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Lot 136

Full title: A Chinese famille rose 'hu' vase with go players and figures in a palace garden, Qianlong mark, 20th C.Description:H 41,7 cm The absence of a condition report does not imply that a lot is in perfect condition. Please contact us to let us know which lots are of interest, so we can make the requested reports for you.Once complete, they will be published on our website.High resolution pictures are already available on our website at www.coronariauctions.com. Further questions are always welcome at info@coronariauctions.com

Lot 14

Full title: Two Chinese famille rose and qianjiang cai vases with figures in a palace garden and an animated landscape, 19th/20th C.Description:H 62,4 - 61,2 cm (both vases with base) H 58 - 56,9 cm (both vases without base) The absence of a condition report does not imply that a lot is in perfect condition. Please contact us to let us know which lots are of interest, so we can make the requested reports for you.Once complete, they will be published on our website.High resolution pictures are already available on our website at www.coronariauctions.com. Further questions are always welcome at info@coronariauctions.com

Lot 24

Henry Moore O.M., C.H. (British, 1898-1986)Recumbent Figure bronze with a brown patina on a wooden base13 cm. (5 1/8 in.) long (excluding the base)Conceived in 1938 and cast in bronze prior to 1948, in an edition of 9Footnotes:ProvenanceMarion and Gustave Ring, Washington D.C.Private Collection, New YorkWith James Goodman Gallery, New YorkWith Waddington Galleries, London, 2004, where acquired by the family of the present ownersPrivate Collection, U.K.ExhibitedFlorence, Forte di Belvedere, Henry Moore, 20 May-30 September 1973 (another cast)Caracas, Museo de Arte Contemporáneo, Henry Moore; Esculturas, Dibujos, Grabados. Obras de 1921 a 1982, March 1983, cat.no.E85 (another cast)Washington D.C., Hirshhorn Museum and Sculptural Garden, Selections from the Collection of Marion and Gustave Ring, 17 October 1985-12 January 1986, cat.no.35 (this cast)Jerusalem, The Israel Museum, Focus on the Collection: Henry Moore, July 2004-March 2005, cat.no.8 (another cast)LiteratureRobert Melville, Henry Moore: Sculpture and Drawings, 1921-1969, Thames and Hudson, London, 1970, p.100, cat.no.174 (monumental stone version illustrated, pp.100-101)Franco Russoli and David Mitchinson, Henry Moore Sculpture, With Comments by the Artist, London, Arthur A. Bartley, 1981, p.74, cat.no.121 (col.ill., another cast)Exh.cat., Henry Moore; Esculturas, Dibujos, Grabados. Obras de 1921 a 1982, Museo de Arte Contemporáneo, Caracas, 1983, p.100, cat.no.E85 (col.ill, another cast)Virginia Wageman (ed.), Selections from the Collection of Marion and Gustave Ring, Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C., 1985, cat.no.35, (coll.ill., as Reclining Figure)David Sylvester, (ed.), Henry Moore: Complete Sculpture, 1921-1948, Lund Humphries, London, 1988, Volume 1, p.11, cat.no.184 (monumental stone version illustrated, pp.112-113, no. 191)It is alleged that James Bolivar Manson, director of the Tate Gallery between 1930 and 1938, once said 'Over my dead body will Henry Moore ever enter the Tate'. Yet just one year following his retirement, the Tate (under the directorship of John Rothenstein) gladly accepted Moore's large green Hornton stone carving Recumbent Figure of 1938. Of all Moore's work perhaps, this carving (for which the present work is a maquette) came to symbolise not just Moore's output but to act as shorthand for modernity in 20th Century Britain.Recumbent Figure was commissioned by the architect Serge Chermayeff, who was building himself a modernist home on the Sussex Downs. The carving was to be positioned at the intersection of Chermayeff's terrace and garden, the connection point between his contemporary architecture and the ancient rolling countryside beyond. Moore recalled 'My figure looked out across the great sweep of the Downs and her gaze gathered the horizon. The sculpture had no specific relationship to the architecture. It had its own identity and did not need to be on Chermayeff's terrace, but it so to speak enjoyed being there, and I think introduced a humanising element; it became a mediator between modern house and ageless land' (Henry Moore in Sculpture in the Open Air, British Council film, 1955, transcript reprinted in Alan Wilkinson (ed.), Henry Moore: Writings and Conversations, Aldershot 2002, p.258–9).Chermayeff ran into financial woes, and Recumbent Figure was returned to the artist, from whom it was purchased by the Tate in 1939. The carving was immediately shipped to New York to be showcased at the British Pavilion of that year's World's Fair, and due to the outbreak of war this intended brief excursion turned into a several-year-long stay. The work was displayed at MOMA and this unplanned circumstance greatly bolstered Moore's reputation in North America. The museum's director wrote in 1946 'It was with great regret that we saw it leave. It had won wide esteem among the museum visitors.' (John James Sweeny, letter to John Rothenstein, 7 March 1946, Tate Public Records TG 4/9/568/1).Following Recumbent Figure's return to the UK, the carving was featured in Battersea Park's first open-air exhibition, where again it drew much attention. Vogue magazine featured the work across its pages alongside sharply dressed models, appropriating Moore's carving as a symbol of the newness so appreciated by its fashion forward readership. In contrast, cartoonists satirised the figure, and in this context the carving's status as a modern icon was subverted to poke fun at politics of the day. Through such broad exposure the carving soon became one of the most famous modern works within the Tate's collection, a status confirmed when its image was included prominently as part of the tiling display at Pimlico station.At the time Moore carved the four-and-a-half-foot Recumbent Figure it was his largest and most ambitious work to date and only made possible by his recent move from Hampstead in London to Burcroft in Kent. The larger studio-space, ability to work outdoors and the hiring of Bernard Meadows as an assistant enabled Moore to increase the scale of his work substantially. To aid this new practice Moore produced a maquette for Recumbent Figure in clay. This is the first time in his career that he adopted a method of scaling up, which would become a mainstay of his sculptural practice thereafter. Meadows recalled that he and Moore attempted, unsuccessfully at first, to cast the clay maquette to lead in a meadow field at Burcroft. Moore subsequently cast the clay to a bronze edition in 1945, to which the present cast belongs.Not only does Recumbent Figure represent one of Moore's earliest maquettes, most importantly it possesses one of the earliest instances of piercing the form, a major development of a highly important device the artist would frequently draw upon throughout his career. Speaking of this progression at the time, Moore stated that 'The first hole made through a piece of stone is a revelation. The hole connects one side to another, making it immediately more three-dimensional. A hole can have as much shape-meaning as a solid mass. Sculpture in air is possible, where the stone contains only the hole, which is the intended and considered form' (Henry Moore, 'A Sculptor Speaks', Listener, 18 August 1937, pp.338–40).This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ARAR Goods subject to Artists Resale Right Additional Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 5

Dame Barbara Hepworth (British, 1903-1975)Forms in Space signed and dated 'Barbara Hepworth 1946' (lower right)pencil, gouache and crayon on gesso-prepared board23.5 x 28.9 cm. (9 1/4 x 11 3/8 in.)Footnotes:ProvenanceWith Piccadilly Gallery, London, April 1964, where acquired by E. SommerTheir sale; Christie's, London, 10 June 2005, lot 103, where acquired by the family of the present ownersPrivate Collection, U.K.The present work is catalogued as D 84 A in the forthcoming catalogue raisonné of Barbara Hepworth's paintings.The 1940s were the most prolific decade for Hepworth in terms of drawings, for having moved to Cornwall in 1939 with Ben Nicholson and their three triplets, she spent less time carving but made, in her words, 'innumerable drawings in gouache and pencil' (Barbara Hepworth quoted in Alan Wilkinson, The Drawings of Barbara Hepworth, Lund Humphries, Farnham and Burlington, 2015, p.59). Kept busy by the domestic necessities of their three children, the drawings were an important outlet for her creativity, as she wrote in a letter to E. H. Ramsden in 1943: 'If I didn't have to cook, wash-up, nurse children ad infinitum, I should carve, carve, carve. The proof of this is in my drawings. They are not just a way of amusing myself nor are they experimental probings – they are my sculptures born in the disguise of two dimensions.' (Ibid., p.69). Hepworth was indeed very productive in creating these abstract drawings during this period, a way of overcoming the historic difficulties of juggling motherhood with furthering her artistic career which were hampered yet further by the scarcity of food and materials during the Second World War, with rationing continuing in Britain until 1954. The present lot, created in 1946, stems from this challenging time. Determined and exceptionally hard-working, Hepworth would endeavour to work through illness or difficulty many times in her life, noting too the societal disadvantages that she often had to fight against as a sculptor: 'I am constantly plagued by this 'little woman' attitude'. Not only did these drawings allow her a creative outlet, but they also sold well, with examples bought by close friends who visited her in Carbis Bay, including C.S. Reddihough, Margaret Gardiner, John Wells, Alastair Morton and others. Indeed a letter detailing a visit from Jim Ede in 1944 shows just how desperate times could be: 'Jim was charming - so nice to the children & so refreshing to be with. He enjoyed all the work, the stones, the shells & crystals & he's lent us a delightful deep blue Miro which looks wonderful in the studio with the sculptures. He bought 3 little paintings of Bens & though he may not realise it completely saved our life - we were at bottom & could not pay either school bills or grocer!' (Barbara Hepworth quoted in Eleanor Clayton, Barbara Hepworth: Art & Life, Thames & Hudson, London, 2021, p.112). Hepworth's approach to these drawings was one of an exploration of ideas, but they were not works that she relied upon for the creation of a particular sculpture, in comparison to Moore's reliance on preparatory drawings. She noted that: 'These drawings I call 'drawings for sculpture'; but it is in a general sense – that is – out of the drawings springs a general influence. Only occasionally can I say that one particular drawing has later become one particular sculpture' (Barbara Hepworth, quoted in Alan Wilkinson, op. cit., p.59). Similarities and ideas stemming from this drawing can be seen however in sculptures such as Pendour, 1947 (Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC), and Pelagos, 1946 (Tate, London).The present lot, Forms in Space, has a crispness and definition which is particularly satisfying: a twist of pencil lines convey the tension of strings, tightly radiating out from a curved arc near the centre, which would have been drawn using a ruler and compass. The sculptural shape in the centre of the work emerges from a blue-grey background, flecked and varied, as though the rippling waves of an incoming tide, seen through a veil of mist. Smoothed onto the shapes of the form are shades of white, grey and blue, contrasted with bright areas of sky-blue and yellow. Always intimately connected to the natural world which surrounded her in Cornwall, the sculptures and related drawings of this time had a particularly poetic resonance for Hepworth: 'I used colour and strings in many of the carvings of this time. The colour in the concavities plunged me into the depth of water, caves, or shadows deeper than the carved concavities themselves. The strings were the tension I felt between myself and the sea, the wind or the hills'. (Ibid., p.71).The drawings of the 1940s were for Hepworth then an important outlet, a lifeline for her creative impulses and a vital source of income when domestic duties limited her ability to carve. Always in tune with the landscape around her, she deeply felt and absorbed the inspiration that came to her from the sky, waves, and land that rolled through and around the Cornish peninsula. Independent, finished art works in their own right, these drawings are a special testament to her resolute determination to work whatever the circumstances, and Forms in Space is an important example of this.We are grateful to Dr. Sophie Bowness for her kind assistance with the cataloguing apparatus for the present work.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ARAR Goods subject to Artists Resale Right Additional Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 69

Mary Martin (British, 1907-1969)Six Groups signed and dated 'Mary Martin '63' (verso)stainless steel, Formica, wood and painted wood relief91.5 x 91.5 x 9cm (36 x 36 x 3 1/2in)(unframed)Footnotes:ProvenanceWith Molton & Lords Gallery, London, 1964, where acquired by Dennis Lennon, thence by descent to the present ownerPrivate Collection, U.K.ExhibitedLondon, Molton & Lords Gallery, Mary Martin, February 1964, cat. no.14Mary Martin was an innovative Constructivist artist, part of an avant-garde group which included Victor Pasmore, Robert Adams, Adrian Heath, Anthony Hill and her husband Kenneth Martin, who she had met while studying at the Royal College of Art. Martin explored the possibilities of making constructed abstract art, often using the medium of the relief and three-dimensional forms to do this, beginning from the early 1950s onwards. She is best known for her complex reliefs which used square and rectangular shapes organised in different permutations often to dazzling effect, exploring the many combinations she could create from the repetition of one simple element, which later focussed on the cube. As she herself wrote in 1957, 'the end is always to achieve simplicity'.Six Groups is a particularly striking example of Martin's signature style, and at 91.5 x 91.5cm, it is larger in scale than the majority of her other reliefs. This work was included in her solo exhibition at Molton and Lords Gallery in 1964, where Martin showed a number of related relief constructions. The common unit for all these works was the right-angled wedge, created from a cube of wood cut diagonally in half, with the rectangular surfaces then covered in a thin sheet of stainless steel, each set at 45 degrees. Set against an impressive background of black Formica, the reflective surfaces of the stainless steel are arranged to catch the light at numerous different angles. As David Sylvester noted in the catalogue essay accompanying her exhibition at Molton and Lords in 1964: 'The wedges are juxtaposed with the reflecting surface facing in all the various possible directions, so creating jagged contrasts of light and shadow which change as the spectator's position or the direction of the light changes.' (D. Sylvester, Mary Martin, Molton & Lords, 1964, n.p.) Despite creating a relief using hard, industrial materials in geometric shapes, Martin creates a sense of movement and rhythm into which the viewer is drawn to interact. The present work takes its title from the six groups of sixteen wedges which are arranged in a four by four formation. The groups have then been arranged asymmetrically on the Formica background, allowing the negative spaces to fill the remaining areas of the square. Six Groups shares with all Martin's reliefs an underlying mathematical logic, and she used principles informed by the Golden Section, Fibonacci sequences and pendulum permutations to devise the complex patterns she created.The present work has a special and interesting provenance, having been acquired from Molton and Lords Gallery in 1964 by the architect Dennis Lennon. Dennis Lennon was one of London's leading architects and designers in the 1960s. After a distinguished career in the war, his first job was with Maxwell Fry. Following this he became director of the Rayon Design Centre, where he offered the up-and-coming young designer Terence Conran his first job after seeing his end-of-term show. He set up his own practice in 1950, and was one of designers for the 1951 Festival of Britain. Examples of his furniture designs are in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum, and from 1963-1998 he was the set designer for many productions at Glyndebourne. He was also responsible for co-ordinating the design for the Cunard ocean liner the Queen Elizabeth II in the 1960s. In 1968, House and Garden magazine illustrated Six Groups hanging in situ in Dennis Lennon's home, Hampermill House. He was a great patron of the arts, and bought many pieces from up-and-coming artists of the time, and knew Francis Bacon, John Piper and Graham Sutherland.Particularly striking and impressive, Six Groups is a formidable example of Martin's best work, and the scarcity of her reliefs means that the chance to acquire one is a rare opportunity. A similar work, Spiral, also created in 1963 and exhibited alongside Six Groups in 1964 at Molton and Lords Gallery, is in the collection of the Tate, London, who acquired it directly from the above exhibition in 1964.We are grateful to Dr. Susan Tebby and the Estate of Mary Martin for their assistance in cataloguing this lot. A full analysis of the mathematical systems used in Six Groups by Dr. Susan Tebby is available on request.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ARAR Goods subject to Artists Resale Right Additional Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 7

Patrick Heron (British, 1920-1999)White and Green Upright : August 1956 signed and titled 'Patrick Heron/White + Green Upright/August 1956' (on the stretcher)oil on canvas91.4 x 50.8 cm. (36 x 20 in.)Footnotes:ProvenanceWith Waddington, Galleries, LondonPrivate Collection, U.K.ExhibitedSt Ives, Tate Gallery,Patrick Heron: Early and Late Garden Paintings, 20 March-3 June 2001LiteratureAndrew Wilson,Patrick Heron: Early and Late Garden Paintings, Tate Publishing, London, 2001, p.27 (ill.)Mel Gooding,Patrick Heron, Phaidon Press, London, 2002, p.106 (col.ill.) White and Green Upright: August 1956 is a painting that belongs to a key moment in both Patrick Heron's life and the development of British art. In April 1956, just a few months before the present work was painted, the artist and his family settled at Eagle's Nest, the home he purchased from Mark Arnold-Forster. It was here, in close proximity to his friend and fellow artist Bryan Wynter and five miles west of the artists' colony of St Ives, amongst the hills overlooking the Cornish village of Zennor, that Heron found his idyll. This corner of west Penwith had captivated numerous people before, including D.H. Lawrence who wrote 'When I looked down at Zennor, I knew it was the Promised Land, and that a new heaven and a new earth would take place' (James T. Boulton (ed.), The Selected Letters of D.H. Lawrence, Cambridge, 1997, p.123).In January 1956 Modern Art in the United States arrived on British shores and caused a sensation at the Tate. Heron reviewed the exhibition, which included Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko, Robert Motherwell and Willem de Kooning amongst others, for Arts and there can be little doubt it had a revelatory impact on both him and his peers. The scale of the works and the confidence with which they were composed meant he was 'instantly elated by the size, originality, economy and inventive daring of many of the paintings'. However, as an accomplished artist himself, Heron was confident enough to stress his view that there was a lack of resonance in their colour. This is perhaps not surprising given his grounding in European art, shaped by the formalist criticism of Roger Fry alongside the work of great Cubists and Fauves, their canvases imbued with vivid hues. He was also a keen admirer of another American artist, Sam Francis, who as a Tachiste alongside the likes of Hans Hartung and Pierre Soulages advocated gestural painting of a softer kind than Abstract Expressionism. The arrival at Eagle's Nest in 1956 marked a move away from figuration and the embracement of abstraction as Heron saw it. The property had been described as a 'painter's garden' owing to the spectacular planting undertaken by Arnold-Forster during his prior ownership and Heron clearly felt this to be the case with much of his work from the period drawing on the rich outdoor landscape and his own reference to 'Tachiste Garden Paintings'. White and Green Upright: August 1956 predominantly incorporates the colour scheme of its title in vertical planes across the surface with subtle tones and variations of red, yellow and black also introduced to give layered complexity. We may consider the ocean to also be at play here with Heron describing how it acted as a gigantic mirror around the property, 'brilliantly silver, and reflecting white light upwards. To have the rocks and the bushes illuminated from below, from a glittering reflector which is over 600 feet beneath one, and many miles wide – is a special experience' (Patrick Heron quoted in Michael McNay, Patrick Heron, Tate Publishing, London, 2002, p.38).This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ARAR Goods subject to Artists Resale Right Additional Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 73

Keith Vaughan (British, 1912-1977)The Garden at Ashton Gifford signed and dated 'Keith Vaughan/44' (lower right) and titled and dated again 'The Garden at Ashton Gifford 1944' (on a label attached to the backboard)gouache, pastel, pen and ink25.2 x 21.9 cm. (9 7/8 x 8 5/8 in.)Footnotes:ProvenanceWith The Redfern Gallery, London, 23 March 1974, where acquired byMichael BestallWith Alan Wheatley Art, London, where acquired by the present ownerPrivate Collection, U.K.ExhibitedEdinburgh, Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, British Drawings 1939-49, June 1969 (catalogue untraced)In 1940 Greenways Preparatory School was evacuated from Bognor Regis in Sussex to Ashton Gifford House, a three-story Neo-Classical building nestled in the heart of overgrown woodland. Over the summer of 1942, while stationed at Codford in Wiltshire, Vaughan's Pioneer Corps company were employed to clear the grounds. The romantic, overgrown setting inspired several paintings over the course of the next few years, including The Working Party, 1942, Tree Felling at Ashton Gifford, 1942–43 and The Garden at Ashton Gifford, 1944. Vaughan wrote in his journal: I live with as much purpose and enthusiasm as a cow. A belly-filling existence. Driven and chivvied all day by NCOs we have no idea of the beginning or the end of a job or what its purpose is. This, more than the labour itself, is what makes it exhausting. Day follows day with no more change than the date on the calendar. (Keith Vaughan, unpublished journal entry, July 1942)The clearing of the woodland not only offered the soldiers worthwhile community service but also provided much-needed fuel for the army in the form of wood. Dozens of trees had to be felled using little more than chopping axes and then cut up into regulation-sized logs with handsaws. Sometimes the school children and evacuees assisted the soldiers during school breaks.Vaughan made dozens of sketches of his company's activities, usually in pen and ink and sometimes in pencil. He seems to have been particularly thorough in his preparations for the paintings he made which were some of his most ambitious wartime images. He filled several sketchbooks with rapidly executed figures studies and related material. Some were drawn at great speed and capture the dynamism of figures breaking the tree boughs and splitting and hauling branches. Others depict his comrades chopping and sawing, dragging enormous boughs and logs, loading lorries and, occasionally, taking well-earned breaks. Vaughan was drawn to certain aesthetic qualities in his surroundings, enough to write about them to his friend, the painter Norman Towne: ...white and ochre branches plunging down into the oceanic surging of tangled nettles. People walking through the waist-high grass, through the aqueous leaf-green shadow, arms full of dead wood...and the wall running as an indefatigable horizontal, losing and finding itself in the jungle of weed and ivy...I wanted to capture this in lassoes of line and nets of colour, but it's more difficult than writing about it. (Keith Vaughan, letter to Norman Towne, 12 October 1942) Sometime in the late 1960s, Vaughan returned to some of these wartime drawings and set about reworking them with gouache and coloured wax pastels, to obliterate many of the overworked pen and ink details and balance out the compositions more effectively. The present work is a good example of the artist's early Neo-Romantic, pen and ink style combined with his later, more simplified approach to picture-making. The foreground figures and forms are worked in detail with pen and ink, while the background wall is depicted in pale, textured washes, supplying the necessary geometrical stability from which he could hang his revised composition. Green patches of oil pastel are used to suggest distant tree boughs and create a formalized sense of spatial recession, in keeping with his work of the 1960s. We are grateful to Gerard Hastings, who is currently working on his new book Keith Vaughan: The Graphic Art, to be published by Pagham Press, for compiling this catalogue entry.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ARAR Goods subject to Artists Resale Right Additional Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 112

Purisima; Spanish School; XVIII century.Polychrome and gilded wood carving.It presents faults in the polychromy.Measurements: 42 x 19 x 12,5 cm.The representation of the Immaculate Conception is an invocation based on an evolved iconographic concept, which sometimes associates the theme of the Coronation of the Virgin or the Immaculate Conception. The latter is the most recurrent iconographic pattern, in which Mary appears standing, dressed in a white tunic and blue cloak, with her hands crossed on her chest, with the moon at her feet and treading on the infernal serpent, which in this painting is slightly outlined, symbolising her victory over Original Sin. Most of these images are accompanied in the painting by the Marian symbols of the litanies and psalms, such as the mystical rose, the palm tree, the cypress, the enclosed garden, the ark of Faith, the gate of Heaven, the ivory tower, the sun and moon, the sealed fountain, the cedar of Lebanon, the spotless mirror, the morning star, and so on. Seventeenth-century artists faithfully maintained the iconographic type but dispensed with or reduced the symbols of the litanies, incorporating them into the composition in a naturalistic manner, and sought greater dynamism and a sense of theatricality. This trend culminated in the 18th century, when we find compositions such as the one we present here, with Mary surrounded by angels, still with some iconographic attributes but now much reduced.

Lot 27

Spanish school; 18th century."Immaculate Conception".Oil on panel.It presents restorations.Measurements: 84 x 61 cm; 90 x 68 cm (frame).Devotional scene in which the figure of the Virgin Mary is presented as the Immaculate Conception. The piece follows the usual iconography attached to the theme, but presents a completely dynamic aesthetic, based on trompe l'oeil and a three-dimensional pictorial conception, which the author achieves through the highly marked shadows of the clouds. In addition, the fluid movement of the frame blends with the work in such a way that they form a whole, very much in the baroque style, although the tones used and the delicacy of the subject's face place us in the 18th century.Medieval Christianity passionately debated the belief that Mary had been conceived without the stain of original sin. Some universities and corporations swore to defend this privilege of the Mother of God, several centuries before the First Vatican Council defined the dogma of faith in 1854. At the end of the Middle Ages the need arose to give iconographic form to this idea, and the model of the Apocalyptic Woman of Saint John was taken, maintaining some elements and modifying others (the Apocalyptic Woman is pregnant, but not the Immaculate). The definitive image came to fruition in the 16th century, apparently in Spain. Following a Valencian tradition, the Jesuit Father Alberro had a vision of the Immaculate Conception and described it to the painter Juan de Juanes so that he could depict it as faithfully as possible. It is an evolved iconographic concept, sometimes associated with the theme of the Coronation of the Virgin. Mary is shown standing, dressed in a white tunic and blue cloak, her hands crossed on her chest, with the moon at her feet (in memory of Diana's chastity) and treading on the infernal serpent (symbol of her victory over Original Sin). Around his head, like a halo, he wears the twelve stars, symbolic of fullness and alluding to the twelve tribes of Israel. Most of these images are accompanied in the painting by the Marian symbols of the litanies and psalms, such as the mystical rose, the palm tree, the cypress, the enclosed garden, the ark of Faith, the gate of Heaven, the ivory tower, the sun and moon, the sealed fountain, the cedar of Lebanon, the spotless mirror, the morning star, and so on. In Baroque painting, the background is usually celestial and populated with angels, as 17th-century artists faithfully maintained the iconographic type but dispensed with the symbols of the litanies or reduced them, incorporating them into the composition in a naturalistic manner, and sought greater dynamism and a sense of theatricality.

Lot 2

Sadanand K. Bakre (Indian, 1920-2007)Landscape inscribed Bakre 1962 in Devanagari lower right and signed and dated versooil on board, framed45.8 x 60cm (18 1/16 x 23 5/8in).Footnotes:CELEBRATING 75 YEARS OF THE PROGRESSIVE ARTISTSProvenancePrivate Collection UK; Acquired from a shop in Lancashire in the 90s.Note: There is a label on the reverse from Burton Gallery, Burton in Wirral, Cheshire which includes the artist's name, the title, medium, the name of the original collector and the date 30th November 1966. In addition, the artist has signed and dated the work in English and Devanagiri, and there is an address 19 Street Helens Garden, London, W.10. The size of the work 18 x 24 is also written, along with LAD 8434.Born in Baroda, Bakre was one of the six founders of the Bombay Progressive Artists' Group in 1947. He studied at the Gokhale Education Society School, where his talents were encouraged, and at the age of sixteen, he held his first solo exhibition at school, where he showcased his clay models of drapery, watercolour landscapes, still life and figurative works. He subsequently enrolled at the Sir J.J School of Art and received his Diploma in Sculpture in 1944. Always looking for new ways to express himself, he abandoned the medium in 1951 when he moved to London and turned his focus to paintings. The present work was created during the 60s, when Bakre's style evolved considerably. Often considered the most important period for his oeuvre, he moved away from academic realism to abstraction, and was influenced by the sculptors Henry Moore and Jacob Epstein and the jagged and repetitive style of the British Vorticists; they were a group formed in London in 1914 who wanted to create art that expressed the dynamism of the modern world. This period is characterised by the visual similarities between his paintings and sculptures and their bold geometric lines. He perhaps best describes this period himself 'I paint as I like... I am traditionally trained and perfectly capable of accomplishing completely realistic work. But my interest in forms has gone far beyond the dull imitations of subject matter, which to me is almost unimportant.' (S. Bakre, All Art Is Either Good or Bad, Free Press Bulletin, March 24, 1965). For a similar work sold in these rooms see, Bonhams, Modern and Contemporary South Asian Art, London, 25th October 2021, lot 46.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 243

Gardening.- Bright (Henry A.) A Year in a Lancashire Garden, 1891 § Van Rensselaer (Mrs. Schuyler) Art Out-of-Doors, 1893 § Felton (S.) Gleanings on Gardens, 1897 § Austin (Alfred) In Veronica's Garden, fifth thousand, light foxing, 1897 § Robinson (W.) Garden Design and Architects' Gardens, 1892 § Ellacombe (Henry N.) In a Gloucestershire Garden, second edition, 1896, armorial bookplate of Sir William Eden to front pastedowns, uniform green straight-grain half morocco gilt by Hatchards, spines with gilt lettering and foliate design, spines uniformly faded, light rubbing to extremities, t.e.g.; and 5 others on gardening in matching uniform bindings, 8vo (11)

Lot 77

Poetry.- Quack doctors. A satire. In hudibrastic stile, first edition, title with woodcut floral ornament, woodcut head-piece, title detached, E1 tear just within text, but without loss, closely trimmed at head, some staining, lightly browned, disbound, scarce, Printed for C. Moran, in the Great Piazza, Covent Garden, 1762 § Touchstone (Timothy, pseudonym) Lord Mayor's day; or City Pageantry; a poem. With notes illustrative and explanatory, first edition, title lightly soiled, occasional spotting, lightly browned, disbound, scarce, Printed for James Ridgway, York Street, St. James's Square, [1792]; and c.15 others, 18th century Poetry, v.s. (c.17)

Lot 89

NO RESERVE [Gardenstone (Francis Garden, Lord), attributed to] Miscellanies in Prose and Verse, first edition, a couple small ink marks to T2, Edinburgh, Printed by J. Robertson, 1791, bound with Johnson (Samuel) A Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland, new edition, first few leaves working loose, some light water-staining at beginning and end, Edinburgh, 1819, together 2 works in 1 vol., occasional light spotting, contemporary half calf, rubbed, spine with central vertical split but holding, joints starting, 8vo.

Lot 1370

MIXED, selection, inc. complete sets (11), football (4), Gallaher Famous Footballers (brown), Churchman Association Footballers 1st (two sets) & 2nd; plus 2 golf types, Pattreiouex & Churchman; Gallaher (7), Champions of Screen & Stage, Wild Flowers, British Birds, Garden Flowers, Wild Animals etc., in modern album, G to EX, 538*

Lot 1372

MIXED, complete sets (17), inc. Mitchell Clan Tartan 2nd, Lea Roses, Players Old Hunting Prints, Abdulla Old Favourites, Wills Railway Engines, Garden Hints; Liebig (8), Napoleon, clouds, floral, cavalry etc., in modern album, G to EX, 423*

Lot 1420

MIXED, complete sets (18), inc. ERB Cinema Stars (inc. Chaplin card), Carreras Britains Defences, Wills Association Footballers, Cavanders Peeps into Prehistoric Times; Gallaher (7), The Navy, Butterflies & Moths, Champions of Screen & Stage, British Birds, Garden Flowers etc., in modern album, G to EX, 736*

Lot 1445

MIXED, complete (19), inc. Wills, Garden Flowers, Life in the Tree Tops, Speed, Ships Badges; Phillips Film Stars, Ogdens Children of All Nations, Carreras History of Army Uniforms etc., generally G to EX, 810*

Lot 1491

MIXED, complete & part sets, inc. BP Football England 98, Kensitas Coronation, Prescott Trains, Frameability Fire Engines, Junior Tropical Birds, Lyons Australia, Typhoo Do You Know?, Wills Garden Hints, Brooke Bond The Secret Diary of Kevin Tipps, PG Tips 40 Years of the Chimps etc., miniature to extra large, in three modern albums, G to EX, Qty.

Lot 892

CDS, signed CD covers, inc. Cliff Richard, with vinyl record and CoA; Absolution, Jelvis, Phatfish, Samantha Jay, Stephen Lee Garden etc., plus Veronica Mars season 1 DVD (signed by Kristen Bell), FR to EX, 30*

Lot 8023

A collection of 1960's and 1970's Psychedelic, Prog and Folk Rock LP's to include Clear Light 'Clear Light' (EKL 4011), Medicine Head 'Heavy On The Drum' (K 49005), Bonzo Dog Band 'The Doughnut In Granny's Greenhouse' (SLS. 50210), 'Let's Make Up And Be Friendly' (UAS 29288) and The History Of The Bonzos' (UAD 60071), Donovan 'A Gift From A Flower To A Garden' (L2N 6071), 'What's Bin Did And What's Bin Had' (MAL 795) and 'Universal Soldier' (MAL 718), Jefferson Airplane 'Bark' (FTR 1001), Wishbone Ash 'Wishbone Ash' (MKPS 2014) and Pentangle 'Cruel Sister' (TRA 228) (11, vinyl F-VG+, sleeves P-VG+)

Lot 8036

A collection of mixed LP's to include The Rolling Stones 'Let It Bleed' (SKL 5025), The Beatles 'With The Beatles' (PMC 1206), '1967-1970' (PCSB 718) and 'A Collection Of Beatles Oldies' (PCS 7016), Queen 'Jazz' (EMA 788), 'A Night At The Opera' (EMTC 103), 'Greatest Hits' (EMTV 30, two copies), Elvis Presley '40 Greatest' (two copies) 'As Recorded At Madison Square Garden', 'Seperate Ways' and 'Elvis Love Songs', Diana Ross 'Greatest Hits/2' and Gladys Knight & The Pips '30 Greatest' (14, vinyl F-VG, sleeves G-VG)

Lot 309

Garden Grant Smith, RSWSt. Andrews, April 20th 1890,watercolour, signed,22.5 x 35cm.

Lot 472

Shallow slate rectangular garden trough, central drain hole, length 120cm, depth 40cm, height 10cm.

Lot 474

Stained teak garden bench, and two matching chairs.

Lot 476

Seven half barrel garden planters, some of the coppering loose, each diameter 65cm, height 44cm.Qty: 7

Lot 479

A collection of vintage garden tools, spades, shovels, hoes, forks, etc

Lot 50

Small collection of Aynsley Bone China, Cottage Garden pattern; together with Royal Crown Derby Posies pattern pin dishes, commemorative mug from Buckingham Palace 1997, etc.

Lot 77

Group of clocks to include Smith's walnut-cased triple train mantel clock, quartz mantel clock, desk clock modelled as a lantern clock, alarm clocks, miniature clocks, modern quartz clock decorated with fairies and an Aynsley 'Cottage Garden' pattern porcelain wall clock.

Lot 190

Pair of Portmeirion 'Botanic Garden' vases, similar plate, Wedgwood blue Jasper ware items, Shelley 'Wild Flowers' cream and sugar, and a jug etc.  (11)

Lot 1123

French School, mid 20th Century/Cottage Garden/signed Bigon/oil on board, 35cm x 32cm CONDITION REPORT: Condition information is not usually provided in the description of the lot but is available upon request; the absence of a condition report does not imply that a lot is without imperfection

Lot 277

A pair of Chinese export famille rose vases, circa 1780, of hexagonal form decorated with panels depicting a noble family at leisure in garden settings, the covers with lion dog finials in gilt, 53.5cm high/see illustration CONDITION REPORT: One of the vases has a chip to the inner edge of the footrim. One of the covers has been professionally restored. Overall good appearance.

Lot 280

A Chinese blue and white porcelain incense burner, 20th Century, depicting figures playing chess in a garden, 11cm diameter CONDITION REPORT: No breaks, repairs or restoration, but there is some significant scuffing to the glaze around the rim and lesser to the body.

Lot 284

A Chinese famille rose slender vase, 20th Century, decorated a grasshopper resting on chrysanthemums in a garden, the base mark 'Hongxian Nianzhi', 21.5cm high/see illustration CONDITION REPORT: In good condition, no damage, repairs or wear

Lot 291

A Chinese Kakiemon-style dish with later decoration, 18th Century, depicting birds flying among flowers with garden scenes on the rim, 36.5cm diameter, a famille rose plate, 22.5 cm diameter, a blue and white bowl, 19.5 cm diameter and a 20th Century blue and white baluster-shape vase, depicting the figures of Baxian CONDITION REPORT: The large kakiemon dish with a large section of the right side broken and bonded, with associated small filled rim chips and a hairline crack. Rim fritting. The famille rose plate has a crack in the well only visible from the reverse, the bowl with a w-shaped section broken from the side and glued, with rim chips.

Lot 308

A Chinese famille rose plate, Qing Dynasty, the plate decorated a landscape in the centre and Baxian deities to the rim, 23cm diameter, and two floral pattern tea cups and a Japanese bowl decorated with peacocks and peonies in a garden CONDITION REPORT: The plate with a hairline crack from the rim at 1 o'clock, diagonally through to the edges of the well at 7 o'clock, one or two tiny rim chips and a footrim chip. the smallest teabowl with a rim crack and several rim chips, larger teabowl with a rim chip and faint hairline crack, bowl in good condition

Lot 601

A suite of Coalbrookdale style fern ware garden furniture, comprising a pair of chairs 65cm wide and a settle 152cm wide/see illustration CONDITION REPORT: Mid 20th Century, Alloy not cast iron, seats are rotten, fern pattern complete with no losses

Lot 604

A wrought iron garden seat with interwoven slatted base, 70cm wide CONDITION REPORT: Condition information is not usually provided in the description of the lot but is available upon request; the absence of a condition report does not imply that a lot is without imperfection

Lot 605

A pair of weathered stone garden vases, square with fluted tapering form, on pedestal bases, 40cm high CONDITION REPORT: Very worn condition, badly chipped throughout and weathered stone.

Lot 134

A Chinese famille rose vase,20th century, the tapering body rising from a circular foot to waisted neck, flanked by bat handles, enameled with five bats in red above a fruiting peach tree in the garden surrounded by precious objects,a six-character Jiaqing mark to base,30.5cm highCondition ReportRestored. With scuffs and surface marks. Please see the additional images.

Lot 144

A Chinese wucai jardiniere,20th century, of tapering form painted with boys in a garden in shaped panels,28.7cm diameterCondition ReportEnamel losses, surface scratches, burst glaze bubbles, minute glaze frits to rim.

Lot 164

A Chinese blue and white garden porcelain garden seat,20th century, of barrel form with flowerhead and scrolling foliage decoration30cm diameter43cm highCondition ReportPitting to the surface and minor scratches. Please see the additional images.

Lot 177

A pair of Chinese qianjiang enamelled vases, 20th century, of baluster form with a flared mouth, painted with ladies and boys in a garden, the reverse with an inscription,44.4 and 45cm high (2)Condition ReportOne with rim chipped restored with signs of glue.The other with firing cracks to the rim.Both with surface scratches.Small star crack to the interior of one vase - not visible from the exterior but can be seen inside under torch and UV light.

Lot 191

A Chinese blue and white teacup, 19th to 20th century, the rounded sides rising from a circular foot, painted with cockerels and chickens in a garden, six-character Yongzheng mark to base, 8.4cm diameterCondition ReportNo obvious faults.

Lot 205

A Chinese Canton export gouache painting, 19th century, painted with figures in a garden in a shaped panel surrounded by butterflies and flowers, their faces in ivory, ink and colour on paper,48cm square, fitted in a shaped gilt-lacquered box, 52.5cm long (2)清十九世纪 外销人物故事图 连漆金盖盒IMPORTANT NOTEThis lot contains elephant ivory material. Please be advised that several countries, including those in the EU and the USA, now prohibit the importation of ivory items unless under specific conditions. Accordingly, prospective buyers should familiarise themselves with the relevant customs regulations of their country and ensure they are able to import this item prior to bidding.This item has been registered as exempt from the UK Ivory Act 2018, on account of it being made before 3 March 1947 with less than 10% ivory by volume. Ivory declaration submission reference: CXA4CP87. Condition ReportBox with chips, cracks, splits and losses throughout, stretched, lacquer work with flakes and cracks, hinge damaged, key missing.Picture with tears and dirt marks.

Lot 475

A pair of small Chinese enamel cups,19th century, of square shape with re-entrant corners, painted with European figures in a garden,3.3cm high4.4cm square (2)Provenance: The Jan Finch CollectionCondition Reportgood.enamel pitting to interiors from manufactureminor wear

Lot 503

A group of five iron garden lanterns,20th century, of hexagonal shape, each with a hinged door and candle,43, 33 and 24cm high (5)Provenance: The Jan Finch CollectionCondition ReportOverall good.

Lot 504

A group of galvanised garden items,including five watering cans, the large oval can with a rose, 49cm high, two 1.5-gallon and two 1-gallon, together with a bucket, 23cm high (6)Provenance: The Jan Finch CollectionCondition ReportWear and tear from use.

Lot 505

A collection of wood fence hurdles or panels,the largest 60cm hightogether with four glass garden cloches,the largest 33cm highProvenance: The Jan Finch CollectionCondition ReportThere are approximately eight fence panels; all have losses, wear, dampness and rot commensurate with being stored outside. The cloches all have chips and cracks. Please see the additional images for the full inventory. Please be aware that this is a large lot, which will need to be collected in full.

Lot 641

A hardstone garden sculpture,20th century, depicting a group of three seated ducks,65cm wide,45cm deepCondition ReportScuffs and scratches, and minor losses - would benefit from a clean

Lot 643

A pair of composite stone garden statues,20th century, modelled as two classical female figures wearing flowing robes on plinth bases,136cm highCondition ReportChip to basket and plinth, Other surface blemishes, weathering and surface deposits commensurate with age. Heavily weathered. Please see the additional images.Would require two people and a suitable vehicle to lift. No more than 30/50 years old.

Lot 646

A pair of wrought iron and steel garden benches20th century, the naturalistic scrolling tree from backs above lattice seats on turned supports170cm wide65cm deep91cm highCondition ReportGreen painted finish with losses chips and scuffs to surfaces revealing base metal. One leaf is detached but present

Lot 286

A collection of twenty three various moulding and scratch planes: including and adjustable plane by Mosely & Son, Covent Garden, together in a pine tool chest.

Lot 440

A Chinese Blue Glazed Earthenware Garden Seat of Barrel Form with Heart Shaped Pierced Sides and Central Pierced Starburst Decoration, 43cms High

Lot 441

A Chinese Brown Glazed Garden Stea of Barrel Form decorated with Dragons, Pierced Sides, 44cms High

Lot 299

A Large and Heavy Early Chinese Bronze Brazier/Garden Burner of Circular Form with Flat Scalloped Rim and Double Gallery of Cast Geometric Open Design, Raised on Tripod Supports of Scrolled Form with Temple Lion Masks, 75cms Diameter

Lot 322

A Pair of Chinese Nanking Crackle Glazed Vases if Tapering Form and Flared Necks decorated with Chinese Deities in Garden Scene, Condition Issues, 40cms High

Lot 338

A Modern Blue and White Garden Seat of Barrel Form with Floral and Geometric Design, 46cms high

Lot 347

An 18th/19th Century Chinese Blue and White Porcelain Bowl, Decorated with Fenced Garden Scene and Blossoming Flowers, 18cms Diameter

Lot 359

An 18th century Chinese Porcelain Sparrow Beak Lipped Blue and White Jug with Loop Handle, Decorated with Garden Scene, 10cms High

Lot 363

An 18th/19th Century Chinese Porcelain Teapot and Cover decorated with Blossoming Flowers in Fenced Garden, Metal Mount Repair to Spout, 11cms High

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