λ A MAHOGANY COLLECTOR'S CABINET OF BRITISH AND WORLD BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS20TH CENTURYwith eight glass topped drawers containing a variety of specimens including: hawk moths, heliconius, Nyctalemon zampa, swallowtails and others63cm high, 48cm wide, 28cm deepProvenanceCollected by Edmund de Rothschild (1916-2009) in the first half of the 20th century and displayed at Exbury House, Hampshire.The Trustees of Exbury House.We are grateful to Simon Moore M.I.Sc.T., A.C.R. from Natural History Conservation for his assistance cataloguing the present work.
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λ A FRENCH ROSEWOOD MANTEL CLOCKBY BERTHET & BAZELAIRE, FIRST HALF 19TH CENTURYthe brass eight day movement with a silk suspension, an outside countwheel and striking on a bell, the backplate inscribed 'Berthet & Bazelaire a Paris', on a silvered dial with black Roman hours and a subsidiary seconds dial inside a gilt guilloche bezel, the rectangular case with fine boxwood line inlay36.7cm high, 21.5cm wide, 15.5cm deep
λ A VICTORIAN OAK WELLINGTON STYLE COLLECTOR'S CABINET OF BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHSMAINLY SOUTH AMERICAN, LATE 19TH CENTURYwith seven glass topped drawers of specimens including Atticus, Saturniidae Loxolomia serpentina, hawk moths, Atlas moths, heliconius, clear-wings, Ageronia Arete, morphos, tajuria, swallowtails and others, some drawers with collecting data112.5cm high, 69.5cm wide, 46.6cm deepProvenanceCollected by Edmund de Rothschild (1916-2009) in the first half of the 20th century and displayed at Exbury House, Hampshire.The Trustees of Exbury House.We are grateful to Simon Moore M.I.Sc.T., A.C.R. from Natural History Conservation for his assistance cataloguing the present work.
λ A MAHOGANY COLLECTOR'S CABINET OF SOUTH AMERICAN AND AFRICAN BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS20TH CENTURYwith a glazed door enclosing fifteen glass topped drawers with a variety of specimens including: swallowtails, heliconius, danaus, clear-wings, crackers, hawk moths, pierids, Bath White, callicore, dynamine, delias, mapwings, graphium and others, some drawers with collecting data102cm high, 56cm wide, 43cm deepProvenanceCollected by Edmund de Rothschild (1916-2009) in the first half of the 20th century and displayed at Exbury House, Hampshire.The Trustees of Exbury House.We are grateful to Simon Moore M.I.Sc.T., A.C.R. from Natural History Conservation for his assistance cataloguing the present work.
λ A MAHOGANY COLLECTOR'S CABINET OF WORLD BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS20TH CENTURYwith a glazed door enclosing fifteen glass topped drawers with a variety of specimens including: swallowtails, morphos, Indian swallowtails, leaf butterfly, Bath whites, Death's Head Hawk, lappet, heliconias, Conepteryx, bird wings, owl butterfly, Atlas moths, monarchs and others, some drawers with collecting data102.3cm high, 55cm wide, 42cm deepProvenanceCollected by Edmund de Rothschild (1916-2009) in the first half of the 20th century and displayed at Exbury House, Hampshire.The Trustees of Exbury House.We are grateful to Simon Moore M.I.Sc.T., A.C.R. from Natural History Conservation for his assistance cataloguing the present work.
λ A PINE COLLECTOR'S CABINET OF BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHSMAINLY BRITISH, 20TH CENTURYthe glazed door enclosing ten glass topped drawers with a variety of specimens including: five spot burnet, hawks head moths including Death's Head, hummingbird, lesser elephant and pine, Clifden nonpareil, cream spot tiger, virgin tiger moth, black veined white butterflies, wood white, Bath white, clouded yellow, small copper, apollo, tiger swallowtail, comma and others70.5cm high, 49.5cm wide, 31.7cm deepProvenanceCollected by Edmund de Rothschild (1916-2009) in the first half of the 20th century and displayed at Exbury House, Hampshire.The Trustees of Exbury House.We are grateful to Simon Moore M.I.Sc.T., A.C.R. from Natural History Conservation for his assistance cataloguing the present work.
λ NINE FOLDING ENTYMOLOGY CASES20TH CENTURYcontaining a variety of specimens of moths and butterflies including: hawk moths, Spanish moon moth, swallowtails, five bar swordtail, owl butterfly and other specimens, together with another entymology box and four frames of mounted butterflies including Atticus Atlas, Black Kaiser and others (14)ProvenanceCollected by Edmund de Rothschild (1916-2009) in the first half of the 20th century and displayed at Exbury House, Hampshire.The Trustees of Exbury House.We are grateful to Simon Moore M.I.Sc.T., A.C.R. from Natural History Conservation for his assistance cataloguing the present work.
λ A MAHOGANY COLLECTOR'S CABINET OF WORLD BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHS20TH CENTURYthe glazed door enclosing fifteen glass topped drawers with a variety of specimens including: green bird wings, swallowtails, fritillaries, hawk moths, damselflies, Cleopatra, Arhopala Hercules and others, some drawers with collecting data103.5cm high, 55.3cm wide, 42cm deepProvenanceCollected by Edmund de Rothschild (1916-2009) in the first half of the 20th century and displayed at Exbury House, Hampshire.The Trustees of Exbury House.We are grateful to Simon Moore M.I.Sc.T., A.C.R. from Natural History Conservation for his assistance cataloguing the present work.
λ SIX BOX FRAMES OF WORLD BUTTERFLIES AND MOTHSincluding: swallowtails, heliconius, leaf butterflies, Paris peacock, Purple Emperor, marbled and Bath whites, Camberwell Beauty, Large Blue, Composia Credula, Large Copper, Apollo, Monarch, large Tortoiseshell, Cleopatra and others, with gilt slips and ebonised moulded frames (6)46 x 170.5cm (max)ProvenanceCollected by Edmund de Rothschild (1916-2009) in the first half of the 20th century and displayed at Exbury House, Hampshire.The Trustees of Exbury House.We are grateful to Simon Moore M.I.Sc.T., A.C.R. from Natural History Conservation for his assistance cataloguing the present work.
⊕ Hugh Cronyn (lots 186-193)IntroductionYoung, impressionable and fresh from Toronto where he had studied with the Group of Seven painter Frank Johnston, Cronyn departed Canada with an irrepressible can-do New World outlook. His unpublished memoirs recount his pre-war years: his time at the Arts Students League in New York in 1929; the early 1930s in Paris tutored by Jean Despujols and André Lhote; bicycling across the Alps; and on his arrival in England his immersion into bohemian life in West London. From the mid-thirties he rented various studios by the Thames in Hammersmith and met many of the leading artists and writers of the day. One such was Ivon Hitchens, whose second solo exhibition at the Lefevre Gallery he helped hang. But most influential in his circle of friends was the critic, humourist and politician A P Herbert ('APH') and his wife Gwen, herself a painter and stage-designer of note. At their home at 12 Hammersmith Terrace, Cronyn met the likes of Edward Wadsworth, Mark Gertler, Leon Underwood and John Piper. Ceri Richards lived nearby, as did poets Robert Graves and Laura Riding in St Peter’s Square. He went on painting trips to Dorset with Julian Trevelyan, his neighbour at Durham Wharf, and to the French-Spanish border with Ray Coxon and Edna Ginese at the time of the Spanish Civil War. After the outbreak of the Second World War, Cronyn was commissioned into the Royal Navy. Put in charge of the Naval bomb disposal squad in Bristol dockyards, he was the first Canadian to be awarded the George Medal (GM). In 1942 he married Jean Harris and settled in Suffolk where from 1949-69 he was tutor of painting at Colchester School of Art teaching alongside John Nash, Edward Bawden, Carel Weight and Peter Coker. From 1963 the Cronyns began to spend their summers in Quercy in the Lot, first renting a 15th century gatehouse and studio, then a small house, Les Vergers, before buying a dilapidated farmhouse in 1970 in Caufour which they renovated. From 1974 the Cronyns spent the winter months in 3 St Peter’s Wharf, next door to Hammersmith Terrace, in one of the artists’ studios overlooking the Thames constructed by Julian Trevelyan. Cronyn's late paintings of the river, which capture the spectrum of colours as the seasons changed, document the river’s moods from winter mists to intense summer sun, and hang in many private collections.HUGH CRONYN (BRITISH 1905-1996)ROAD OVER THE CAUSSE, QUERCYsigned HUGH CRONYN lower right; dated 1978 on a Highgate Fine Art label on the reverseoil on canvas51 x 76cm; 20 1/4 x 30in63 x 89cm; 24 3/4 x 35in (framed)Quercy - a former province in south west France - lies between lush valleys in the Lot. Causses are flat limestone plateaus that are a feature of the area. The present view follows the track to the towers of the Chateau de Charry, Montcuq which can be seen in the distance (see also lot 193).
⊕ GEORGE MAYER-MARTON (lots 1-11) His appearance, accent and manner spoke of a lost and to us largely unknown Mitteleuropa. Always meticulously dressed in a suit and wearing a hat and polished shoes, he would arrive in the college with his leather briefcase and don his professional white coat. Introduction In Their Safe Haven', Hungarian artists in Britain from the 1930s, compiled and edited by Robert Waterhouse, the story of George Mayer-Marton's bleak story of dispossession is graphically pieced together from the artist's diaries and via first hand accounts. Born in Gyor, North Hungary, the artist's formative years had largely been spent in Austria or Germany. During the First World War he had served on the front line in the Austrian army, and - leading up to the Anschluss - he lived in Vienna, happily married and, as vice-president of the Hagenbund, he was a leading voice among contemporary artists. But with Hitler's annexation of the country at the end of September 1938 together with Grete his wife he fled Vienna for London. Mayer-Marton's diaries evoke with withering honesty the reception he received and his despairing sense of dislocation: 'For the moment, London spells turmoil, noise, rows of double decker buses and a language one doesn't understand... We observe the English art of 'splendid isolation', their culture of bureaucratic niceties, good manners and cold souls; their complete consideration for others out of consideration for their own piece and quiet.' (Waterhouse, p. 74). Eventually the couple set up home and a studio in St John's Wood, only for the premises to be hit by an incendiary bomb in 1940 during the Blitz. In the ensuing fire Mayer-Marton lost the vast majority of the work he had brought with him. At the end of the War he learnt of the murder of his and Grete's parents together with his brother in the Holocaust. Grete's death in a psychiatric hospital in Epsom in 1952 followed, a consequnce of her inability to recover either from her forced exile or the subsequent destruction of their London home. Yet, despite such a succession of tragedies, Mayer-Marton was resolutely determined. He strove to replace the works lost in the London bombing, not simply with copies but because he felt challenged by the very different light and landscape of the British countryside, his lightness of touch and deftness of colour abundantly apparent in the present selection of works. He was also appointed a senior lecturer at Liverpool College of Art, a post in which he flourished. His Liverpool students recalled Mayer-Marton's innovative approach to teaching. He introduced weekly 'Socratic method' seminars, challenging students with rhetorical questions ranging from 'Kant's moral imperative to Schopenhauer's aesthetic theory, the scientific ideas of Einstein, concepts of the primitive in art, abstraction, expressionism, the medieval guilds and so on... these seminars were a decade before the history and theory of art were incorporated into art school curricula in the 1960s' (Waterhouse, pp. 212-213). In Liverpool he also introduced new technical know-how, in particular fresco painting and the re-introduction of Byzantine-style mosaic practices. These he deployed in a series of large scale ecclesiastical commissions in the north-west, including the large Crucifixion mural at the former church of the Holy Rosary, Oldham (1955), Pentecost now in Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral, and the Crowning of St Clare at St Clare's Church, Blackley. GEORGE MAYER-MARTON (HUNGARIAN 1897-1960) VIEW OF CONCARNEAU signed Gmayermarton lower right watercolour and wash on paper 52.5 x 36.5cm; 20 3/4 x 14 1/2in 79.5 x 67cm; 31 1/4 x 26 1/2 (framed) Mayer-Marton visited Concarneau, Brittany in 1950 and 1951. Held behind glass, not examined out of frame. This work appears in very good original condition, colours fresh and vibrant.
⊕ Property from the Marie-Louise von Motesiczky Charitable Trust (lots 12-44) Introduction Marie-Louise von Motesiczky (1906-1996) grew up in Vienna, but when Austria was annexed by Germany in 1938 she and her mother fled via Holland to England where she lived and painted until she died in her ninetieth year. A seminal influence on her work was Max Beckmann (1884-1950) whom she met in 1920. She recalled: ‘A winged creature from Mars could not have made a greater impact on me’ and they remained in regular contact until the end of his life. Beckmann visited her in Paris, she attended his master classes in Frankfurt 1927-28 and they stayed in contact as far as possible during his exile in Holland from 1937-47, travelling to visit him and his wife ‘Quappi’ before they left for the United States. Marie-Louise had been born into a cultured Jewish banking dynasty. Her maternal grandfather, Leopold von Lieben, was President of the Stock Exchange in Vienna, she counted the Todescos, and Ephrussis among her family circle, and her grandmother Anna was one of Freud’s early patients. Over time the family was stricken by tragedy and financial and political turmoil. Marie-Louise’s father died in a hunting accident in 1909, her mother’s income was reduced during the post First World War by high taxation and the failure of the family bank in 1932, and the Anschluss on 13 March 1938 impelled her to leave Vienna immediately with her mother. Her brother Karl did not do so, mistakenly thinking he could continue his studies and look after the family property. He was arrested in October 1942 for aiding Jewish refugees and deported to Auschwitz, dying of typhus on 25 June 1943. In London Marie-Louise reconnected with Oskar Kokoschka (1886-1980), a family friend from Vienna now similarly in exile. Kokoschka arranged for her work to be exhibited in London, including a show at the Czechoslovak Institute in 1944. It was in Britain that she found her own ‘voice’ as an artist, living in Amersham during the war years, then a rented flat in West Hampstead and finally a large house on Chesterford Gardens in Hampstead. Another figure central to her life for nearly thirty years was the Nobel prize-winning writer Elias Canetti (1905-94), who is commemorated on the plaque dedicated to the two of them at the house in Chesterford Gardens. But starting afresh in Britain proved challenging for Marie-Louise, and it was not until 1960 that she had a second solo show at the Beaux Arts Gallery. In contrast, on the Continent her work was exhibited in Amsterdam and The Hague in 1952, a canvas being purchased by the Stedelijk Museum; she showed in Munich (1954) and Düsseldorf (1955), and in the 1960s she enjoyed further shows in both Austria and Germany. Then, in 1985, her work was exhibited again in London at the Goethe-Institut. The catalogue included contributions by Tate curator Richard Calvocoressi, Gunther Busch, former director of the Kunsthalle in Bremen, and the renowned cultural historian and fellow émigré Sir Ernst Gombrich. The exhibition re-ignited interest in her work, and in the years that followed her work was shown across Europe. A centenary exhibition travelled from Britain to Germany and Austria in 2006-7, her biography written by Jill Lloyd was published in 2007, followed in 2009 by a catalogue raisonné compiled by Ines Schlenker. In 2019 the ‘Marie-Louise von Motesiczky Archive Gallery’ was inaugurated at Tate Britain where the archive of her papers, photographs and the bulk of her drawings and sketchbooks are held and fully catalogued online. Her work is now in the collections of national, regional, local and university museums in Britain, Ireland, Austria, Germany, Netherlands and the United States. A major self-portrait of 1959 is on display at the National Portrait Gallery in London, following its reopening in June 2023. Literature Reference: the full reference for Schlenker, abbreviated in lots 12-43, is: Ines Schlenker, Marie-Louise von Motesiczky, A Catalogue Raisonné of the Oil Paintings, London, 2009. The Marie-Louise von Motesiczky Charitable Trust, is a company limited by guarantee registered in England and Wales (no. 7572024) and a registered charity (no. 1140890): www.motesiczky.org. The copyright for Marie-Louise von Motesiczky’s paintings, drawings and correspondence or other written work originating from her, her mother Henriette and brother Karl, lies with the Marie-Louise von Motesiczky Charitable Trust. MARIE-LOUISE VON MOTESICZKY (AUSTRIAN-BRITISH 1906-1996) SELF-PORTRAIT watercolour and pastel on paper 11 x 16cm; 4 1/4 x 6 1/4in 31 x 39cm; 12 1/4 x 15 1/4in (framed)
⊕ Trevor Bell (lots 107-114) One of the most important painters working anywhere today is Trevor Bell, and Bell’s first experiments in what we now call shaped canvases began in the late fifties. Patrick Heron, 1970IntroductionBell grew up in Leeds, where he studied at the College of Art (1947-1952) before teaching at Harrogate College of Art. In Leeds he met Terry Frost who was up from St Ives benefiting from a Gregory Fellowship at the university. On Frost's advice Bell and his wife moved to Cornwall in 1955. There Bell became a leading member of the younger generation of St Ives artists, exhibiting with the Penwith Society of Arts from 1956. Used to painting the grimey north of England, Bell responded with vigour and alacrity to the colour and light of his new surroundings capturing the atmosphere of the sea, coast and landscape of the south west in his distinctive and developing abstraction. An early mentor in St Ives for Bell was Ben Nicholson who encouraged him to show in London. Another there who admired his youthful painterly zest was Patrick Heron. Bell's first one man show at Waddington Galleries on Cork Street in 1958 was a sell out success. In the catalogue Heron described him as 'The best non-figurative painter under thirty'. The same year Bell was awarded an Italian government sponsorship; in 1959 he won one of six main painting prizes at the first Paris International Biennale of Young Artists and in 1960 he was awarded a Gregory Fellowship by Leeds University, and moved back north. During the following decade Bell enjoyed considerable commercial success both in the UK and abroad, including a succession of exhibitions at Waddington Galleries (1960, 1962 & 1964). It was during this period that he developed his interest in shaped canvases and the Tate Gallery purchased their first work by him. The decade culminated in a hugely successful show at the Richard Demarco Gallery in Edinburgh which toured to Northern Ireland and the Mappin Art Gallery, Sheffield. In the autumn of 1973 the Whitechapel Art Gallery mounted an exhibition of his recent paintings, and the following year he showed at the Corcoran Gallery, Washington DC. In 1976 Bell moved to Florida to take up the post of Professor for Master Painting at Florida State University in Tallahassee. Availed of a warehouse-sized studio and with time to really develop his painting he produced large-scale, intensely coloured works, reflecting the influence of the climate and landscape on him. A source of inspiration too were the rockets launched from Cape Canaveral, the first he saw being the night time launch of Apollo 17 in December 1972. This and subsequent rocket shots had a lasting influence on his work. Over the 20 years he spent in America exhibitions of his work were mounted at the Academy of Sciences in Washington, the Metropolitan Museum and Art Center, Miami, The Cummer Gallery, Jacksonville and the Museum of Art at Fort Lauderdale, Florida.In 1985 Bell was included in the the Tate Gallery's exhibition on St Ives 1939-64: Twenty-five years of Painting, Sculpture and Pottery and his work was featured in the Tate St Ives' inaugural show in 1993. Retiring from his Florida teaching post in 1996, he returned to Cornwall, setting up studios near Penzance. He was the subject of a full retrospective of his work at Tate St Ives in 2004 and in 2011 a further fourteen works were acquired by the Tate Gallery for their permanent collection. In the UK other examples of his work are in collections of The Arts Council of England, the British Council, the British Museum, Laing Art Gallery and the Victoria & Albert Museum.TREVOR BELL (BRITISH 1930-2017)TWOacrylic on canvas laid on panel and styrafoam56 x 58cm; 22 x 23inunframedPainted in 1967.
⊕ James Hull (Lots 95-106) Introduction Hull aptly summed up his work as ‘a tension of objects in space’. And at his solo ‘come-back’ exhibition at Adrienne Resnick Gallery in 1989 Resnick described him as ‘a giant, both physically and as an artist’. Hull’s reputation flourished in the 1950s, when he established himself as one of the leading abstract painters of the post-War years in Britain. His first one-man exhibition was at the Brook Street Gallery in 1949 where Herbert Read gave the opening address. In 1951 he designed a mural for the Dome of Discovery at the Festival of Britain and started showing regularly with Gimpel Fils (1951-56). Elsewhere in London he exhibited with the Redfern Gallery and at the ICA and took part in the renowned This is Tomorrow exhibition at the Whitechapel Art Gallery in 1956; the same year Gimpel held a joint exhibition of Hull and Roger Hilton’s work. Abroad he showed with Galerie de France, Paris, Passedoit Gallery, New York (together with Peter Lanyon and William Gear), and at the Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh. But in 1960 Hull turned his back on painting full time after winning a competition to design the interior of the Daily Mirror building. He spent the next ten years as a full-time design consultant for the International Publishing Corporation (IPC), before moving with his family to Ibiza where he designed jewellery. After the death of his daughter in a car accident in the early 1970s he left to embark on a solo travel odyssey. Over the next few years he held down a variety of jobs, including as a consultant designer for NASA’s space shuttle building in the USA. Returning to London in 1980 he took up painting once more. It took him a few years to re-establish himself, but by the end of the decade his work was starting to get traction once again, first at the Strickland Gallery in 1986, and then with Adrienne Resnick Gallery and Whitford & Hughes in 1989. His death a year later was all too premature. JAMES HULL (BRITISH 1921-1990)COMPOSITION IX 88signed and dated HULL IX 88 upper leftgouache, pastel and pencil on paper50 x 73cm; 19 3/4 x 28 3/4in64.5 x 88cm; 25 1/2 x 34 3/4in (framed)
⊕Edmond Xavier Kapp (lots 83-94) Oh to be silent! Oh to be a painter! Oh (in short) to be Mr. Kapp (Virginia Woolf) Introduction Widely remembered for his portraiture, in particular his distinctive form of character types (he did not like his work to be describe as caricature), Kapp was a highly versatile artist with an enquiring mind and a love of music. Appreciated in his lifetime also for his poetry and his evolving interest in abstraction, he aspired to write, mixed with the leading artists of the day and attracted the attention of critics and the cognoscenti. The following eight lots from his estate capture the singularity of his artistic vision and his constant thirst for innovation. Born in Islington, London, the son of Jewish-German parents, Kapp studied in Berlin, Paris and Cambridge, where he had his first exhibition, wrote for Granta and the Cambridge Magazine and attracted the attention of Max Beerbohm. While a 2nd Lieutenant with the Royal Sussex Regiment in the First World War, he sketched portraits of his fellow soldiers to amuse them in the trenches, including the young poet Edmund Blunden, and crossed paths with William Rothenstein at Amiens, a meeting Rothenstein recalls in his autobiography Men and Memories. After the Armistice Kapp held his first one man exhibition at the Little Art Rooms, Adelphi, London, the catalogue introduction written by Beerbohm. Commissions followed, together with the publication of his first book: Personalities published in 1919 and reviewed by Virgina Woolf in her essay Pictures and Portraits. Prominent figures who featured in his early work included Edwin Elgar, Percy Wyndham Lewis and Richard Strauss. Later, after the War, subjects ranged from Albert Einstein (1923) to the Duke of Windsor, the future King Edward VIII (1932); of leading personalities in the arts he captured the characters of Aldous Huxley and Noël Coward. Kapp typically rejected supplying caricatures to newspapers, preferring to choose his own subjects. But he did take on commissions, such as his series Ten Great Lawyers published in 1924 in the Law Society Journal. And his work appeared in a wide variety of periodicals, most notably Time and Tide, output that resulted in the publication of further volumes of his collected portraits, and an exhibition of his work at The Leicester Galleries, the leading contemporary gallery in London of the day. In 1922 Kapp married Yvonne Meyer, journalist, photographer, translator and writer, now best known for her biography of Eleanor Marx. On their honeymoon the young couple visited Beerbohm in Rapallo and settled the following year in Rome where Kapp studied at Sigmund Lipinsky’s art school and under Antonio Sciortino at the British Academy. There too he met the American painter Maurice Sterne who encouraged him to paint in oil. Kapp also developed his interest in lithography as a means to sell limited editions of his more well-known sitters. It led in 1935 to a commission for portraits of twenty-five delegates to the League of Nations in Geneva. Publication of the series brought him to the attention of Pablo Picasso, and the beginning of a close friendship between the two artists. Kapp captured Picasso’s profile in a sketch of him in his studio at 23 Rue La Boetie, Paris in 1938, purportedly the only likeness for which Picasso agreed to sit (collection of the Victoria & Albert Museum). And there are relaxed and informal photos of Picasso in bathing trunks snapped by Kapp in 1948 outside the restaurant Chez Nounou and the Hotel de la Mer in Golfe Juan when holidaying with Picasso in the South of France. During the Second World War Kapp was an Official War Artist; after the War he worked as an Official Artist to UNESCO. He kept a studio at 2 Steeles Studios, Haverstock Hill in Hampstead, North London and in Beausoleil, near Monaco in the Alpes Maritimes, and explored abstraction (lots 91-94). STILL-LIFE OF FLOWERS IN A BLUE AND WHITE JUGoil on canvas59.5 x 49.5cm; 23 1/2 x 19.5in67 x 57cm; 26 1/2 x 22 1/2in (framed)
⊕ MICHAEL FORSTER (lots 135-145)It is the energy that reaches you first… The painter is prodigal; he squeezes the paint out of the tube; like sap it drips and runs and seems to follow its own impetuous course...IntroductionBorn in Calcutta, schooled at Lancing College, Sussex, a student at Central School of Art and Design, London and Académie Colarossi, Paris, Forster emigrated to Canada in his early twenties. In Toronto he found piecemeal work as an illustrator and window display designer. In 1936 he travelled first to New York and then west to Los Angeles where he was taken on as a set designer for Selznick International Pictures. On his return to Toronto in 1938 he met the young painter and critic Paul Duval (1922-2018) who became a lifelong friend, and also the collector Douglas Duncan (1902-1968). Duncan formed the Picture Loan Society with other collector friends, and mounted exhibitions of contemporary art. Forster’s first solo show with Duncan was in 1941. Further exhibitions followed. The following year he was invited to show with the Canadian Group of Painters, the successors to the Group of Seven. And in 1943 his work was included in Four Canadian Artists at the Art Gallery of Toronto, together with three other leading non-objective painters. Forster’s style at the time was abstract but with strong surrealist landscape elements and contorted figural forms, his work in part stimulated by a major display of Surrealist work in Toronto in 1938 organized by Herbert Read and Roland Penrose, and subsequently in response to the torment of the Second World War which Canada entered in 1939. In 1943 Forster became a Canadian War Artist, first stationed on a merchant marine ship out of Halifax plying its trade in the West Indies. He was subsequently based on the Isle of Wight accompanying submarine patrols in the Atlantic. A large exhibition of his and other official War Artists was held at the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa in spring 1946. After the War his interest in abstraction was increasingly fuelled by the ideas of automatism and free gesture expounded by André Breton. Newly married to Adele (née Davis), whom he had met in Ottawa, the couple moved to Montreal where he wrote a contemporary art column for the newspaper The Standard. In 1951 his increasingly experimental work was included in two shows at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts. The following year he was also the subject of a joint exhibition there with Louis Muhlstock (1904-2001). Critic Jonathan Ayre wrote enthusiastically of Forster at the time: ‘It is the energy that reaches you first… The painter is prodigal; he squeezes the paint out of the tube; like sap it drips and runs and seems to follow its own impetuous course; the forms seem to run riot like tropic vegetation. But they are always under control; the structure is there.’ (Dennis Read, ‘Michael Forster, Canadian Artist’ in Michael Forster, exhib. cat, Messum’s London, 2013, n.p.). For the next ten years Forster and Adele lived in Mexico, which had become a popular destination for Canadian artists. The couple settled first in San Miguel de Allende, and then in Mexico City. His work was very well received, he befriended the Mexican painter Rufino Tamayo (1899-1991), had a show with Galeria Proteo in Mexico City in 1954, and was given a prestigious solo exhibition of eighty of his works at the Museo Nacional de Arte Moderno, Mexico City in 1960. But despite Forster’s burgeoning critical success there the couple returned to Canada in 1963. Settling in Ottawa, Forster picked up where he had left off, reconnecting with collector Douglas Duncan and art critic Paul Duval, and becoming the subject of a rolling series of exhibitions in Ottawa, Toronto, Hamilton and Buffalo, New York State, and Oakville Ontario. He also had his first show in London in 1973 at the Upper Street Gallery. Tragically Adele died from cancer in 1974, and a year later Forster left Canada for England where he settled in Treen, Cornwall with his recently widowed sister. He continued to paint with his customary energy and intelligence for the next twenty-five years. He sent work back to Canada for a series series of exhibitions, including in Hamilton (1977),Oshawa (1993), Toronto (1996, 1998, 2001, 2002, 2009, 2011 & 2013). He also showed with Galerie d’Art Déclic in Luxembourg, and was represented in the UK by Messum’s on London's Cork Street. In 1993 he married again, to Gloria Ochitwa, a longtime friend from Canada. MICHAEL FORSTER (BRITISH 1907-2002)LANDSCAPEsigned with initial and dated 1978 lower left; signed Michael Forster, numbered 149L and with the artist's estate stamp on the reverse acrylic on board 54.5 x 72cm; 21 1/2 x 28 1/4in66 x 83.5cm; 26 x 33in (framed)Floating in the frame. Stuck to the backboard at all four corners. Strong impasto; in very good original condition.
⊕ Bernard Myers (lots 139-158) Work and travel in the Middle East and India introduced me to a world of colour. Under the influence of Islamic tiles and textiles, and Indian and Tibetan painting I set out to teach myself colour. My work at this time was mainly abstract and loosely based on astronomical and optical diagrams. Gradually I turned to realism via still life, working very precisely... (Bernard Myers) Introduction Trained as a gunner in the RAF during the Second World War, Bernard Myers studied at St Martin’s School of Art, Camberwell and the Royal College of Art. Fellow students included John Bratby and Jack Smith, Frank Auerbach and Leon Kossoff. After graduating ARCA in 1954, Myers taught, variously at Camberwell, Hammersmith and Ealing art schools, and was senior lecturer in drawing at the Architectural Association School. He returned to the RCA to teach for the following two decades, punctuated in 1968 and 1971 by stints as Visiting Professor at the Indian Institute of technology, New Delhi. His final teaching post was as Chair of Design Technology at Brunel University (1979-85). Students at the RCA treasured Myers’ good advice. James Dyson remembered him as ‘cheerful, irrepressible [and] rather dapper… with a tweed suit and bowtie…’ But as well as being upbeat Myers was also appreciated for his considerable range of mind and intellect. On being made a Fellow, in his welcome speech the Dean noted that Myers ‘…must without doubt be the most versatile graduate ever to emerge from the Painting School. Since joining the College in 1961 he has been, by virtue of an encyclopaedic knowledge which comfortably bestrides the boundaries between the humane and the technological, and of his superlative gifts as a teacher, in demand by virtually every School and Department within the College…’ The plus side for Myers was that teaching left him free to practise his own art exactly as he wished. As he noted: ‘Some artists find that teaching interferes with their work. I find it clarifies my work.’ Indeed, he had an unstoppable compulsion to paint, incessantly exploring a wide range of subject matter, in particular the landscapes he encountered on his varied travels (lots 209-213), the still-lifes he worked on in his studio (lots 194,197,,200 & 203), the nudes he painted in weekly life-classes (195, 198, 201, 204), and his not infrequent forays into abstraction, precipitated in part by his fascination with space (lots 196, 199, 202, 205). He married Pamela Fildes, grand-daughter of the painter Sir Luke Fildes in the early 1950s; they lived first in Windsor and then in Kensington before moving in 1974 into one of the studios overlooking the Thames at St Peter’s Wharf, purpose built by Julian Trevelyan, next to Hammersmith Terrace (lots 206-208). He had several one-man shows in the West End, the first at the New Art Centre in 1969; his last with Austin Desmond Fine Art in 1991. He wrote two books on Goya, others on the history of sculpture and How to Look at Art, and co-edited The Macmillan Encyclopedia of Art (1979). He also penned articles for The Artist (May 1988) on his highly original approach to pastel (lots 139-142 & 147-150), and Artists and Illustrators (1995) on his Venice views (lot 209).STILL LIFE WITH FLOWERS AND PEARS ON A PLATTER signed B Myers lower right; inscribed New Grafton 7 upper left margin oil pastel on paper 52.5 x 72cm; 20 3/4 x 28 1/4in (image) unframed In good original condition.
Sir William Rothenstein (lot 76) and Albert Rutherston (lots 77-82)IntroductionRaised in Bradford as two of six children of Jewish immigrants, William and Albert both achieved considerable influence at the very heart of the British art establishment. Amongst their many and remarkable strengths they were painters, printmakers, illustrators, teachers, administrators, gallerists and, in William’s case, an accomplished and prolific writer. William was the first to move south to study under Alphonse Legros at the Slade (1888-89) before attending the Académie Julian in Paris (1889-1893), where he was encouraged by Whistler, Degas and Toulouse-Lautrec and befriended Rodin. Albert followed him a decade later to the Slade, where by then Fred Brown was professor, assisted by Henry Tonks, Philip Wilson Steer and Walter Russell. The youngest student by far, Albert fell in with a gilded set of like-minded spirits, in particular Augustus John and William Orpen. The young trio was dubbed by William ‘The Three Musketeers’. Albert went on to win separate prizes for both drawing and painting and was awarded a Slade scholarship. On his return from France William established himself as a talented portraitist illustrating Oxford Characters in 1896 with twenty-four lithographs. It was one of several collections of portraits depicting men and women of distinction that William would produce. In 1900 William’s painting The Dolls House (after Ibsen’s eponymous play), won a silver medal at the Exposition Universelle in Paris, the same year as his book on Goya was published. Such foreboding influences, however, contrasted with the many happy and light-filled works he produced following his marriage to Alice Knewstub in 1899. For Albert and his fellow ‘Musketeers’ the new century heralded trips to France. There he met Walter Sickert and shared holidays with William, Spencer Gore and Slade teacher Walter Russell. In London Albert thrived on Fitzroy Street and exhibited with William, Sickert, Gore, Russell and Harold Gilman. Sickert recalled their efforts ‘to create a Salon d’automne milieu in London’. Towards the end of the 1910s Albert turned increasingly to decorative designs. In 1911 he collaborated with Roger Fry on large scale murals for Borough Polytechnic and worked on a number of designs for the ballet and theatre. He changed his name to Rutherston in 1916. After the War he married Marjory Holman, taught at Camberwell School of Art, and the Oxford School of Drawing, Painting and Design, and was appointed Master of the Ruskin School of Art (1929-49). A late but important influence in his life was the young model Patricia Koring whom he met in 1938. From the First World War on William’s work revolved around painting, teaching and writing. During 1917-18 he spent six months as an official War artist at the Front (lot 76), and was briefly visiting Professor of Civic Art at Sheffield University. In 1920 he became Principal of the Royal College of Art in London and was knighted in 1931. As well as Goya, among William’s publications were three fascinating volumes of memoirs. William’s sons carved out their own influential paths in the Arts. John (1901-92) his eldest, became director of the Tate Gallery (1938-1964), wrote Modern British Painters (1956) and was knighted in 1952. Michael (1908-1993) became a highly accomplished painter and print maker.SIR WILLIAM ROTHENSTEIN (BRITISH 1872-1945)THE CHURCH OF ST GERY, HAVRINCOURTtitled Havrincourt Church lower left and numbered 29 lower right oil pastel over pencil on paper52 x 36cm; 20 1/2 x 14 1/4in85.5 x 63.5cm; 33 3/4 x 25in (framed)Havrincourt was on the battle front during the First World War. By November 1917 the German ‘Hindenburg Line’ crossed through it, and the village was part of the opening phase of the Battle of Cambrai at the end of the month. The second battle at Havrincourt opened in mid-September 1918, and marked the beginning of the German retreat back to the Belgian-French border. The vast majority of the village was destroyed in the conflict, but much was rebuilt following the Armistice, including the church of St Géry. Rothenstein worked alongside Eric Kennington (1888-1960) as a War Artist, recording in his memoires how 'We worked at Cambrai, Bourlon, Moeuvres, Havrincourt, Lesquières - everywhere the fantastic shapes and colours of ruined houses and shell-shocked trees provided a constant stimulus... No work has ever satisfied me so completely as that which I undertook while acting as a British, and later, as a Canadian, Official Artist. (William Rothenstein, Men and Memories, London, 1932, vol. II, p. 361).
⊕DAVID BATES (lots 170-177)IntroductionBates enrolled as a student at the Royal College of Art in 1950, where he railed with his tutor Francis Bacon and also the young art critic David Sylvester about the rise of abstraction, arguing vehemently for realism and naturalism. Sylvester was disparaging of the so called 'Kitchen Sink School' to which he all too readily consigned Bates, and was especially critical of Bates' fellow student and friend John Bratby. But Bates was not to be dissuaded. He joined the Communist Party, and his strongly held socialist convictions led him later both to campaign for nuclear disarmament and to march in protest against the war in Vietnam. His subject matter in the 1950s reflected his political views and his interest in the worker in society: in London he made studies of workers removing tram lines and emblematic studies of industrial objects such as a cement mixer. Later he would celebrate the working man in his powerful portrait of Billy Griffiths, a plumber in Preston (lot 174). At the RCA he met fellow art student June Moss, his wife to be. The couple were married in Nottingham in 1957 where Bates was teaching at Boots College (lots 171 & 177). They first moved together to Yeovil, then In 1961 they took their burgeoning family to Preston where Bates became senior lecturer in painting at Harris School of Art. They remained there until the late 1970s, by the end of which the couple were running non-vocational art courses, and Bates was directing the Preston Arts Centre, overseeing a diverse programme of music, film, art and events. In 1978 he took early retirement and he and June moved further north to live and work at Newbiggin Hall, Carlisle.Bates was born in China, the son of a Methodist mIssionary and headmaster. But with the rise of the Kuomintang (the Chinese Nationalist Party) his parents were forced to leave, returning with their young family to England in 1931. Over the next two decades the family relocated regularly. They first lived briefly in Birmingham, then moved to Penzance, and subsequently to Nottingham before settling in Stockport in 1940, where Bates attended Stockport Polytechnic, and Bristol in 1945, where he enrolled in the West of England College of Art. In the late 1940s the family moved to Millom, South Cumbria where Bates began recording the heavy industry of the area (lot 173), before starting his studies at the Royal College of Art in London. Then, in 1951 the family upped-sticks once again and moved to Stoke-on-Trent where he drew and painted the potteries (lots 172 & 176).DAVID FREDERICK BATES (BRITISH 1929-2024)AT THE LIDOoil on cardboard17.5 x 19cm; 6 3/4 x 7 1/2in unframed
JOHN INIGO RICHARDS R.A. (BRITISH 1731-1810) EAGLE TOWER CAERNARFON CASTLEinscribed Caernarvon Castle versowatercolour over pencil on laid paper with original artist's wash-line mount 22 x 31.5cm; 8 1/2 x 12 1/2intogether with three further watercolours of castles, by Charlotte Percy (Duchess of Northumberland, 1787-1866), James Russell (c.1720-1793) and John Buckler (1770-1851)various sizesall unframed(4)Provenance the first and the James Russell: Leonard Gordon Duke (1890-1971) Exhibitedthe first: London, Tate Gallery, Pictures by Richard Wilson and His Circle, 1949, no. 73
JOHN BAPTIST MALCHAIR (GERMAN - BRITISH 1731-1812) BEHIND THE BREWHOUSES IN ST. TOLES OXENinscribed and dated in the artist's hand Behind the Brewhouses in St. Toles Oxen July 3 1787 versopen and ink and watercolour over pencil on laid paper21 x 32.5cm; 8 1/4 x 12 3/4intogether with three further drawings by the same hand, all inscribed in the artist's hand verso: Portrait of an Oak near Oxford, Bridge over the Dovy at Dinas Mowddwy, Monday September 5th 1791 11/ Marionethshire and Nant Rhyddod near Dynas Mouthwy in Marionethshire/ July 28th 1795various sizes, all unframed(4)ExhibitedMalchair and the Oxford School, Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, 1998 (Nant Rhyddod near Dynas Mowddwy)Provenancethe first: Leonard Gordon Duke (1890-1971), inventory no. D397
SAWREY GILPIN R.A. (BRITISH 1733-1807) STRIATED MONKEY signed Howitt in the watercolourwatercolour25 x 19cm; 10 x 7 1/2intogether with another signed watercolour, thought to be of Thorold's Deer from Tibet by the same handboth unframed(2)LiteratureIolo Williams, Early English Watercolours and Some Cognate Drawings by Artists Born Not Later Than 1785, 1952, p. 196, Plate CXLVII, Fig. 299, Samuel Howitt, A Stag (Red Deer?)The first, is illustrated in reverse in Edward Griffith's book, General and Particular Descriptions of the Vertebrated Animals, arranged conformably to the Modern Discoveries and Improvements in Zoology, London 1821, p. 97Iolo Williams said, [Howitt] was particularly good at deer, which he drew with special delicacy, but he also did many monkeys, cattle, birds, fish ans so forth. (Early English Watercolours, p. 196.)
WILLIAM MARLOW R.A. (BRITISH 1740-1813) STUDY OF A GARDENER SEATEDwatercolour over pencil on laid paper14.5 x 9.5cm; 5¾ x 3¾intogether with two further watercolours: Sir Robert Ker Porter (1777-1842) a soldier seated on a rock, signed and dated 1798, and attributed to William Anderson (1757-1837) figures in a tavernvarious sizes, all unframed(3)Provenancethe first: Leonard Gordon Duke (1890-1971), inventory no. D308, signed with initials LGD, titled and inscribed in his hand on the mount cf Marlow' Sketch Book in the Brit Mus
HENRY HOWARD R.A. (BRITISH 1769-1847) BIRTH OF VENUScharcoal and coloured chalks 24 x 36cm; 9 1/2 x 14 1/4intogether with George Frederick Watts RA (1817-1904), study of two figures embracing, red chalk over pencil, 18 x 15cm; 7 x 6inboth unframed(2)Provenancethe first: Charles Edward Lees (1840-1894)
WILLIAM PAYNE (BRITISH 1755-1830) A RIVER LANDSCAPE WITH MOUNTAINS IN THE DISTANCEwatercolour over pencil9 x 43.5cm; 3 1/2 x 17in (arched top)together with another landscape watercolour by the same hand signed and dated Payne / 1805 versoboth unframed(2)Exhibitedthe first: William Payne, Plymouth,1937, no. 71
THE REV. WILLIAM GILPIN (BRITISH 1724-1804) A PICTURESQUE LANDSCAPE WITH RUINS IN THE FOREGROUNDwatercolour 14.5 x 20cm; 5¾ x 8intogether with four further picturesque studies by the same hand three by Dr Thomas Monro (British 1759-1833)various sizes, all unframed(8)Provenancethe first: Leonard Gordon Duke, his collection, inventory no. D868
SAMUEL WALE R.A. (BRITISH c.1721-1786) HERMAN STRODTMAN IN THE ACT OF MURDERING HIS FELLOW PRENTICE, PETER WOLTERpen and brown ink and grey wash 15.5 x 10cm; 6¼ x 4inmounted together with another illustration by the same hand, Repreive for a Criminal while on the way to the place of execution, and four further pen and ink and wash illustrations by Samuel Wale R.A. (c.1721-1786)various sizes, all unframed(6)Literaturethe first: Tyburn Chronicle, vol. I, 1768, facing p. 32; the second: engraved as frontispiece to vol. III of Tyburn Chronicle
JAMES WARD R.A. (BRITISH 1769-1859) COTTAGE NEAR CALNE, WILTSHIRE initialed J.W. lower right and inscribed and dated Cottage near Calne Augst 1807 Wilts in the artist's hand pencil 12.5 x 20cm; 5 x 7 3/4intogether with eight further drawing by the same hand various sizes, all unframed(9)Provenancethe first: inscribed on the mount by Iolo A. Williams: Bought from Levin, of Vauxhall Bridge Road, who told me it came from the collection of Mrs G. M. Ward
RIDING A FROGinscribed and dated Wood - Krr. 10 Oct. 1807. below pen and brown ink and sepia wash11.5 x 13cm; 3½ x 4¾intogether with eight further caricatures by or attributed to various artists including, Alexander Nasmyth, Sir Nathaniel Dance-Holland, George Dance, James Roberts, James Gillray and George 'Sidney' Shepherdvarious media, various sizes, all unframed (9)Provenancethe first: Abbott & Holder Jan 1953Leonard Gordon Duke C.B.E. (1890-1971) (the reverse inscribed with his initials and his inventory no. D1105)LiteratureIolo Williams, Early English Watercolours and Some Cognate Drawings by Artists Born Not Later Than 1785, 1952, Plate CXVII, Fig. 240, James Roberts, A Duel, 1779
ATTRIBUTED TO RICHARD WILSON (BRITISH 1713-1782) MOUNT PALLATINEinitialed W. E. lower left, inscribed Mount Pallatine by Wilson on the mount, with Paul Sandby's collector's stamp lower right, inscribed P. Sanby Col 1811 W.E. P.116-N.899 and Mount Pallatine Wilson verso black chalk 27 x 40.5cm; 10 1/2 x 16intogether with four further drawings, three attributed to Richard Wilson and one by Robert Crone of Dublin, a pupil of Richard Wilsontwo mounted as onevarious sizes, all unframed(5)Provenancethe first: Paul Sandby R.A. (1731-1809), 1811; William Esdaile (1758-1837)
HENEAGE FINCH, 4TH EARL OF AYLESFORD (BRITISH 1751-1812) A FARMHOUSEpencil and grey wash on laid paper 18.5 x 22cm; 71/4 x 8 3/4intogether with three further works, one inscribed on the mount Moulsey, pencil and grey wash, by the same hand, one by the Hon. Daniel Finch (1757-1840) and one attributed to a member of the family of the 4th Earl of Aylesfordvarious sizes, three unframed, one framed(4)Provenancethe first: Leonard Gordon Duke (1890-1971), his collection, inscribed verso with inventory no. D795 / Heneage Finch, 4th Earl of Aylesford / 1751-1812/ LGDHeneage Finch, 4th Earl of Aylesford (1751-1812) was an amateur watercolourist of considerable repute as was his brother the Rev. and Hon. Daniel Finch (1757-1840). His children including the Hon. Daniel Finch were all able amateur artists. Due to the similarity of their names and their style their work can be confused.
THOMAS MANBY (BRITISH c. 1633-1695) PONTE LUCANO, NEAR TIVOLIsigned and numbered Manby 2-6 upper leftpen and black ink and grey wash on laid paper28 x 47cm; 11 x 18 1/4intogether with three further watercolours, a pair of drawings by Francis Place (British 1647-1728): A View of Sailsbury and A View of Brean Down, and one drawing attributed to William Taverner (British 1703-1772): Figures amongst Classical Ruins.various sizes, all unframed(4)Provenancethe first three, Patrick Allan Fraser (1813-1890), his sale, Sotheby's, 1931, catalogued as Various views in Italy, including two views of Ponte Lucano, near Tivoli. LiteratureIolo Williams, Early English Watercolours and Some Cognate Drawings by Artists Born Not Later Than 1785, 1952, p. 6A similar view of Ponte Lucano near Tivoli, circa 1660-1690 by Thomas Manby is in the Yale Centre for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection - BI977.14.5699
DR WILLIAM CROTCH (BRITISH 1775-1847) THE WAIRS (WEIRS) NEAR OXFORD numbered and inscribed and dated, 61 The Wairs, near Oxford, April 28 1801 Oct 13 1842 / Brackins's Wairs, lower marginpencil and watercolour together with another watercolour by the same hand, numbered, signed with initials, dated, and inscribed, 79 WC Nov 1842 from one August 1800 copied from a sketch of a hovel in St Clememts Oxford by /J Malchair May 1785 - The Iffley bank on the rightthe first 13 x 23cm; 5 x 9inframed together(2)LiteratureIolo Williams, Early English Watercolours and Some Cognate Drawings by Artists Born Not Later Than 1785, 1952, p. 239
JOHN VANDERBANK (BRITISH 1694-1739) STUDY FOR A GROUP PORTRAIT OF THREE WOMEN ON A TERRACEsigned der V and dated 1737 lower right, recto with another unfinished study for the same scene,verso inscribed A H 13 and with artist's name in a later hand upper left pen and brown ink over pencil on laid paper, rectopen and brown ink, verso 20 x 31cm; 7¾ x 12¼intogether with two further sketches of putti by the same hand, and a family scene by Antonio Pietro Francesco Zucchi (1726-1795) and four putti by Samuel De Wilde (1751-1832), signed with initials and dated 1806 various sizes, all unframed(5)Provenancethe first: Leonard Gordon Duke (1890-1971)
THOMAS SUNDERLAND (BRITISH 1744-1828) VIEW OF PULAU PENANG ISLAND, MALAYSIAinscribed verso, Scenery in Pulau Penang, 2 miles from George Town, called the Highlands of Scotland, built upon, & so named by Mr Scott, who is denominated the Father of the Island. He also built the pleasure Seats of Killicrankie & Kelso. pen and ink and blue and grey wash over pencil 19.5 x 27.5cm; 9 x 11½intogether with two further watercolours by Thomas Sunderland, the first inscribed beneath and on the verso, View from the Gaer Hill Macoa looking to Mr Roberts Garden, Camoens, Green Hill, and to the division between China & Potugal, 26 Dec 1812; the second inscribed verso Windermerevarious sizes, all unframed (3)In 1826 Penang along with Malacca and Singapore became part of the Straits Settlements under the British administraton in India, moving to direct British colonial rule in 1867. James Scott (1746-1808) was trading partner to Captain Francis Light in Penang. When Light died in 1794, Scott aquired Light's Estate, making him the largest landowner in Penang.
WILLIAM SAMUEL HOWITT (BRITISH c. 1756-1822)STRIATED MONKEY signed Howitt in the watercolourwatercolour25 x 19cm; 10 x 7 1/2intogether with another signed watercolour, thought to be of Thorold's Deer from Tibet by the same handboth unframed(2)LiteratureIolo Williams, Early English Watercolours and Some Cognate Drawings by Artists Born Not Later Than 1785, 1952, p. 196, Plate CXLVII, Fig. 299, Samuel Howitt, A Stag (Red Deer?)The first, is illustrated in reverse in Edward Griffith's book, General and Particular Descriptions of the Vertebrated Animals, arranged conformably to the Modern Discoveries and Improvements in Zoology, London 1821, p. 97Iolo Williams said, [Howitt] was particularly good at deer, which he drew with special delicacy, but he also did many monkeys, cattle, birds, fish and so forth. (Early English Watercolours, p. 196.)
First World War Militaria, comprising a cased compass, a Sam Browne belt, sundry cap and collar badges, military buttons, a small linen unit flag with embroidered details ‘N bn. Div. Cyclist COY.’ Together with various booklets, including ‘Semaphore Simplified’, photographs etc. The linen flag with some wear, otherwise good overall condition. Please note that all lots in this auction have been imported from outside the United Kingdom and are subject to 5% import duty on the hammer price. Items being exported outside of the UK are exempt from this charge upon proof of export. Any international bidder having items sent to a UK address will be subject to this fee.
Officers Headdress Carrying Tins, the first named to W Caulley 3rd Hussars, the second with painted details R.D.M.C. Miers LXX1X 2494W, the third an 1881 pattern infantry officers helmet tin, unnamed. (3). Please note that all lots in this auction have been imported from outside the United Kingdom and are subject to 5% import duty on the hammer price. Items being exported outside of the UK are exempt from this charge upon proof of export. Any international bidder having items sent to a UK address will be subject to this fee.
A Moon Landing commemorative silver medallion, by Paul Vincze, the obverse with figural moon landing scene, inscribed "Man's First Landing on the Moon 20th July 1969", over scrolling banners inscribed "Neil Armstrong", "Col. Edwin Aldrin" and "Col. Michael Collins", stamped "P. Vincze" to obverse and reverse, the rim stamped "Fine Silver", 63mm diameter, 3.0oz gross.
A Scalextric Grand Prix Series motor racing set with Lotus racing car, track and accessories, boxed, together with a C61 Porsche, a C60 Jaguar D-type, a C57 Aston Martin, an A211 first aid hut, an A203 owner's stand and pit, an A209 grand stand, an A208 control tower, an A228 refreshment kiosk, an A233 entrance building, an F302 camera and crew set and track, mostly boxed (playwear and unchecked).
Two Maiolica jars Savona, Italy, circa 1700, the first inscribed 'Unguentem de basilicon' ('Basil ointment') and the second inscribed 'Unguenrum de gistino rosa', ('Oil from rose hips'), both decorated with geometric cobalt blue borders, 17.5cm high (2) With signs of wear consistent with age and use. With chips and cracks. With firing imperfections. With crazing. With areas of flaking to the glaze.
Pair of temple dogsChinese, 20th Century, coated with a turquoise glaze, each dog with scrolling fur and seated rectangular form plinths, the plinths with volute style details, the first dog resting the front right paw upon a pup and marked '092' to the base, the second dog resting the front left paw upon a puzzle ball and marked '058' to the base, each approximately 25cm high (2) With signs of wear consistent with age and use, chips and crazing. With firing imperfections. With cracks.
Collection of ceramics to include two Spode Imari dishes, each marked with the pattern's number '967' to the base, the first of shaped form and the second of oval form, the dishes decorated throughout with various flowers and foliage and gold detailing; a Derby Imari patterned coffee can; two Wedgwood Jasperware lidded pots, pale blue ground, with frieze style relief decoration of various classical figures; a small Wedgwood Jasperware plate, pale blue ground, the border decorated in relief with grapevine; ten Wedgwood plates, decorated with borders of burnt orange ground Greek key pattern; a Staffordshire silhouette jug, possibly by Elsmore and Forster, monochrome and decorated throughout with Dickensian characters after Joseph Clayton Clarke, with gilt lining, and a Minton shaped dish of three sections, painted with fern green borders and gold detailing throughout (20) With crazing, cracks and chips. With signs of wear consistent with age and use. With staining/discolouration. With firing imperfections. Old label attached.
Louis Wain (British, 1860-1939) for Paragon China, Englandearly 20th Century, to include three plates from the Tinker Tailor series: 'The Aeroplane Journey', 'The Clever Tinker' and 'First in the Flight' (3) With signs of wear consistent with age and use. With cracks and firing imperfections. With crazing. With chips.
Camille Fauré (French, 1972-1925) for Limoges, Francetwo hand-painted porcelain panels, the first depicting a girl under a tree, the second depicting an elderly woman at a fireplace, each signed 'Faure, Limoges, France' and with certificates to the verso, both 19.5cm x 14.5cm (2) With signs of wear consistent with age and use. Frames with chips.
Canton brush potChinese, bright yellow ground, painted with a graden scene with various birds, flowers and foliage, 12cm high; together with two Vallauris style white ground beakers, the first decorated with recurring peacocks, the second with patterned decoration, each signed to the base, 14cm high (3)*Scandinavian glass paperweight missing from this lot - please speak to CW or KJ* At present, there is no condition report prepared for this lot, this in no way indicates a good condition, please contact the saleroom for a condition report.
Two carved mirrors19th Century, the first Florentine style, gilded and of oval form, the frame carved with recurring crescent moons, 39cm wide x 46cm high; together with a rectangular form mirror, the frame surrounded with scrolling foliage, 51cm wide x 63cm high (2) With signs of wear consistent with age and use. In need of repair. With evidence of glue. With craquelure. With old repairs. With chips.
Ewart Oakeshott (British, 1916-2002) oil on canvas of a busy harbour, signed and dated '77 to the lower right, 50cm x 75.5cm; together with 'The Blindfold Game', '"The Day" at Jutland', written, illustrated and signed by Oakeshott, Pergamon Press Ltd, Oxford, first edition published 1969 (2) At present, there is no condition report prepared for this lot, this in no way indicates a good condition, please contact the saleroom for a condition report.
Two pieces of gold jewellery the first a possibly Edwardian pendant set with a central pearl and blue/green stones, stamped '9ct', on a later 9k gold chain, 8g approx overall and a 15ct gold bar brooch, set with split pearls and a diamond, 4.5cm overall, 5g approx overall (2) At present, there is no condition report prepared for this lot, this in no way indicates a good condition, please contact the saleroom for a condition report.
Attributed to Doulton Lambeth pair of lamps, of cylindrical form, imperial blue ground, decorated with flowers and foliage, each lamp with upper and lower bronze ground panels with further decoration of flowers and foliage, the first numbered 1058 and 21 to the interior base, the second numbered 1059 and 24 to the interior base, 35.5cm high (2) Wires have been cut/need rewiring. Without bulbs or shades. With firing imperfections. With chips.
1966 Ford Mustang 289 Deluxe 4.7L V8 Convertible Automatic. Registration number: JKJ 102D. Mileage showing: 69,263. Selling on behalf of a local deceased estate. First registered in the UK in 2014 and then supplied to the current owner by Bill Shepherd and Son Mustang in 2016 at the cost of £36,500. Desirable Deluxe model Finished stunning Arcadian Blue blue with Poly blue trim. Electric white convertible roof. Wood dash board. Wood chrome steering wheel. Air conditioning that is not active. Power steering. Electronic ignition system. Front disc brakes. This is a stunning looking Mustang that has clearly been well looked after and has been restored at some point in its life. Service history folder with various receipt's showing thousands spent by the previous owners in the UK. Being registered as an historic vehicle it is both MOT and tax exempt.Please note that buyers premium is 10% plus VAT (total 12% inc VAT) on all cars and motorbikes, subject to a minimum of £150 plus VAT. Please be aware that all lots are sold as seen and without any warranty implied or given. You must satisfy your knowledge as to a vehicles description and condition before you decide to bid. We recommend that you inspect the lot in person during the general viewing days held prior to the auction day on the 2nd of October. If you are unable to attend one of the viewing days, Ewbanks can arrange for an individual telephone/walk round video call appointment with a car expert. Please refer to the terms and conditions. Viewing days: Saturday 21st of September: 10am - 2pm, Monday 23rd of September: 9am - 5pm, Tuesday 24th of September: 9am-7pm. Wednesday 25th of September : 9am-5pm, Thursday 26th of September: 9am-5pm, Friday 27th of September : 9am-5pm, Monday 30th of September: 9am - 5pm, Tuesday 1st of October: 9am-5pm. Morning of the Auction on Friday 2nd of October.
Box of Automobillia including Vanguards die-cast Rover P4 & Rover 2000 TC 1.43 scale, Praesidium melamine John Player Special ashtray, The Clarkson Collection DVD, books, car stamps, Rolls Royce document folder, Challenge Digital Cut Off Inflator, 12 volt DC operation, boxed, as new, never used together with Mercedes -Benz First Aid Kit, never used and other items (qty) Please note this lot has the standard Ewbank's standard buyers premium payable on top of the hammer price and not the reduced rate for cars and motorbikes.
1993 Mercedes 190E 2.0L Automatic. Registration number: K151 UPL. Mileage: 135,203. Family owned since 1993 until the current owner purchased it in 2023. First registered owner was Mercedes Puttocks of Guilford the suppling dealer to the first owner. Believed to be a Mercedes demonstrator being a high spec model. Original condition finished in Smoke silver with cream cloth interior. Factory fitted body kit with 15inch AMG alloy wheels. Electric sunroof. Wood insert trim. Electric windows and mirror. Original Blaupunkt cassette stereo system. Remote central locking with 3 x sets of keys. Substantial history including letters from the original owner including the original purchase invoice. Old Tax discs and MOT certificates. Long MOT until 20th of April 2025.Please note that buyers premium is 10% plus VAT (total 12% inc VAT) on all cars and motorbikes, subject to a minimum of £150 plus VAT. Please be aware that all lots are sold as seen and without any warranty implied or given. You must satisfy your knowledge as to a vehicles description and condition before you decide to bid. We recommend that you inspect the lot in person during the general viewing days held prior to the auction day on the 2nd of October. If you are unable to attend one of the viewing days, Ewbanks can arrange for an individual telephone/walk round video call appointment with a car expert. Please refer to the terms and conditions. Viewing days: Saturday 21st of September: 10am - 2pm, Monday 23rd of September: 9am - 5pm, Tuesday 24th of September: 9am-7pm. Wednesday 25th of September : 9am-5pm, Thursday 26th of September: 9am-5pm, Friday 27th of September : 9am-5pm, Monday 30th of September: 9am - 5pm, Tuesday 1st of October: 9am-5pm. Morning of the Auction on Friday 2nd of October.
2006 Vauxhall Vectra 1.8 Design VVT Petrol. Registration number: KC06 UYG.Mileage: 120,006.Finished in metallic Star Silver coachwork with black half-leather upholstery. Alloy wheels. SatNav. Air-conditioning with climate control. Remote central locking and electric windows. 2 x Vauxhall remote locking keys. First registered by Camden Motors Vauxhall dealership in Bedfordshire, 24th May 2006. It has been owned a run by one keeper since it was 9 months old. Until earlier this year.A move to central London has prompted the sale no longer requiring a car. Comes with Vauxhall Service Book (containing x 15 stamped entries). Last serviced at 114,460. A substantial quantity of invoices for maintenance across all the preceding years, since new. The car has had a service each and every year and the cambelt was replaced, as scheduled, at 76,002 miles.Long MOT until July 2025.ULEZ Compliant. Please note that buyers premium is 10% plus VAT (total 12% inc VAT) on all cars and motorbikes, subject to a minimum of £150 plus VAT. Please be aware that all lots are sold as seen and without any warranty implied or given. You must satisfy your knowledge as to a vehicles description and condition before you decide to bid. We recommend that you inspect the lot in person during the general viewing days held prior to the auction day on the 2nd of October. If you are unable to attend one of the viewing days, Ewbanks can arrange for an individual telephone/walk round video call appointment with a car expert. Please refer to the terms and conditions. Viewing days: Saturday 21st of September: 10am - 2pm, Monday 23rd of September: 9am - 5pm, Tuesday 24th of September: 9am-7pm. Wednesday 25th of September : 9am-5pm, Thursday 26th of September: 9am-5pm, Friday 27th of September : 9am-5pm, Monday 30th of September: 9am - 5pm, Tuesday 1st of October: 9am-5pm. Morning of the Auction on Friday 2nd of October.Condition Report: The car presents in superb order throughout. The vendor reports as being a reliable and comfortable car. Has been driven to the salesroom.

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