Ca. 100-300 AD.A terracotta oil lamp Loeschcke type IV, shoulder V. On the mirror parts of the gladiator equipment (helmet, greaves, shield, sword, dagger etc.). Sintered, intact. With certificate of authenticity from Galerie Günter Puhze, Freiburg.Size: L:25mm / W:95mm ; 40gProvenance: Property a London Ancient Art Gallery, acquired on the UK Art Market; Ex Collection P.R., Southern Germany, around 1970 - mid-1990s, acquired a) from Galerie Arete, Zurich, 1977, b and e) from Galerie Günter Puhze, Freiburg.
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Ca. 100-200 AD.A mould-made terracotta oil lamp with concave discus bearing a relief image of a standing, armoured gladiator facing left. He is wearing a helmet, greaves, and draped garment around his lower body. He is holding a sword in his right hand, and a round shield in his left. The shoulder of the lamp is flat, with three concentric circles framing the tondo. A filling hole at the bottom right. The nozzle channel is wide and decorated with volutes on each side.Size: L:105mm / W:72mm ; 73gProvenance: From the private collection of an Essex gentleman; previously in an old British Collection, formed in the 1980s.
Ca. 100-300 AD.A lovely terracotta oil lamp with a columnar projection depicting standing cherub with his characteristic chubby face framed with waves of curly hair. The pear-shaped body of the lamp has a rounded wick spout and a small lug at the back.Size: L:115mm / W:55mm ; 94gProvenance: From the private collection of a Cambridgeshire gentleman; previously in an old British collection, formed in the 1980s on the UK /European art markets.
Han Dynasty, Ca. 206 BC.A hollow-cast oil lamp in the form of a recumbent ram with a head raised with long, ribbed horns curled behind pointed ears and stylised goatee. The hinged rump forming the cover of the lamp. Typically, the hinged cover flips up to reveal the oil reservoir in the body of the animal. some restoration. For a similar see The Tomb of Liu Sheng, Prince of Zhongshan, Mancheng, Hebei province, and is illustrated in Zhongguo Qingtongqi Quanji - 12 - Qin Han, Beijing 1998, p. 112, no. 110. The item has undergone X-ray fluorescence analysis to confirm the metallurgical content suggesting its ancient origin and lack of modern trace elements.Size: L:200mm / W:250mm ; 2.4kg, 2.2kgProvenance: From the private collection of a Somerset gentleman; previously in an old British collection, formed before 2000 on the UK /European art markets.
Mamluk or earlier Andalusian, Ca. 1300 AD.A single lantern grill with a crenelated top and pieced writing, and a thick patina. Writing in a variant of Kufic script. The lamp could have illuminated the writing on a wall and reminded of the popularity of shadow theatre during the Mamluk period.Size: L:173mm / W:100mm; 154gProvenance: Private London collection ( B.A); formerly acquired in the 1970s from John Lees collection.
Ca. 200 AD.A glazed ceramic lamp with the upper body shaped as a frog. The animal is finely detailed with realistically modelled skin, attentive eyes, and crouches upon a flat base with an extended nozzle to the front and a loop handle to the rear. The filling hole with a decorative, flounced border is set at the back of the frog. The oldest Roman lamps date to the third century BC when the Romans adopted the idea from the Greek colonies of Southern Italy. By the first century BC, it became popular to use lamps in funeral ceremonies and public celebrations. As the empire grew, the manufacture of lamps increased dramatically, as did the variation in decoration. Common decorative themes included gladiators in combat, mythological scenes, and animals. For a similar example, but in bronze see Archaeological Museum of Bologna, Inventory Number: 2040.Size: L:125mm / W:60mm ; 84.8gProvenance: From the private collection of a Cambridgeshire gentleman; previously in an old British collection, ex. German art market 1990s.
Original vintage advertising poster Olivetti DomusLife, featuring interior design and household elements – table, refrigerator, rug, bookshelf, computer, bed, cupboard, kitchen, lamp, and people in form of cut-outs set over white background. The Italian company Olivetti (founded 1908) produced type-writers, calculators and computers; the company employed the best commercial artists and graphic designers to create posters for their marketing campaigns. Excellent condition. Country of issue: Italy, designer: Ettore Sottsass, size (cm): 69x49, year of printing: 1990s.
Original vintage double-sided child education poster from Spring Quarterly 1966 – Aladdin, illustrated by John Harwood, featuring an illustration of an East Asian man walking through a garden with tropical birds, butterflies, and monkeys, with an Aladdin lamp at the centre of the image, the reverse of the poster features an outline image for The Story of Puss in Boots designed by Elsbeth Weyel. Horizontal. Very good condition, folded as issued, double sided, minor staining, minor creasing. Country of issue: UK, designer: John Harwood, size (cm): 61x91, year of printing: 1966.
Original vintage advertising poster Picasso Das graphishce Werk 1904-1967 graphic artwork exhibition at the Kunsthaus Zurich featuring a linocut print Still Life Under the Lamp, depicting a goblet and apples under a hanging lamp in green, yellow, red and black colours. Very good condition, creasing. Country of issue: Germany, designer: Pablo Picasso, size (cm): 70x50, year of printing: 1968.
One of the 90 examples finished by Ford in the more refined road car specification and just 7,800 miles from new.Ask any rally fan to name their favourite era and chances are that the wild Group B years will be at the top of most people’s list. It was a time of uncompromising and completely unhinged machinery, with designers and engineers really pushing the edge of the envelope when it came to interpreting the rules and endowing these four-wheel-drive turbocharged monsters with the maximum possible performance. Perhaps the wildest of them all was Ford’s RS200 and where the Audi Quattro, Peugeot 205 T16 and even the Lancia Delta S4 were very obviously derived from their more mundane production cousins, Ford took a different route, designing and building a Group B car that looked – and drove – like no other Ford before or since.Ford had, of course, been part of the rallying furniture ever since the rear-drive Escort made its debut, but as the WRC entered the Group B era, it found itself without a machine to compete at this level. Unusually for Ford, the solution proved elusive and, with the Escort RS1700T failing miserably, they were forced to return to the drawing board and start all over again. The result was the RS200, however, they had now become ‘late starters' and were effectively three years behind. The car was styled by Ghia and, unusually, the bodywork for the majority of cars was entrusted to Reliant of Shenstone, a company who knew a fair bit about building fibreglass cars. The chassis engineering was looked after by F1 gurus Tony Southgate and John Wheeler. Naturally, four-wheel drive was essential and it was built around a space-frame chassis, Kevlar bodywork, and a potent mid-mounted engine courtesy of well-proven race engine builder Brian Hart. Add to this an innovative front-mounted gearbox for better weight distribution and balance, plus a variable torque-split differential from Ferguson, and you have a serious rally car. The RS200’s mid-mounted engine was a development of the RS1700T’s, but capacity was increased to 1803cc with a bore and stroke of 86.0 and 77.62mm respectively. It featured Ford/Bosch injection, and with an 8.2:1 compression ratio allied with a Garrett turbocharger in road-going trim it developed 246bhp at 6500-7000rpm and a maximum torque output of 215lb ft at 4000-5000rpm. The rally cars had significantly more to play with – 444bhp at a screaming 8000rpm and 361lb ft at 5500rpm.It looked like Ford finally had the package to win and things were looking promising after Kalle Grundell came home third in the Swedish Rally of 1986, however, the fickle finger of fate was soon to be pointed at Group B. After a series of tragedies with both drivers and spectators being killed, it became obvious that 600bhp, lightweight rally cars being threaded at three-figure speeds through banks of standing spectators was not the way forward and the decision was taken by the FIA to pull the plug on Group B at the end of the ‘86 season. As a result, after just one year in competition, it was all over for the RS200 so it never got to show off its full potential, however, it did prove that it had enormous promise with many of the cars being spectacularly successful in Rallycross particularly in the hands of Norwegian Martin Schanche.FIA Homologation Rules for Group B required the construction of at least 200 road-legal vehicles, however, the demise of Group B meant that only 144 were completed. Of these, 20 were further developed and sold as the RS200 Evolution with a 2.1-litre power unit, a number were disassembled for spares, and records indicate that 90 were converted to road cars with improved build quality and a number of creature comforts.In the true tradition of RS Fords, Silverstone Auctions are proud to offer this RS200 as one of the 90 cars Ford returned to the more refined road specification. Well documented, it was supplied by Frews of Perth, one of the nine Rallye Sport Dealers in Scotland, to Mr Brian Holmes in Derbyshire who was the former Managing Director of Chesterfield-based Auto Windscreens, which probably explains why it comes with a new boxed spare windscreen. The RS joined his Collection which included an RS500, also supplied by Frews. It was fitted with the 300bhp upgrade, a multi-light grille lamp-pod, full competition Sabelt harnesses and finished in Ford Motorsport’s iconic blue and white livery.The RS200 remained with the Holmes family until 2010 and had still only covered around a 1,000 miles when it was entrusted to RS200 expert Geoff Page for a total engine refresh. The work is fully documented in the history file. It revisited GPR again in October 2012 for a throttle pot and full spanner check before being exported to a collector in Japan. He decided to reduce his collection and it returned to the UK last month with an indicated mileage of 7,794. It's supplied with the original alloys, spare screen, light-pod cover, original exhaust and its factory owner's manual.Group B rally cars with the cachet of the RS200 seldom come to market and, with its solid timeline and lovely condition, this is a super example and we welcome and encourage your close inspection.If this lot remains in the UK it will be subject to a reduced rate of import duty of 5% on the hammer price. SpecificationMake: FORDModel: RS 200Year: 1988Chassis Number: SFACXXBJ2CGL00118Registration Number: F666 MSLTransmission: ManualEngine Number: GL00118 Drive Side: Right-hand DriveMake: RHDInterior Colour: RedClick here for more details and images
A high quality handmade desk lamp featuring a coil spring from a racing Corvette mated to its base with a sprocket from a competition motorbike.Sitting approximately 35cm high, this wired lamp features a retro Edison style bulb emitting a lovely warm glow.Click here for more details and images
The final competing WRC99 example in the world. Highly revered, hugely successful and fresh from a total rebuild, Chassis #15 is on the market for the first time in nearly 20 years.Over the course of its life in the World Rally Championship with the works 555 Subaru World Rally Team, the Impreza scored an impressive 46 victories and 122 podium finishes in 193 World Rally events, claiming 6 World Rally Championships in the process. The car presented here is 1999 Subaru Impreza WRC example, chassis PRO GC8-99.015, built in late 1999 by Prodrive. Chassis #15 is one of only 27 WRC99 examples produced and was originally owned and registered by Prodrive as ‘V100 ALL’. It was utilised as an ‘Allstars’ car being driven by Holowczyc Krzysztof (with co-driver Fortin Jean-Marc) on two WRC events, namely the Swedish International Rally on 10th February 2000 as car 22, and by the same pairing as car 26 on the TAP Rallye de Portugal 2000 on 16th March 2000. Subsequently, Chassis #15 was totally re-prepared and later in 2000, was sold to well-known Northern Irish driver and businessman Andrew Nesbitt, now bearing the registration ‘V10 WRC’ and its famous ‘Cuisine de France’ livery. He and co-driver James O’Brien campaigned the car for 18 months, winning six events, including the Shell Donegal International Rally, breaking all previous records by taking the fastest times on all 22 special stages, and going on to win the Irish Tarmac Championship. In 2002, the car was subsequently sold to Niall Maguire who converted it to right-hand drive and competed in the National Championship of Ireland, which he won in 2003. Our vendor bought the car from Maguire in March 2004 and has owned/campaigned it ever since, this being a long and fruitful custodianship. He has used Chassis #15 on all home national/international rallies including Jim Clark, Killarney, West Cork, Waterford, Wexford in Ireland, Bethune Rally and Rallye Charlemagne in France, Mull and Isle of Man; the last of these being the Pentraeth Glyn Memorial Stages in November 2021. The car is presented to auction in immaculate condition, having been the recipient of a full bare shell rebuild (costing £50,000), only 800 miles ago. With absolutely no expense spared and with a full photographic record, the work included an engine prepared by Graham Sweet of GT Motorsports Ltd., a fully rebuilt gearbox (£5,500) by Autosportif Engineering Ltd., new front hubs and new rear hub bearings, a new tubular front cross member (£3,000), a new Inconel exhaust manifold (£5,000), and a new AP clutch; the Reiger 3-way suspension had the fronts re-gassed and oiled, whist the rears were rebuilt. The bag tank is valid until 2024 (which can be extended by 2 years), with Motordrive seats (2022) and harnesses (2022), Lifeline Zero 360 fire extinguishers (serviced March 2021) and a Peltor intercom. The car has been solely prepared and run by GEO Preparation of Bromsgrove whilst in our vendor’s ownership. Chassis #15 is a very well-known and highly revered car, having been hugely successful and reliable in the hands of just three owners (the last of which for 18 years), and is the final competing WRC99 example in the world – a testimony to its diligent ownership. The car's status and achievements are fully documented on the ewrc-results.com website: https://www.ewrc-results.com/carinfo/38-subaru-impreza-s5-wrc-99/?car=851This is a very special car, and we invite any interested parties to come and inspect it. They won’t be disappointed. Its quality is clear both ‘in the metal’ and in its achievements. Complete with a huge spares package, the car will come with a carbon-fibre lamp pod with Hella hid Zenon lenses and halogen corner pods, a bespoke stainless-steel tundish and dry break, 4 x refurbished magnesium 6-spoke Speedline wheels, a pair of brand new AP front discs with bells fitted, 1x set front/rear Mintex pads, 1x spare clutch (re-shimmed), new front/rear bumpers plus splitter, original Prodrive Bilstein dampers, alternative springs for Reiger dampers and 100 litres of 102 octane fuel.Available by separate negotiation are: 30+ magnesium alloy wheels (12 x original 6-spoke Speedlines), springs, driveshafts, clutches, complete turbo (0 miles since rebuild), new throttle motor, new rad pack and fans, new intercooler (needs headers fitting), s/h exhaust manifolds, a new steel front wing and new steering rack, plus more. SpecificationMake: SUBARUModel: IMPREZAYear: 1999Chassis Number: PRO WRC GC8-99.015Registration Number: V10 WRCTransmission: ManualDrive Side: Right-hand DriveMake: RHDInterior Colour: RallyClick here for more details and images
A late 19th century spelter mantel clock, surmounted by a figure of Diana the Huntress, the circular dial with raised enamel tablets and Roman numerals, having eight-day cylinder movement, h.49cm; together with a carved hardwood figural table lamp (both a/f)Figure of Diana is loose. Back is missing. No pendulum. Not working. Spares/repair only.

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307192 item(s)/page