A continental hunting hanger, c 1680, broad slightly curved, shallow fullered blade 19”, DE towards reinforced tip, knight’s head armourer’s mark on both sides at forte, brass hilt, the single shell guard pierced with vines around a central escutcheon bearing Turk’s head on top and Negro’s head underneath, twin loops into knucklebow with ornamental centre and top into cap shaped pommel embossed with heads and vines, horn grips with front central band (back band missing). GC for age (quillon missing) Plate 9
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A continental hunting hanger, c 1720, broad SE shallow fullered blade 22½”, with traces of running wolf mark on one side at forte, small turn down steel shell guard, short shallow ovoid section crossguard, broad 2 piece horn grip with lower band and pommel (side straps missing). GC for age (blade worn) Plate 9
An early 19th century hunting hanger, straight SE blade 19”, with traces of etching, brass hilt with scalloped irregular shell guard, crossguard and hoof quillon, knucklebow and hoof terminal into plain pommel and backstrap, bone grips secured by 3 oval studs. GC (hilt a little loose and bent). Plate 9
A mid 18th century hunting hanger, SE tapering blade 22”, with twin back fullers, brass hilt with turn down shell guard and small oval crossguard, ornamental knucklebow, crossguard with fluted central section, radial panelled pommel cap, tapering multi fluted ebony grip. GC traces of gilt to hilt, (blade some pitting, hilt a little loose). Plate 9
Rookwood handled vessel Iris glaze Carl Schmidt Rare Rookwood, handled vessel, Iris glaze with a painted hunting scene, executed by Carl Schmidt in 1902, #587C, 5"w x 5"h The handle of this mug has been professionally restored at an unknown time. Otherwise there are no problems and only minor crazing. An unusual and detailed painting with a hunter and his dog in a marsh landscape, done by Carl Schmidt. The base is impressed with the Rookwood logo, date, shape # and artist initials typical of the year 1902. This vessel is in good condition with the restoration and is a little bit dirty. Starting Price: $400
A red hunting tartan kilt owned and worn by Rangers legendary Manager Bill Struth, with interior Wm Anderson & Sons label inscribed Wm Struth Esq., September 1938, with associated belt and buckle, a black and white studio portrait of Bill Struth and two programmes The above kilt was owned and worn by Bill Struth
George IV Inlaid Rosewood Hunting Sideboard. The superstructure composed of a crossbanded rectangular top raised on scroll volute sides, over an inset three drawer frieze shelf, over the outset canted rectangular top on a three drawer frieze, raised on tapered legs, ending in spade feet, fitted with diamond form estucheons. Dimensions 52 1/4 x 48 x 19 inches (132.7 x 121.9 x 48.2 cm); Property from a Private San Francisco Collection [Key] Starting Price: $600
AN EARLY 20TH CENTURY MASAI ANIMAL HIDE SHIELD of elliptical form, crudely painted in white, black and blood red, the reverse with wood rib and handle, 111cm high; together with an African staff, with a figural handle, carved as a Nubian official, 122cm high; a Masai hunting spear and bow, an ornamental knife and whip and a single string wooden cow hide harp and an African hide covered drum (8)
EVERED (Philip) and LOMAS (H M illust.) - Stag Hunting with The Devon and Somerset 1887-1901 An Account of The Chase of The Wild Red Deer on Exmoor, London & Exeter 1902, numerous b&w illustrations, teg. three-quarter calf gilt; together with FORTESQUE (Hon. John) - Records of Stag-Hunting on Exmoor, illusts. by Edgar Greene, London 1887, teg. three-quarter calf gilt, both ex-libris Swinton park (2)
KOROVIN, KONSTANTIN(1861-1939)Summer Morning. Okhotino, signed, inscribed in Cyrillic "Okhotino" and dated 1916.Oil on canvas, 87.5 by 134 cm.Provenance: Collection of Colonel Josef Košek (1886–1953), member of the Diplomatic Corps of Czechoslovakia and First Consul of Czechoslovakia in Riga, from 1921. Acquired from the above by the present owner. Private collection, Germany. Authenticity of the work has been confirmed by the expert V. Petrov.Konstantin Korovin’s life-affirming landscape, Summer Morning. Okhotino, belongs to the remarkable cycle painted at the artist’s beloved country estate in the 1910s. Korovin acquired the Okhotino estate from Savva Mamontov in 1897 and designed and built a small house there (which is now near Pereslavl-Zalessky). From then on he tried to spend as much time as he could there, to escape the noise of Moscow, the scenery workshops of the Bolshoi Theatre and the stuffy classrooms of the College of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture where he taught. The full-blooded loveliness of the Vladimir countryside with its lush green woodlands, the deep dark-blue River Nerl, with its fluffy blanket of snow in winter and babbling thaw-holes, was extraordinarily dear to his heart. Korovin painted many canvasses of the Okhotino landscape, capturing familiar sights like the long lines of high trees and typical Okhotino houses with pointed finials to their sloping roofs. It is as though Okhotino nourished Korovin with its vital energy, the warmth of its sunny days, the splendour of its autumn colours, the cordiality of its winter evenings and the simplicity of peasant life. Okhotino canvasses such as Summer Morning, even more remarkable for their virtuoso painterly artistry, are essentially plein air studies elevated to the status of fully finished pictures. He painted them astonishingly quickly, sometimes out fishing or shooting – while waiting for a bite or between drives. Accordingly, nature comes across in these paintings as a concentrated sensation infused with the painter’s poetic sentiment and seemingly living and breathing the same air that he does. The same old woods, barns, wattle fences, weirs and stretches of water not only fail to tire Korovin’s eye but, on the contrary, take on a sharper individual resonance on each occasion, with the season and time of day. No wonder his peers, on seeing these unpretentious views of the Vladimir region, observed that “Korovin saw the same life as others do, but saw it in astonishing richness”. As early as the 1870s, when he was seeking landscape motifs that were “close to my heart and which resonate with my soul” and distancing himself from the Itinerant position, Korovin wrote: “What is needed is light – more gladness, more brightness”. The strongest embodiment of these words, which became a kind of creative credo for the artist, is in the Okhotino canvasses, in which, captivated by the natural force that is colour, becomes a true bard of the Russian summer. Warm summer days and evenings, few in number and therefore especially gladdening to the Russian soul, dazzled Korovin with their riot of shimmering colours. In Summer Morning, dated 1916, it seems that the sun itself – rising above the horizon outside the picture and casting strips of shade on the sparse verdure of the countryside – is urging the artist to reproduce the effects of light. There are wooden houses everywhere in the distance, there are barns and stacks of wood; among the trees a peasant girl in a red dress hurries about her business and, the artist’s hunting dog waits on the road for his master to finish, wipe off his palette and pack up his easel. These tokens of the rustic genre seem to blend with the surrounding landscape in shimmering light and a multiplicity of reflections, into a single joyous symphony of colour. It is also significant that Korovin uses his trademark chromatic discovery of 1886: the burning of red against green, which gradually takes hold in his traditional palette and the many and varied combinations of dark green and ochre tones. Running through the morning light of summer, the contrasts of hue and swiftness of his brushwork, is his intoxication with the luxuriance of painting and, through painting – the luxuriance of nature. The style of painting in which the artist applies a succession of precise, impetuous, broad brushstrokes appears relaxed. This imparts to the whole composition not only a slightly uplifted, festive mood, but also a special cadence. It seems that the artist has seized the moment and then, from behind the treetops, the sun comes out, clouds scud across the sky and the earth begins to shine in the light of summer. Thus, these landscapes of the first and second decades of the 20th century occupy a special place in Korovin’s creative legacy. Preserving the immediacy and vivacity of an impression and the astonishing painterly bravura that distinguishes Korovin’s best pieces, they have become perhaps more profound and poignant than anything else that the artist bequeathed to posterity."
Hunt-Related Books, Sixteen Volumes: Including eleven volumes of the works of Robert Smith Surtees (1805-1864), a later edition, bound in uniform three-quarter red morocco; The Analysis of the Hunting Field, London: Ackerman, 1846, with illustrations by H. Alken, in three-quarter red morocco; The Chace, the Turf, and the Road, by Nimrod, London: Murray, 1870, in full red leather by Zaehnsdorf; Vyner`s Notitia Venatica, London: John Camden Hotten, [1872], illustrated, in cloth; Grand`s Colonel Weatherford and his Friends, New York: Derrydale, 1933, in red publisher`s binding; and William Scarth Dixon`s Hunting in the Olden Days, Boston: Small Maynard and Co., [n.d.] with an autograph letter signed by the author inserted, illustrated, bound in three-quarter green morocco. (16).
North Pole. Frederick de Wit (1610-1698) Poli Arctici, et Circumiacentium Terrarum Descriptio Novissima. Amsterdam, [c. 1670]. Double-page folio, copper engraving, with contemporary colored shading around the land masses, and gold highlights to the cartouches; the map area is circular, and surrounded by four scenes of arctic whaling, walrus hunting, and blubber processing, these vignettes with no added color; evenly toned, slightly rumpled, damp stains to lower blank margin, old folds, small internal tear one inch from the center of the map; framed, not examined outside of the frame, glass cracked in lower right corner, 19 x 21 in. Arctic exploration and cartography were in a state of active development during the 17th century. This map includes several uncharted areas, as explorers continued to actively seek a northwest passage to the Pacific Ocean. It would take another 250 years of arctic exploration before such a journey was successfully completed.
Three 19th century watercolours on card of gentlemen in hunting attire, two three quarter length facing left, the other - head and shoulders oval, looking to the right. To verso in pencil and pen `printed by Josh Dighton` - Sizes 22cm x 15cm; 20cm x 13cm and 10.5cm x 8cm. Condition report: Heavy foxing to all

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