of several Apis bulls, the bull being a sacred animal to god Ptah.[A video of this lot is available to view on Timeline Auctions Website.] Fine condition.
Late Period, 525-332 BC. A pale-blue glazed composition mummiform shabti figurine wearing a tripartite wig and false beard, sharp facial detailing, arms crossed at the chest holding a pick and hoe, seed-bag over the left shoulder, standing against a plain dorsal pillar; a T-shaped incised inscription names the owner as Dwaui-djedef(?); accompanied by a custom-made display stand. 111 grams, 15cm high (273 grams total, 17cm including stand) (6 (6 3/4)"). Gallery Drees Archeo, Brussels 2004. Private collection of Egyptologist Paul Whelan, Hertfordshire, UK. [A video of this lot is available to view on Timeline Auctions Website.] Fine condition.
26th Dynasty, 664-525 BC. A substantial light blue glazed composition shabti figurine belonging to a man named Nes-Ptah, a Sameref-priest and prophet of Isis, born of Tayes-shepset-hert; the mummiform statuette wearing a plain tripartite wig and a braided beard, arms crossed over the chest, holding pick and hoe with a seed bag over the left shoulder, plain dorsal pillar; the body of the figurine covered in ten horizontal lines of hieroglyphic text of a version of Chapter 6, 'spell of causing a shabti to do work for his master in the netherworld' from the Book of the Dead; mounted on a custom-made display stand. See Milde, H., 'Shabtis' in Wendrich, W. (ed.), UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology, Los Angeles, 2012; PN I = Ranke, Hermann, Die Ägyptischen Personennamen, Band I, Glückstadt, 1935; Scheider, H., Shabtis. An Introduction to the History of Ancient Egyptian Funerary Statuettes, Leiden, 1977, Pt.1; Stewart, H.M., Egyptian Shabtis, Shire Egyptology 23, Princes Risborough, 1995. 240 grams total, 20cm including stand (8"). Fernand Adda collection, 1920s. Collection of Mrs Petra Schamelman, Breitenbach, Germany. From the collection of a Kensington gentleman. Accompanied by an academic report by Dr Alberto Maria Pollastrini. A Sameref-priest was linked to the Egyptian funerary rites, especially to the Opening of the Mouth ritual, and to the cult of Osiris and his identification with the god Herishef.[A video of this lot is available to view on Timeline Auctions Website.] Fine condition.
Third Intermediate Period, 22nd Dynasty, 945-720 BC. A green-glazed composition shabti figurine wearing a tripartite wig with seshed fillet painted in black, uraeus on the forehead; arms crossed and holding a flail in each hand, seed-bag on the back; a painted column of hieroglyphs and a cartouche for 'Qedmerut, the Divine Adoratrice of Amun' to the front; accompanied by a custom-made display stand. Cf. Aubert, J.-F. & Aubert, L., Statuettes Egyptiennes. Chaouabtis Ouchebtis, Paris, p.166-167, pl.51, fig.120; The British Museum, museum numbers EA37421 and EA71046; Manchester Museum, accession numbers 4635, 5948 and 9386. Charles Ede Ltd, Small Sculpture from Egypt, catalogue XXII, 1995, no.44. 52.4 grams, 96mm high (61.6 grams total,10.5cm including stand) (3 3/4 (4)"). By repute discovered by W.M.F. Petrie at the Ramesseum in 1898 and given to Sir George Dancer Thane, F.R.C.S.Eng.LL.D., Sc.D., F.Z.S. (1850-1930), Dean of the Medical Faulty, University College London. Bonham's, London, 5th July 1994, lot 478. With Charles Ede, London, UK. Bonham's, London, 30 April 1996, lot 298. Private collection of Egyptologist Paul Whelan, Hertfordshire, UK. Accompanied by copies of the relevant Aubert and Aubert and Egyptian Research Account, 1896, The Ramesseum, pages. Accompanied by copies of the relevant Bonhams catalogue pages. The prominent title 'The Divine Adoratrice of Amun' was for the chief priestess of Amun, who would have maintained the god's cult on behalf of the king, holding great power. Qedmerut's exact chronological position in the line of successors is uncertain but it is likely that she was the successor of Karomama G, based on the typology of her shabti figures. She would have been a high born woman, a daughter or wife of one of the Libyan or Theban priest kings, indicated by the royal uraeus on her forehead. Many of the known examples have the Ramesseum as their provenance, although the queen's tomb is not known. There are specimens in the British Museum, Petrie Museum UCL (2), Oxford, Cambridge, Manchester, Berlin and Leiden Museums. Fine condition.
TWO ROYAL WORCESTER LADY FIGURES AND ANOTHER BY DANBURY MINT, comprising 'With all my Heart', limited edition no.1746 / 12500, with certificate, Anniversary figurine of the year 2001 'A Golden Moment', CW520, with certificate and a Danbury Mint 'The Rose Princess by Lena Lui', with certificate (3 + 3 certificates) (Condition report: all three in good condition)
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55411 item(s)/page