Three silver salvers. Various dates and makers. The group comprising: a shaped, circular salver by Mappin & Webb, Sheffield, 1954, engraved with train to base and presentation inscription to Sir Roy Welensky 'on the occasion of the commissioning of the first 2000HP diesel electric locomotive for the Rhodesia Railways', 31.7cm dia.; a smaller example, Birmingham, 1946, William Suckling, also with presentation engraving, 24.7cm dia.; and an example by Viners, Sheffield marks, engraved with presentation inscription to underside, 20.3cm dia., total weight approx. 55.4ozt (3)
We found 596772 price guide item(s) matching your search
There are 596772 lots that match your search criteria. Subscribe now to get instant access to the full price guide service.
Click here to subscribe- List
- Grid
-
596772 item(s)/page
An 18th century Italian silver inkstand. Kingdom of Sardinia (Turin), c.1793. First assayer (assaggiatore) Giuseppe Fontana (1789-1814), second assayer (contrassaggiatore) Giuseppe Veroni (1779-1824), the quatrefoil-shaped inkstand designed with a beaded border and foliate quarters, complete with blue glass inkwells and detachable inkwell holders, both pierced and decorated with laurel garlands to sides, the hinged covers with foliate finials, inkstand engraved with monogram, 30cm wide, approx. weight 15.5ozt (exc. glass inkwells) Footnotes: For a description of the marks on this piece, please see: Argenti Italiani del Settecento. Punzoni di garanzia. Punzoni degli argentieri. V. Donaver and R. Dabbene. Pp 12-17Stamped with the mark for Giuseppe Fontana used until the end of 1793, at which point his mark changed (see pg. 17, Donaver & Dabbene) and the mark for Giuseppe Veroni used pre 1793. These marks therefore indicate that the inkstand was assayed c.1793.
ROBERT POLHILL BEVAN (BRITISH 1865-1925) SMITHY BARN, BOLHAM - 1919 Lithograph, from the edition of 40, signed in pencil, with the stamped monogram the sheet 28.5cm x 44.5cm (11.25in x 17.5in), unframed Estate of the Artist; and thence by descent to the present owner. Literature: Dry, Graham, Robert Bevan 1865-1925: Catalogue Raisonné of the Lithographs and other Prints, The Curwen Press, London, 1965, another example from the edition repr. b/w no. 26Note: According to Graham Dry, this work was drawn the stone in the artist’s Hampstead studio and was printed by Vincent Brooks Day & Son under the artist’s supervision.‘Lithography was a very important part of his artistic expression. He found it a very suitable medium for his skills . . . At all times he loved the feel of lithographic chalk and the handling of it on the smooth stone’ - Robert Alexander Bevan, the artist’s son, 1968We are delighted to present a group of eight lithographs by Robert Polhill Bevan, which come from the Artist’s Estate and thence by descent to the present owner, in our Prints & Multiples sale of 26 March 2025. Consisting of four of his celebrated London horse images and four of his attractive rural scenes, each reveals his love of and technical brilliance in the medium of lithography.Bevan was born in Hove, Sussex in 1865 and grew up in Horsgate, near Cuckfield. He studied at Westminster School of Art, London and at the Académie Julian in Paris. His training during the 1890s also included two periods in Pont-Aven in Brittany – where he met Paul Gauguin – as well as time spent in Madrid and Tangier. He was a member of the Fitzroy Street, Camden Town, London and Cumberland Market Groups, founded in London between 1907 and 1914. In 1897, Bevan met and married the Polish artist Stanislawa de Karlowska (1876-1952). Three years later they moved to 14 Adamson Road, London, which remained their base for the rest of Bevan’s life. The couple became key figures in London’s art world before and after the First World War and held popular ‘at homes’ on Sunday afternoons during the 1910s.Printmaking was an important part of Bevan’s artistic practice. He used lithography early in his career but turned away from the medium in 1901. After 17 years Bevan returned to lithography with aplomb at the end of the War. A work like The Plantation, 1922 (lot 44), shows his mature mastery of the technique, along with a simplification of form, angular structure and clarity of composition. He brought this sensibility to all his landscape prints, capturing the essence of English villages and Polish homesteads in images including The White House, 1921 (lot 43), A Polish Homestead, 1922 (lot 42) and Smithy Barn, Bolham, 1919 (lot 41).Bevan was a highly-skilled horseman and his images of horses are amongst the most celebrated of his oeuvre. He would sketch during the horse sales in London, where he enjoyed the interaction between people and animals as much as the pace and spectacle of the event. This interest expanded into his printmaking practice and can be seen in lithographs such as Horse Dealers (Ward’s Repository No.1) (lot 38), The Horse Mart (Barbican No. 1) (lot 37) and Horse Dealers at the Barbican (Barbican No.2) (lot 39) produced from 1919 to 1921. Crocks of 1925 (lot 40) was his final lithograph and shows a pair of horses having been taken out of a cab’s shafts and led to a trough for a drink.Following Bevan’s death in 1925, memorial exhibitions of his work were held at the Goupil Gallery in London and at Brighton Art Gallery. Bevan is represented in many major public collections, including the British Museum, Victoria & Albert Museum and Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
ROBERT POLHILL BEVAN (BRITISH 1865-1925) THE WHITE HOUSE - 1921 Lithograph, 25/50, numbered in pencil to margin, with the stamped monogram the sheet 26.5cm x 33.5cm (10.5in x 13.25in), unframed Estate of the Artist; and thence by descent to the present owner. Literature: Dry, Graham, Robert Bevan 1865-1925: Catalogue Raisonné of the Lithographs and other Prints, The Curwen Press, London, 1965, another example from the edition repr. b/w no.30Note: Graham Dry has explained that this lithograph is based on a painting of Gould’s Farm Luppitt, where the artist worked in 1920.‘Lithography was a very important part of his artistic expression. He found it a very suitable medium for his skills . . . At all times he loved the feel of lithographic chalk and the handling of it on the smooth stone’ - Robert Alexander Bevan, the artist’s son, 1968We are delighted to present a group of eight lithographs by Robert Polhill Bevan, which come from the Artist’s Estate and thence by descent to the present owner, in our Prints & Multiples sale of 26 March 2025. Consisting of four of his celebrated London horse images and four of his attractive rural scenes, each reveals his love of and technical brilliance in the medium of lithography.Bevan was born in Hove, Sussex in 1865 and grew up in Horsgate, near Cuckfield. He studied at Westminster School of Art, London and at the Académie Julian in Paris. His training during the 1890s also included two periods in Pont-Aven in Brittany – where he met Paul Gauguin – as well as time spent in Madrid and Tangier. He was a member of the Fitzroy Street, Camden Town, London and Cumberland Market Groups, founded in London between 1907 and 1914. In 1897, Bevan met and married the Polish artist Stanislawa de Karlowska (1876-1952). Three years later they moved to 14 Adamson Road, London, which remained their base for the rest of Bevan’s life. The couple became key figures in London’s art world before and after the First World War and held popular ‘at homes’ on Sunday afternoons during the 1910s.Printmaking was an important part of Bevan’s artistic practice. He used lithography early in his career but turned away from the medium in 1901. After 17 years Bevan returned to lithography with aplomb at the end of the War. A work like The Plantation, 1922 (lot 44), shows his mature mastery of the technique, along with a simplification of form, angular structure and clarity of composition. He brought this sensibility to all his landscape prints, capturing the essence of English villages and Polish homesteads in images including The White House, 1921 (lot 43), A Polish Homestead, 1922 (lot 42) and Smithy Barn, Bolham, 1919 (lot 41).Bevan was a highly-skilled horseman and his images of horses are amongst the most celebrated of his oeuvre. He would sketch during the horse sales in London, where he enjoyed the interaction between people and animals as much as the pace and spectacle of the event. This interest expanded into his printmaking practice and can be seen in lithographs such as Horse Dealers (Ward’s Repository No.1) (lot 38), The Horse Mart (Barbican No. 1) (lot 37) and Horse Dealers at the Barbican (Barbican No.2) (lot 39) produced from 1919 to 1921. Crocks of 1925 (lot 40) was his final lithograph and shows a pair of horses having been taken out of a cab’s shafts and led to a trough for a drink.Following Bevan’s death in 1925, memorial exhibitions of his work were held at the Goupil Gallery in London and at Brighton Art Gallery. Bevan is represented in many major public collections, including the British Museum, Victoria & Albert Museum and Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
ROBERT POLHILL BEVAN (BRITISH 1865-1925) HORSE DEALERS AT THE BARBICAN (BARBICAN NO. 2) - 1921 Lithograph, from the edition of 70, inscribed ‘Barbican No 2’ in pencil to lower edge Estate of the Artist; and thence by descent to the present owner. Literature: Dry, Graham, Robert Bevan 1865-1925: Catalogue Raisonné of the Lithographs and other Prints, The Curwen Press, London 1965, another example from the edition repr. b/w no.35.Note: This print is one of eleven from the edition on thin white wove paper, with no signature. It is based on an oil painting of the same title, with some alterations, the location of which is unknown. ‘Lithography was a very important part of his artistic expression. He found it a very suitable medium for his skills . . . At all times he loved the feel of lithographic chalk and the handling of it on the smooth stone’ - Robert Alexander Bevan, the artist’s son, 1968We are delighted to present a group of eight lithographs by Robert Polhill Bevan, which come from the Artist’s Estate and thence by descent to the present owner, in our Prints & Multiples sale of 26 March 2025. Consisting of four of his celebrated London horse images and four of his attractive rural scenes, each reveals his love of and technical brilliance in the medium of lithography.Bevan was born in Hove, Sussex in 1865 and grew up in Horsgate, near Cuckfield. He studied at Westminster School of Art, London and at the Académie Julian in Paris. His training during the 1890s also included two periods in Pont-Aven in Brittany – where he met Paul Gauguin – as well as time spent in Madrid and Tangier. He was a member of the Fitzroy Street, Camden Town, London and Cumberland Market Groups, founded in London between 1907 and 1914. In 1897, Bevan met and married the Polish artist Stanislawa de Karlowska (1876-1952). Three years later they moved to 14 Adamson Road, London, which remained their base for the rest of Bevan’s life. The couple became key figures in London’s art world before and after the First World War and held popular ‘at homes’ on Sunday afternoons during the 1910s.Printmaking was an important part of Bevan’s artistic practice. He used lithography early in his career but turned away from the medium in 1901. After 17 years Bevan returned to lithography with aplomb at the end of the War. A work like The Plantation, 1922 (lot 44), shows his mature mastery of the technique, along with a simplification of form, angular structure and clarity of composition. He brought this sensibility to all his landscape prints, capturing the essence of English villages and Polish homesteads in images including The White House, 1921 (lot 43), A Polish Homestead, 1922 (lot 42) and Smithy Barn, Bolham, 1919 (lot 41).Bevan was a highly-skilled horseman and his images of horses are amongst the most celebrated of his oeuvre. He would sketch during the horse sales in London, where he enjoyed the interaction between people and animals as much as the pace and spectacle of the event. This interest expanded into his printmaking practice and can be seen in lithographs such as Horse Dealers (Ward’s Repository No.1) (lot 38), The Horse Mart (Barbican No. 1) (lot 37) and Horse Dealers at the Barbican (Barbican No.2) (lot 39) produced from 1919 to 1921. Crocks of 1925 (lot 40) was his final lithograph and shows a pair of horses having been taken out of a cab’s shafts and led to a trough for a drink.Following Bevan’s death in 1925, memorial exhibitions of his work were held at the Goupil Gallery in London and at Brighton Art Gallery. Bevan is represented in many major public collections, including the British Museum, Victoria & Albert Museum and Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
ROBERT POLHILL BEVAN (BRITISH 1865-1925) A POLISH HOMESTEAD - 1922 Lithograph, 34/45, signed and numbered in pencil to margin, with the stamped monogram the sheet 33cm x 38cm (13in x 15in), unframed Estate of the Artist; and thence by descent to the present owner. Literature: Dry, Graham, Robert Bevan 1865-1925: Catalogue Raisonné of the Lithographs and other Prints, The Curwen Press, London, 1965, another example from the edition repr. b/w no. 32‘Lithography was a very important part of his artistic expression. He found it a very suitable medium for his skills . . . At all times he loved the feel of lithographic chalk and the handling of it on the smooth stone’ - Robert Alexander Bevan, the artist’s son, 1968We are delighted to present a group of eight lithographs by Robert Polhill Bevan, which come from the Artist’s Estate and thence by descent to the present owner, in our Prints & Multiples sale of 26 March 2025. Consisting of four of his celebrated London horse images and four of his attractive rural scenes, each reveals his love of and technical brilliance in the medium of lithography.Bevan was born in Hove, Sussex in 1865 and grew up in Horsgate, near Cuckfield. He studied at Westminster School of Art, London and at the Académie Julian in Paris. His training during the 1890s also included two periods in Pont-Aven in Brittany – where he met Paul Gauguin – as well as time spent in Madrid and Tangier. He was a member of the Fitzroy Street, Camden Town, London and Cumberland Market Groups, founded in London between 1907 and 1914. In 1897, Bevan met and married the Polish artist Stanislawa de Karlowska (1876-1952). Three years later they moved to 14 Adamson Road, London, which remained their base for the rest of Bevan’s life. The couple became key figures in London’s art world before and after the First World War and held popular ‘at homes’ on Sunday afternoons during the 1910s.Printmaking was an important part of Bevan’s artistic practice. He used lithography early in his career but turned away from the medium in 1901. After 17 years Bevan returned to lithography with aplomb at the end of the War. A work like The Plantation, 1922 (lot 44), shows his mature mastery of the technique, along with a simplification of form, angular structure and clarity of composition. He brought this sensibility to all his landscape prints, capturing the essence of English villages and Polish homesteads in images including The White House, 1921 (lot 43), A Polish Homestead, 1922 (lot 42) and Smithy Barn, Bolham, 1919 (lot 41).Bevan was a highly-skilled horseman and his images of horses are amongst the most celebrated of his oeuvre. He would sketch during the horse sales in London, where he enjoyed the interaction between people and animals as much as the pace and spectacle of the event. This interest expanded into his printmaking practice and can be seen in lithographs such as Horse Dealers (Ward’s Repository No.1) (lot 38), The Horse Mart (Barbican No. 1) (lot 37) and Horse Dealers at the Barbican (Barbican No.2) (lot 39) produced from 1919 to 1921. Crocks of 1925 (lot 40) was his final lithograph and shows a pair of horses having been taken out of a cab’s shafts and led to a trough for a drink.Following Bevan’s death in 1925, memorial exhibitions of his work were held at the Goupil Gallery in London and at Brighton Art Gallery. Bevan is represented in many major public collections, including the British Museum, Victoria & Albert Museum and Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
ROBERT POLHILL BEVAN (BRITISH 1865-1925) THE HORSE MART (BARBICAN NO. I) - 1920 Lithograph, from the edition of 65 the sheet 46cm x 59cm (18in x 23.25in), unframed Estate of the Artist; and thence by descent to the present owner. Literature: Dry, Graham, Robert Bevan 1865-1925: Catalogue Raisonné of the Lithographs and other Prints, The Curwen Press, London, 1965, another example from the edition repr. b/w no. 34.Note: This work is based on the oil painting The Horse Mart of 1917-18, in the collection of the Yale Center for British Art (acc.no. B2001.2.110).‘Lithography was a very important part of his artistic expression. He found it a very suitable medium for his skills . . . At all times he loved the feel of lithographic chalk and the handling of it on the smooth stone’ - Robert Alexander Bevan, the artist’s son, 1968We are delighted to present a group of eight lithographs by Robert Polhill Bevan, which come from the Artist’s Estate and thence by descent to the present owner, in our Prints & Multiples sale of 26 March 2025. Consisting of four of his celebrated London horse images and four of his attractive rural scenes, each reveals his love of and technical brilliance in the medium of lithography.Bevan was born in Hove, Sussex in 1865 and grew up in Horsgate, near Cuckfield. He studied at Westminster School of Art, London and at the Académie Julian in Paris. His training during the 1890s also included two periods in Pont-Aven in Brittany – where he met Paul Gauguin – as well as time spent in Madrid and Tangier. He was a member of the Fitzroy Street, Camden Town, London and Cumberland Market Groups, founded in London between 1907 and 1914. In 1897, Bevan met and married the Polish artist Stanislawa de Karlowska (1876-1952). Three years later they moved to 14 Adamson Road, London, which remained their base for the rest of Bevan’s life. The couple became key figures in London’s art world before and after the First World War and held popular ‘at homes’ on Sunday afternoons during the 1910s.Printmaking was an important part of Bevan’s artistic practice. He used lithography early in his career but turned away from the medium in 1901. After 17 years Bevan returned to lithography with aplomb at the end of the War. A work like The Plantation, 1922 (lot 44), shows his mature mastery of the technique, along with a simplification of form, angular structure and clarity of composition. He brought this sensibility to all his landscape prints, capturing the essence of English villages and Polish homesteads in images including The White House, 1921 (lot 43), A Polish Homestead, 1922 (lot 42) and Smithy Barn, Bolham, 1919 (lot 41).Bevan was a highly-skilled horseman and his images of horses are amongst the most celebrated of his oeuvre. He would sketch during the horse sales in London, where he enjoyed the interaction between people and animals as much as the pace and spectacle of the event. This interest expanded into his printmaking practice and can be seen in lithographs such as Horse Dealers (Ward’s Repository No.1) (lot 38), The Horse Mart (Barbican No. 1) (lot 37) and Horse Dealers at the Barbican (Barbican No.2) (lot 39) produced from 1919 to 1921. Crocks of 1925 (lot 40) was his final lithograph and shows a pair of horses having been taken out of a cab’s shafts and led to a trough for a drink.Following Bevan’s death in 1925, memorial exhibitions of his work were held at the Goupil Gallery in London and at Brighton Art Gallery. Bevan is represented in many major public collections, including the British Museum, Victoria & Albert Museum and Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
ROBERT POLHILL BEVAN (BRITISH 1865-1925) THE PLANTATION - 1922 Lithograph, 13/40, signed and numbered in pencil to margin, with the stamped monogram, inscribed with title in pencil at lower edge the sheet 41cm x 56cm (16.25in x 22in), unframed Estate of the Artist; and thence by descent to the present owner. Literature: Dry, Graham, Robert Bevan 1865-1925: Catalogue Raisonné of the Lithographs and other Prints, The Curwen Press, London 1965, another example from the edition repr. b/w no.37.Note: This work is based, in reverse, on an oil painting of the same title of 1919, the location of which is unknown.‘Lithography was a very important part of his artistic expression. He found it a very suitable medium for his skills . . . At all times he loved the feel of lithographic chalk and the handling of it on the smooth stone’ - Robert Alexander Bevan, the artist’s son, 1968We are delighted to present a group of eight lithographs by Robert Polhill Bevan, which come from the Artist’s Estate and thence by descent to the present owner, in our Prints & Multiples sale of 26 March 2025. Consisting of four of his celebrated London horse images and four of his attractive rural scenes, each reveals his love of and technical brilliance in the medium of lithography.Bevan was born in Hove, Sussex in 1865 and grew up in Horsgate, near Cuckfield. He studied at Westminster School of Art, London and at the Académie Julian in Paris. His training during the 1890s also included two periods in Pont-Aven in Brittany – where he met Paul Gauguin – as well as time spent in Madrid and Tangier. He was a member of the Fitzroy Street, Camden Town, London and Cumberland Market Groups, founded in London between 1907 and 1914. In 1897, Bevan met and married the Polish artist Stanislawa de Karlowska (1876-1952). Three years later they moved to 14 Adamson Road, London, which remained their base for the rest of Bevan’s life. The couple became key figures in London’s art world before and after the First World War and held popular ‘at homes’ on Sunday afternoons during the 1910s.Printmaking was an important part of Bevan’s artistic practice. He used lithography early in his career but turned away from the medium in 1901. After 17 years Bevan returned to lithography with aplomb at the end of the War. A work like The Plantation, 1922 (lot 44), shows his mature mastery of the technique, along with a simplification of form, angular structure and clarity of composition. He brought this sensibility to all his landscape prints, capturing the essence of English villages and Polish homesteads in images including The White House, 1921 (lot 43), A Polish Homestead, 1922 (lot 42) and Smithy Barn, Bolham, 1919 (lot 41).Bevan was a highly-skilled horseman and his images of horses are amongst the most celebrated of his oeuvre. He would sketch during the horse sales in London, where he enjoyed the interaction between people and animals as much as the pace and spectacle of the event. This interest expanded into his printmaking practice and can be seen in lithographs such as Horse Dealers (Ward’s Repository No.1) (lot 38), The Horse Mart (Barbican No. 1) (lot 37) and Horse Dealers at the Barbican (Barbican No.2) (lot 39) produced from 1919 to 1921. Crocks of 1925 (lot 40) was his final lithograph and shows a pair of horses having been taken out of a cab’s shafts and led to a trough for a drink.Following Bevan’s death in 1925, memorial exhibitions of his work were held at the Goupil Gallery in London and at Brighton Art Gallery. Bevan is represented in many major public collections, including the British Museum, Victoria & Albert Museum and Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
ROBERT POLHILL BEVAN (BRITISH 1865-1925) HORSE DEALERS (WARD'S REPOSITORY NO.I) - 1919 Lithograph, from the edition of 80 the sheet 44.5cm x 57cm (17.5in x 22.5in), unframed Estate of the Artist; and thence by descent to the present owner. Literature: Bevan, R.A., Robert Bevan 1865-1925: A Memoir by his Son, Studio Vista, London 1965, another example from the edition repr. b/w pl.62 (as 'Horse Dealers' and dated 1921),Dry, Graham, Robert Bevan 1865-1925: Catalogue Raisonné of the Lithographs and other Prints, The Curwen Press, London 1965, another example from the edition repr. b/w no.33 (as 'Horse Dealers (Ward's Repository No.1)' and dated 1919).Note: This work is also known as Ward's No.1. It is related to the oil painting Horse Dealers (Sale at Ward's Repository No.1) of 1918 which was purchased by Manchester Art Gallery in 1935 (acc.no.1935.157). Ward's Repository off the Edgware Road, London, was the first of the horse sale yards to close.‘Lithography was a very important part of his artistic expression. He found it a very suitable medium for his skills . . . At all times he loved the feel of lithographic chalk and the handling of it on the smooth stone’ - Robert Alexander Bevan, the artist’s son, 1968We are delighted to present a group of eight lithographs by Robert Polhill Bevan, which come from the Artist’s Estate and thence by descent to the present owner, in our Prints & Multiples sale of 26 March 2025. Consisting of four of his celebrated London horse images and four of his attractive rural scenes, each reveals his love of and technical brilliance in the medium of lithography.Bevan was born in Hove, Sussex in 1865 and grew up in Horsgate, near Cuckfield. He studied at Westminster School of Art, London and at the Académie Julian in Paris. His training during the 1890s also included two periods in Pont-Aven in Brittany – where he met Paul Gauguin – as well as time spent in Madrid and Tangier. He was a member of the Fitzroy Street, Camden Town, London and Cumberland Market Groups, founded in London between 1907 and 1914. In 1897, Bevan met and married the Polish artist Stanislawa de Karlowska (1876-1952). Three years later they moved to 14 Adamson Road, London, which remained their base for the rest of Bevan’s life. The couple became key figures in London’s art world before and after the First World War and held popular ‘at homes’ on Sunday afternoons during the 1910s.Printmaking was an important part of Bevan’s artistic practice. He used lithography early in his career but turned away from the medium in 1901. After 17 years Bevan returned to lithography with aplomb at the end of the War. A work like The Plantation, 1922 (lot 44), shows his mature mastery of the technique, along with a simplification of form, angular structure and clarity of composition. He brought this sensibility to all his landscape prints, capturing the essence of English villages and Polish homesteads in images including The White House, 1921 (lot 43), A Polish Homestead, 1922 (lot 42) and Smithy Barn, Bolham, 1919 (lot 41).Bevan was a highly-skilled horseman and his images of horses are amongst the most celebrated of his oeuvre. He would sketch during the horse sales in London, where he enjoyed the interaction between people and animals as much as the pace and spectacle of the event. This interest expanded into his printmaking practice and can be seen in lithographs such as Horse Dealers (Ward’s Repository No.1) (lot 38), The Horse Mart (Barbican No. 1) (lot 37) and Horse Dealers at the Barbican (Barbican No.2) (lot 39) produced from 1919 to 1921. Crocks of 1925 (lot 40) was his final lithograph and shows a pair of horses having been taken out of a cab’s shafts and led to a trough for a drink.Following Bevan’s death in 1925, memorial exhibitions of his work were held at the Goupil Gallery in London and at Brighton Art Gallery. Bevan is represented in many major public collections, including the British Museum, Victoria & Albert Museum and Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
Eugene F. Kranz, American aerospace engineer. A signed 11x8 inch photo with 'Flight' added. Kranz served as NASA's second Chief Flight Director, directing missions of the Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo programs, including the first lunar landing mission, Apollo 11. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
Sir Peter Masefield, Ma CEng FRAes FCIT CIMechE signed plus 1 other.FDC. 60th Anniversary of the Opening of London's First Air Terminal 28 March 1920. Single stamp plus single post mark 28 March 1980. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
Nigel Milton signed FDC. 20th Anniversary of the first flight from English Soil on the 15 September 1784. Single stamp plus single post mark 15 Sept 84.. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
Nadia Comaneci signed 10x8 inch colour promo photo. Nadia Elena Com?neci is a Romanian retired gymnast. She is a five-time Olympic gold medallist, all in individual events. In 1976, at the age of 14, Com?neci was the first gymnast to be awarded a perfect score of 10.0 at the Olympic Games. At the same Games (1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal), she received six more perfect 10s for events en route to winning three gold medals. At the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow, she won two more gold medals and achieved two more perfect 10s. During her career, she won nine Olympic medals and four World Artistic Gymnastics Championship medals. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
Katarina Witt Singed 6x4 inch colour promo photo. Katarina Witt is a German former figure skater. A two-time Olympic champion, Witt is regarded as one of the greatest ladies' singles figure skaters of all time. Witt won the first of her two Olympic gold medals for East Germany at the 1984 Sarajevo Olympics, before winning a second at the 1988 Calgary Olympics. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
Sir Peter Masefield, Ma CEng FRAes FCIT CIMechE signed plus 1 other. FDC. 60th Anniversary of the Opening of London's first Air Terminal 28 March 1920. Single stamp plus single post mark 28 March 1980. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
Anastasia Myskina signed 10x8 inch photo. Anastasia Myskina is a Russian former professional tennis player. Anastasia Myskina won the 2004 French Open singles title, becoming the first Russian woman to win a major singles title. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
Peter Sadler signed FDC. 200th Anniversary of the first Manned Aerial Voyage made by an Englishman, made in a Balloon on the 4th October 1784. Single stamp plus single post mark 4 Oct 84. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
Peter Sadler signed FDC. 200th Anniversary of the first Manned Aerial Voyage made by an Englishman, made in a Balloon on the 4th October 1784. Single stamp plus single post mark 4 Oct 84. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
James Bond - Jill St John - a signed 10x8 inch photo as Tiffany Case, the first American Bond girl in Diamonds Are Forever (1971). Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
John Fifield, OBE, DFC, AFC signed sqn. Ldr, John S Martin signed, James.W. Martin BA BAI CEng FRAes signed, Jack Scot signed FDC. 50th Anniversary-First British Live Ejection. Single post mark plus single post mark 24 Jul 96. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
Roland Beamont, CBE signed, Jimmy Dell signed, Sir Frederick Page, John Squier. FDC. 45th Anniversary of English Electric P1 First Flight - 4 August 1954. Single Stamp plus single post mark 4 Aug 99. Good condition. All autographs come with a Certificate of Authenticity. We combine postage on multiple winning lots and can ship worldwide. UK postage from £5.99, EU from £7.99, Rest of World from £9.99
An early 19th century blue and white transfer printed mug, depicting Lanercost Priory Brampton. Height 15 cm.The body of the mug is generally in good order, however there are two chips to the base, the first is approximately 8 x 8 mm and the second which is more towards the foot is approximately 1.5 cm in length. There is also to the underside a star crack which is not visible from the inside.
A George II astronomical clock by Gandy of Cockermouth dated 1757, with two train striking movement and 14" dial with broad chapter ring with wavy minute band surrounded by an annual calendar and signs of the zodiac. The arch is considerably more than a semi circle to accommodate the major part of a 24 hour chapter ring which is traversed by the sun and has moving shutters to show sunrise and sunset. The outer edge of the ring is divided into degrees to indicate the suns amplitude and the inner edge has signs of the zodiac, Cancer through to Sagittarius, on each side. The arched centre has the remaining signs of the zodiac surrounding a lunar and tidal dial. All housed in a red walnut case raised on ogee moulded bracket feet, complete with weights and pendulum. Height 7' 2 1/4". NOTE: This complicated clock has been entered for sale form a local estate and its existence in the Cockermouth area has been known by Mitchells for at least the last 40 years. This is a very important and interesting clock boasting features that rarely appear outside of London. It exhibits great individuality in both design and construction equalling that of many of the principal London makers. All the more remarkable is that it was made nearly 270 years ago. The Gandy family were originally of Cockermouth and later Maryport. The business was started by James Gandy I who was born circa 1700 and who died a pauper in Cockermouth in 1779. James's eldest son Samuel (1726-1803) and his younger son also James (1730-1793) were the principal clock makers of this name. This information gleaned from "The Clockmakers of Cumberland" by John B Penfold 1977. The clock is nationally known and is illustrated and discussed in "The Longcase Clock" by Tom Robinson published by The Antique Collectors Club first edition 1981. The clock is illustrated on page 224, 304 and 306 in the 1981 edition and discussed on page 305 (see illustration).
Three Edwardian inlaid satinwood Hepplewhite style bedroom chairs, with stuffover serpentine fronted seats and raised on tapered legs of square section terminating in spade feet.The first chair, the two spindles to the left and right in the back are very slightly loose, although this does not affect the structural integrity of the chair. To the right-hand side edge of the chair, there is a small amount of inlay which is missing and to the very front there is a dent, other than this the chair has the usual wear and tear, age related marks etc. The fabric to the seat does appear to be very slightly faded. The second chair is in good condition, shows the usual age-related wear etc. The third chair has a small amount of movement to the frame but nothing majorly untoward, The fabric on chairs 2 and 3 is slightly faded. Seat height is 45 cm and the width at the front is 43 cm.
A Chinese nest of four tables. Largest height 65 cm, width 46 cm, depth 33 cm, smallest height 40 cm, width 28 cm, depth 21 cm.The largest table is structurally sound, it does have some light scratches and marks to the top where it as been used. The front carved decorative rail is broken but is still attached. There is a crack to the right-hand side and along the top where it joins into the frame and another crack to the right-hand side. The third table has more marks to the top than the first but it again structurally sound, although the left-hand rear joint is very slightly loose. Third table has age-related wear to the top but there is also a crack to the front right-hand side which runs from the centre towards the front for approximately 8 to 10 cm and then branches of in two different directions. The left-hand branch going for approximately 7 cm. The rear right-hand joint is also very slightly loose but the table is structurally sound. Fourth table has age-related wear to the top but is structurally sound.
A large late 19th century terracotta urn, on pedestal stand, with half lobed body and on square stepped base. Height 134 cm, top diameter 55 cm (see illustration).The urn comes into three sections, the top bowl which has a firing fault internally and is 16 cm in length. There are also a couple of cracks approximately 4 cm in length as well as a number of small chips. The central section which rises up into the upper section is broken into a number of pieces and so the two parts do not fit snuggly together. The centre section also has a number of chips to the first lob, the largest of which is approximately 6 cm in length x 4 cm, although these have been sone quite sometime ago and are nicely coloured over. The lower section again has a number of chips to the edges but again these have been done quite some time ago and are nicely coloured over with lichen.
A nest of four Chinese hardwood occasional tables, largest height 66 cm, width 51 cm, depth 36 cm.The first table is generally in very good order showing signs of light use but nothing untoward. The second table is slightly discoloured to the surface, probably water staining, other than this it is just age-related wear nothing untoward. The third table is in good order, shows age-related wear but is structurally sound,. The fourth table again is structurally sound, showing signs of age-related wear, it also has a small splodge of emulsion paint to one of the legs but we are sure that this would easily scratch off.
A pair of Meiji period Japanese satsuma ware vases, decorated with figures, rectangular seal mark to base. Height 30 cm.The first vase is generally in very good order, there is crazing to all the cream parts. There is also some slight rubbing to the gilding and to the people’s hair. The second vase is in a similar condition but also has a repaired chip to the rim, approximately 1 cm square. There is also around three small chips to the underside of the foot and a couple of cracks which run from the foot into the body approximately 1 cm in length.
Two limited edition commemorative coin first day covers, Queen Mother memorial silver coin cover, Royal Mail definitive stamps collection, Victorian lilac and green series stamps, Victorian 1858-1881 low value denomination stamps and a small selection of British Armed Forces currency £5, £1 bank notes etc.
Three ladies 9 ct gold wristwatches, the first by Centaur marked to dial 17 jewels with octagonal case and leather strap case diameter 20 mm, a Rhone quartz wristwatch the strap and case stamped 375 case diameter 18 mm and a vintage wristwatch marked internally Buren 15 jewels. Overall weight 51 grams.
Three cloisonne vases, the near pair with Egyptian panels as well as traditional Japanese design. Height 21 and 21.5 cm together with another 18 cm.The central vase is slightly dull and would benefit from a good clean, there are some chips to the cloisonné, the first being in some flowers below the turquoise panel and further round to the right-hand side in the maroon patch of flowers. The near pair of vases, again are a little grubby but are in reasonable condition. We can see no signs of any dents or chips.
A near pair of silver tankards, the first London 1839 maker Edward Junior John and William Barnard. Height +/- 9 cm, diameter 8 cm, weight 195 grams, the second London 1846 Joseph and albert Savory. Height 9 cm, diameter 8 cm.The William Barnard tankard is generally in good order. However, the foot does have two dents to it, one rising upwards where it has been placed down on an edge and another which is slightly rolled in. Other than this it is in good order. The Joseph Savory tankard again is in good condition and has a very small inverted dent to the foot.
"Beyond The Border" by W D Campbell, published by Archibald Constable & Company 1898, first edition, pictorial gilt covers and spine.There is rubbing to the gilding on the spine top and bottom and the front board bottom right-hand corner. The boards front and back internally are still attached but show the bindings as the paper is ripped the length of the boards. The flyleaves are discoloured but internally the pages are in very good condition with a nice clean colour with no inscriptions. Overall I would classify this book as being in good condition.
Fleming Ian "On Her Majesty's Secret Service", hard cover first edition, published by Jonathan Cape 1963, with dust cover, together with "The Spy Who Loved Me" 1964 sixth impression.Overall, the two books in this lot are in good condition, however ”On Her Majesty’s Secret Service” has the poorer dust jacket with small tears of a few milometers mostly to the spine and a 1 cm tear near the fold to the front cover board. There is some discoloration and the dust cover is slightly grubby with two slight blemishes to the spine. There is a previous owners name inside. However the pages are nice and clean there is no major issues with the book.
Fleming Ian "You Only Live Twice", published by Jonathan Cape, first edition 1964 with dust wrapper.There is a name inside in pen, slight foxing to the end papers, internal pages are clean as are the boards of the book. The dust wrapper has a 2 cm rip on the fold, a 1 cm rip on the spine, 2 or 3 small other tears and slight fold marks to the bottom left-hand corner and top edge, however the dust wrapper is generally clean, and the spine is in good condition.
Alfred Wainwright (1907-1991), a Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells, book 1 The Eastern Fells, published in 1955 by Henry Marshall, dark green Rexine covers with rounded corners and gold lettering, issued without a dust wrapper, first edition.This book is free from any inscriptions, notes, ticks or pen marks. There is a light pencil price which will rub out. Overall this is a nice clean copy.
Alfred Wainwright (1907-1991), a Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells, book 2 The Far Eastern Fells, published in 1955 by Henry Marshall, grey Rexine covers with rounded corners and red lettering, dust wrapper prices 12/6, first edition (see illustration).Underneath the dust wrapper on the front board is a name and address, date April 1957, the spine is severely faded, there is foxing to the dust cover, the internal pages are in good condition with no marks.
Alfred Wainwright (1907-1991), a Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells, book 3 The Central Fells published in 1958 by Henry Marshall, blue Rexine covers with rounded corners and silver lettering, dust wrapper priced 12/6, first edition. The book says published 1958 and book for in preparation. The cover has a price of 12 shillings and sixpence. There are no later impression marks. There are no internal inscriptions or marks on the pages, the dust cover has been covered in plastic to repair the rips to the dust cover.
Alfred Wainwright (1907-1991), a Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells, book 4 The Southern Fells, published in 1960 by Henry Marshall, brown Rexine covers with rounded corners and blue lettering, dust wrapper priced 12/6, first edition.No internal inscriptions or marks to the pages, dust jacket is slightly grubby but not faded.
Alfred Wainwright (1907-1991), a Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells, book 5 The Northern Fells dark maroon Rexine covers with rounded corners and silver lettering, dust wrapper priced 12/6, first edition.There are no internal inscriptions or marks to the pages, the dust jacket has been covered with plastic, there are rips and slight damage to the dust jacket.
Alfred Wainwright (1907-1991), a Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells, book 6 published in 1964 by The Westmorland Gazette Limited, yellow Rexine covers with rounded corners and dark blue lettering, dust wrapper priced 12/6, first edition.There is a name and date in pen. The rest of the book is in clean condition, however the . spine is faded and there is a mark to the front.
Alfred Wainwright (1907-1991), a Pictorial Guide to the Lakeland Fells, book 7 The Western Fells, published in 1966 by The Westmorland Gazette Limited, light green Rexine covers with rounded corners and gold lettering, dust wrapper priced 15/, first edition.The book has no inscriptions and no pen marks throughout the pages. The dust jacket is . in reasonable condition, it hasn’t faded but is slightly grubby.
Two books on Gamebirds and Hunting, "Gamebirds and Wild Fowl of Sweden and Norway" by L Lloyd, published by Frederick Warne & Company, hard cover first edition 1867, with green boards and gilded decoration, together with "The English Sportsman The Western Prairies" by Grantley Berkeley, published by Hurst & Blackett London 1861, rear board detached but still present and spine damaged top and bottom but still securely attached.
Six topographical and local history books, "The Kirby Family" by Lewis Kirby, signed first edition 1994, limited to 250 copies, "A History of Whitby" by George Young, 1976 reprint and "A History of Whitby and Streoneshalh Abbey" 1990 reprint hard covers, "A History of The Parish Church of Burnside" by Elizabeth Bingham, "Carlisle Down Memory Lane" by Mary Scott Parker 2013, together with "The Rise and Fall of Ewanrigg Hall" by Doris Riley, signed.

-
596772 item(s)/page