Rare and interesting early bisque head mystery Bebe doll for ‘AU NAIN BLEU’ of Paris, French circa 1880, beautiful pale bisque head with fixed light blue spiral paperweight glass eyes, finely painted lashes and brows, closed mouth with delicate painting to lips, pierced ears with red glass bead earrings, cork pate with blonde shoulder length wig, on a good wood and composition eight-ball jointed body with fixed wrists and rare white and gold ‘Au Nain Blue’ label to chest, wearing a white dress with lace velvet sash, underclothes, socks, brown leather shoes, bonnet and bag, indistinct incised marked to back of head, possibly J K or J H, 13” (33cm) tall, (condition: head perfect, body very good, one shoe with replaced sole).
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Etienne Denamur bisque head Bebe doll, French circa 1890, the pale bisque head with fixed light blue glass paper-weight eyes, feather brows, pierced ears with blue bead earrings, and closed mouth, blonde wig and on a fully jointed wood and composition body, wearing a cream satin dress with lace, bonnet, underclothes, socks and later shoes, 20” (51cm) tall, incised E8D, (condition: good, some repaint to hands).
Early Leon Casimir Bru Jne bisque head Bebe doll, size 8, French circa 1885, exceptionally pale bisque head, fixed stunning light blue/grey glass paperweight eyes, shaded lids, finely painted lashes and feather brows, closed mouth with delicately shaded lips, pierced ears, original cork pate and sheepskin wig, swivel head to bisque shoulder plate with shaped bosoms, gusseted kid leather body with bisque lower arms with beautifully sculptured hands, wearing a pink cotton dress with lace detail, bonnet, underclothes, socks and brown leather shoes, incised Bru Jne, 8 to head and BRU JNE, No8 to shoulder plate, 24” (61cm) tall, (condition: professional restoration to back of head).
Large Simon & Halbig 126 bisque head baby doll, German circa 1915, with weighted brown glass ‘flirty’ eyes, painted lashes and brows, open mouth with two upper teeth and tongue, short light brown wig, on a five piece composition baby body, wearing a long white cotton nightdress and bonnet, 22” (56cm) tall, (condition: good).
Kammer & Reinhardt/S&H bisque head doll in original box, German circa 1910, the fine quality bisque head with weighted brown glass eyes, real lashes, open mouth with upper teeth, pierced ears and original light brown wig with pink ribbon, on a good fully jointed wood and composition body, wearing a cream silk dress with lace detail, cardigan, underclothes, bonnet, socks and shoes, in her original brown card box with label to lid, ‘ one and only darling’ doll 16” (41cm) tall, (condition: doll excellent, some very slight loss to lid)
A Max Handwerck bisque head doll, German circa 1910, with weighted blue glass eyes, open mouth with upper teeth and original blonde wig, on a fully jointed wood and composition body, wearing white cotton dress, underclothes and light brown leather shoes and socks, 17 ¼” (44cm) tall, (condition: good, lacks one little finger).
A charming Simon & Halbig/K&R Holy Communion bisque head doll, German circa 1905, with weighted brown glass eyes, painted features, open mouth with upper teeth, original light brown wig, on a composition five-piece body jointed at shoulders and hips with painted white socks and gold shoes, wearing original Holy Communion clothing decorated with metallic threads, sequins and beads, underclothes with original paper shop label, 9” (23cm) tall, (condition: excellent).
Sasha Gotz No Nose Red head girl doll, Swiss 1965, with painted grey brown eyes, with single line eyelids and smaller lighter line above and eyebrows, light pink lips and nostrils, long red hair with fringe, swivel head on a five-piece body jointed at shoulders and hips, torso with single seam and belly button, wearing knitted blue and white dress, underclothes and red sandals, marked Sasha Serie to back of head and torso, 16” (41cm) tall, (condition: excellent).
Sasha Gotz No Nose Blonde Schoolboy doll, Swiss 1966-67, with painted grey brown eyes, with single line eyelids and smaller lighter line above and eyebrows, light pink lips and nostrils, short blonde hair, swivel head on a five-piece body jointed at shoulders and hips, torso with single seam and belly button, wearing knitted brown jacket, white jumper and green corduroy dungarees, marked Sasha Serie to back of head and torso, 16” (41cm) tall, (condition: excellent).
Collection of Dolls House furniture, German 1870-90, including Waltershausen settee, two chairs with mauve silk upholstery and gold decoration and marble top table, together with a gilt metal Grandfather clock with circular dial, weights and pendulum, sweet babies crib on rockers, red velvet settee and chair, wooden bed with green silk and paper embossed decoration, light wood wash stand and dressing table with mirror, small sofa and chair, clock 5 ½” (14cm) high, (13 items).
Rare Sasha Trendon Ltd Red head girl doll in Dungarees, English 1969, painted light brown eyes with pin pupils, eyelashes, shading and thin line and eyebrows, pink lips, long red hair with plaits, swivel head on a five-piece body jointed at shoulders and hips, wearing original dungarees, shirt and brown sandals, 16” (41cm) tall, (condition: excellent).
White mohair Steiff Teddy bear, German circa 1909, the straw filled bear with black boot button eyes, pointed snout and light brown stitched nose, mouth and claws, swivel head, jointed at shoulders and hips, with elongated arms, large feet and felt paw pads, button to left ear, wearing navy trousers and white shirt, 13” (33cm) tall, (condition: generally good, usual wear to mohair, some holes to left paw pad).
Hermann light brown mohair Teddy bear, German 1950s, straw stuffed bear with orange glass eyes, clipped separated golden mohair muzzle with stitched nose and mouth, swivel head and jointed at shoulders and hips, felt paw pads with stitched claws, 20” (51cm) tall, (condition: very good, two small holes to hand paw pads), together with two smaller long mohair Teddy bears with clipped mohair paws, 11 ½” (29cm) and 10” (25.5cm) tall, (condition: good), (3 items).
A good wooden model Shop room set, English early to mid-19th century, the shop with arched top and semi-rounded sides, open front flanked by two glazed windows, interior with counter and shelves below twelve light wood veneered drawers and arched shelving above, mounted on a base with shaped front, with seven painted plaster loaves and six tin bottle containers, 21” (53.5cm) high, 23 ¼” (59cm) wide and 12” (30.5cm) deep, (condition: very good, some loss to veneer).
A very rare Beilby enamelled armorial light baluster 'Tilly' wine glass, circa 1765-69The round funnel bowl finely decorated in polychrome with the coat of arms of the Tilly family of Haarlem, a yellow dove perched on an olive branch with a white stem and green leaves, within an ouroboros, the yellow serpent picked out in iron-red shown biting its tail, within an elaborate rococo scroll cartouche painted in shades of pale purple, inscribed 'Tilly.' in opaque white beneath, the reverse with the crest of a white dove in flight above a helmet in yellow and red, traces of gilding to the rim, on a stem with triple-annulated knop above a beaded inverted baluster and small teared basal knop, over a conical foot, 17cm highFootnotes:ProvenanceThe Tilly family of Haarlem, NetherlandsThence by family descent to Rudy van Dobben, Halfweg, NetherlandsWith Frides Laméris, 1 June 2012Stephen Pohlmann CollectionLiteratureStephen Pohlmann, 'The Tilly Glasses', Glass Circle News, no.139 (November 2015), p.5, fig.2Kiki Alpherts and Marius van Dam, Tussen Kunst en Kitsch: 101 ontdekkingen (2015), p.133, no.66Stephen Pohlmann, 'An Eclectic Collector', Glass Matters, no.14 (June 2022), p.23, figs.6a-bExhibited30 Jaar Tussen Kunst en Kitsch in 101 Ontdekkingen, Museum Flehite, Amersfoort, Netherlands, 19 April - 22 July 2015, no.66Once known as 'Newcastle' balusters, glasses of this distinctive form are now known to have been manufactured in Holland as well as England. It is possible that the Beilbys imported undecorated light-baluster glasses from Holland, as most surviving examples of this shape with Beilby decoration have identical stems. The Beilbys will have been aware that the best glass engravers working in Holland, such as Jacob Sang, favoured the light-baluster shape for their most prestigious commissions.Fifteen Beilby decorated light baluster wine glasses or goblets, many of similar shape, are recorded including the present lot. Eleven of these bear armorials or crests, while four are painted with vine in opaque white enamel. The latter include one in the Victoria and Albert Museum (inv. no.c.625/1936), one in the Kunstmuseum Den Haag (inv. no.1005203), one in the Fitzwilliam Museum (inv. no.C.513-1961) and one from the Thompson-Schwab Collection sold by Bonhams on 21 June 2022, lot 102.Of the crested and armorial examples, eight have direct Dutch connections. They include the magnificent Prince William V goblet from the A C Hubbard Jr Collection sold by Bonhams on 30 November 2011, lot 142, a smaller wine glass also bearing the arms of Prince William V sold by Bonhams on 1 May 2013, lot 116, two wine glasses with the arms of Prince William V and Princess Wilhelmina accollé, including one from the Julius and Ann Kaplan Collection sold by Bonhams on 15 November 2017, lot 33 and one in Museum Rotterdam (inv. no.17) and a goblet in the World of Glass Museum in St. Helens bearing the arms of the Van Dongen family of Amsterdam. Three further glasses bear the arms and crest of the Tilly family of Haarlem, including the present lot. A 'Tilly' glass in the Durrington Collection is illustrated by Peter Dodsworth in his catalogue (2006), p.35, no.29 and was thought to be the only example in existence at the time of publication. It differs slightly from the present lot in that in place of the helmet on the reverse there is a wheel-engraved medallion containing seven arrows emblematic of the Seven United Provinces, within the inscription 'VREEDE EN EENDRAGHT' (Peace and Unity). Whilst it has been suggested that the engraving on the Durrington glass existed before the enamelling took place, it seems far more plausible that the decoration originally matched that on the present lot, with the helmet being later removed and replaced by the engraved medallion. The third 'Tilly' glass, in a private collection, is unpublished.The 'Tilly' set was almost certainly commissioned by Claas de Koning Tilly (1727-1814), who by 1764 owned a firm in Haarlem founded by his grandfather in 1696, which specialised in the production of a panacea known as Dutch drops (Haarlemmerolie). The firm was subsequently renamed C de Koning Tilly and was latterly owned by Rudy van Dobben until 2019, a direct descendent of this branch of the Tilly family. Interestingly, two engraved light baluster wine glasses bearing the initials 'CDKT' for Claas de Koning Tilly are discussed in detail by J R ter Molen, 'Twee gedecoreerde wijnglazen uit 1765 en 1769 met de initialen van C. de Koning Tilly', Antiek, Vol.8 (March 1982), pp.461-70, indicating that Claas was clearly commissioning other glasses at this time. The first is decorated with the arms of Haarlem, dated 1765 and inscribed ''T WELVAAREN VAN DE DIACONY' (The prosperity of the Diaconate). It is thought to commemorate the election of Claas as a deacon by the Grand Church Council on 18 March that year, a position which he held until 1769. The other is dated 1769 and decorated with a view of the Hofje van Bakenes in Haarlem, almost certainly commemorating his appointment as regent of the Bakenesser Chamber on 2 October that year, a position which he retained until 1780. It seems likely that the Beilby decorated set may also have been commissioned to celebrate one of these occasions.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Dutch engraved armorial light baluster goblet, circa 1750The engraving later, the generous round funnel bowl naively decorated in diamond-point with the coat of arms of the Tilly family of Haarlem, a dove perched on an olive branch within an ouroboros, the serpent shown biting its tail, crested by a dove in flight above a helmet, within a scrollwork cartouche, on a stem with a triple-annulated knop above an inverted baluster, over a domed foot, 19cm highFootnotes:ProvenanceWith Frides LamérisStephen Pohlmann CollectionFor a Beilby enamelled light baluster wine glass also decorated with the arms of Tilly, see lot 40 in this sale.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A large Flight, Barr and Barr Worcester pot pourri vase, circa 1815-20Possibly painted by Thomas Baxter, with a pierced shoulder and gilt sphinx-like figurehead handles, bands of pearls applied around the body and neck rim, painted on both sides with a topographical panel, one depicting Tintern Abbey, Monmouthshire, the other with Malvern Church, Worcestershire, framed with raised paste gilding on a light grey-blue ground, floral panels beneath the handles, 31cm high, painted factory marks and titles of the views all in neat black scriptFootnotes:ProvenanceLord and Lady Flight CollectionThe painting style compares favourably with the Carisbroke Castle vase in the Museum of Royal Worcester, and other topographical pieces attributed to Thomas Baxter. The use of neat black script for the marks on this vase is also a well-known feature of much of Thomas Baxter's work for Flight, Barr and Barr.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
An exceptional Dutch engraved light baluster goblet and cover signed by Jacob Sang, dated 1760The round funnel bowl with a continuous paved floor, upon which stands a finely dressed lady emblematic of Charity, holding a child in her arms and another by the hand, a collared hound standing upon a metal-bound strongbox to her left, a horse to her right, the reverse with a large spray of flowers in a vase, inscribed 'A TOUT CE QUE NOUS FAIT PLAISIR' (To All That is Dear to Us) below the rim, on a stem with an upper angular knop above a slender beaded inverted baluster and small basal knop, the conical foot inscribed 'Jacob Sang, inv = et Fec = Amsterdam, 1760' in diamond-point script, the high domed cover with a hollow globular finial, 25.1cm high (2)Footnotes:ProvenanceSjoukje Jantina Collection, Groningen, NetherlandsThence by family descent to her daughter JansjeWith Frides Laméris, 1 December 2017Stephen Pohlmann CollectionThis remarkable goblet is unrecorded in the literature. It was inherited by Sjoukje Jantina from an elderly friend who had been a nurse in Amsterdam and lived in Ermelo with Sjoukje's paternal aunts in retirement, who had in turn inherited it from a violinist for the Concertgebouw Orchestra who she had nursed during illness.A handful of other signed glasses decorated with virtually identical scenes by Jacob Sang are recorded. A composite stem light baluster glass dated 1761, with the same inscription but in Dutch, is recorded by F G A M Smit, A concise catalogue of eighteenth-century wine-glasses wheel-engraved and signed by Jacob Sang (1992), p.15, no.1761.1 and illustrated by C R S Sheppard and J P Smith, Glass from the Restoration to the Regency (1990), pp.60-1, no.85. At the time of publication, Sheppard and Smith noted just two other glasses with the same subject, both unsigned. One of these was sold by Sotheby's New York on 21 March 2000, lot 334. The other, with a damaged stem, is illustrated by Kristin Duysters, Facetten van Glas (2000), p.71, no.132 and was sold by Bonhams on 20 November 2019, lot 36. An airtwist goblet of very different form, signed by Sang and dated 1759, was sold by Christie's Amsterdam on 19 December 2007, lot 167 and is the only other signed example with a similar scene recorded.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A fine Dutch engraved composite stem light baluster goblet signed by Jacob Sang, dated 1760The generous round funnel bowl decorated with a large farm before an elaborate gated entrance and small bridge, a tiny figure standing outside, bounded by iron railings hedges and rows of tall trees, encircled by a watercourse, an avenue of trees to the right, inscribed 'BLOEJLANG, ZUYDHOEVE/ IN RUST EN VREE,/ MET ZEGEN OVER LAND EN VEE/ G. HOYER' (May Zuidhoeve long prosper, in peace and quiet, with blessed land and cattle. G. Hoijer) on the reverse, the stem with a multi-spiral airtwist dumbbell section above a teared inverted baluster with a small basal knop, over a conical foot, the pontil mark inscribed in partially abraded diamond-point script 'J. Sang Fec.' with the date '1760' below, 20.8cm highFootnotes:ProvenanceDr N Potter Collection, Sotheby's, 13 July 1987, lot 203Dietmar Zoedler Collection, Sotheby's, 21 November 2007, lot 45With Kunstzalen A vecht, 18 November 2014Stephen Pohlmann CollectionLiteratureF G A M Smit, A Concise Catalogue of Eighteenth-Century Wine-Glasses wheel-engraved and signed by Jacob Sang (1992), p.13, no.1760.7The view on this goblet has never been previously identified, but is almost certainly a farm by the name of Zuidhoeve (literally 'South Farm') on the Duivenvoorde estate in Voorschoten, just outside of The Hague. The original 16th century building still exists in part, where it is surrounded by watercourses and avenues of trees. Its architectural appearance very much resembles the building depicted on the present goblet. Around two miles northwest of Zuidhoeve a neighbouring 16th century farm by the name of De Astopwoning of Kleyn Haesbroek existed on what is now the estate of Kasteel Oud-Wassenaar. In 1764 this came into the hands of Gerard Hoijer and Paulus Hoijer van Brakel, who expanded the estate with a mansion called Snippenstein (today known as Oud-Wassenaar). Gerard was a lawyer and Paulus a prosecutor at the Hof van Holland. Gerard is almost certainly the same 'G Hoyer' referred to on the present goblet, perhaps intended as a gift for the owner.This shape of goblet was a favourite of Sang, with seven examples including the present lot recorded by Smit (1992), p.5. Whilst sand typically inscribed his signature on the foot of his goblets, several examples are recorded with signatures on the pontil mark, either in full or abbreviated to 'J. Sang'. A goblet of very similar form but with different engraving, signed 'Jacob Sang, inv: et Fec: Amsterdam 1764' on the pontil mark, is illustrated by Pieter C Ritsema van Eck, Glass in the Rijksmuseum, Vol.2 (1995), pp.202-3, no.214 and recorded by Anna Laméris, Pur Sang: Een onderzoek naar de kenmerken van de stijl van Jacob Sang aan de hand van zijn gesigneerde glazen, unpublished PhD thesis, Kunsthistorisch Instituut Amsterdam (1994), no.1764.4.Another of very similar form engraved with a coat of arms and signed 'Jacob Sang... fec. Amsterdam 1769' on the pontil mark, unrecorded by both Smit and Laméris, was sold by Sotheby's New York on 15 December 1998 and again by Christie's Amsterdam on 19 December 2007, lot 93. Curiously the signature, much like that on the present lot, had been partially erased with scratching. This is not unusual and may have been because the donor did not want the engraver to be identified. Indeed, it is possible that some of Sang's commissions were from individuals who specifically requested that he did not sign his work so prominently or at all, hence the use of the pontil mark in such a way, perhaps in the hope that it would go unnoticed.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
An exceptional engraved light baluster wine glass signed by Jacob Sang, dated 1760The round funnel bowl exquisitely engraved with a three-masted 24-gun ship in full sail on a neatly undulating sea, the reverse with a farmer in a handsome overcoat driving a horse-drawn plough across a grassy sward, inscribed 'AU BIEN DELA PATRIE' (To the Prosperity of the Country), on a stem with an upper angular knop above a slender beaded inverted baluster with a small basal knop, the conical foot inscribed 'Jacob Sang, inv = et Fec = Amsterdam, 1760' in diamond-point script, 19.3cm highFootnotes:ProvenanceVan Solkema Collection, The Hague, NetherlandsMak van Waay Amsterdam, 10 December 1974, lot 2098With Frides Laméris, 17 April 2012Stephen Pohlmann CollectionLiteratureAnna Laméris, Pur Sang: Een onderzoek naar de kenmerken van de stijl van Jacob Sang aan de hand van zijn gesigneerde glazen, unpublished PhD thesis, Kunsthistorisch Instituut Amsterdam (1994), no.1760.11F G A M Smit, A concise catalogue of eighteenth-century wine-glasses wheel-engraved and signed by Jacob Sang (1992), p.14, no.1760.11A ploughing farmer in conjunction with one or more ships is a design found on at six glasses signed by Jacob Sang, including the present lot, with the sailing ship being a particularly popular motif symbolic of the Dutch Republic, see Anna Laméris, 'Ships on Glass', in Frides Laméris, Canes, Serpents and Ships (2018), p.57. Three further glasses with related scenes are recorded by Smit (1992), nos.1757.2, 1760.12 and 1760.13, the latter illustrated by Pieter C Ritsema van Eck, Glass in the Rijksmuseum, Vol.2 (1995), p.200, no.212. A fifth, dated 1762, was sold by Sotheby's on 15 September 1992, lot 90 and is recorded by Laméris (1994), no.1762.7. A sixth, dated 1760, was sold by Christie's Amsterdam on 27 June 2000, lot 96 and appears unrecorded in the literature.All of these glasses are of virtually identical size and form to the present lot, employing a stem type much favoured by Sang, with inscriptions in Dutch all alluding in some way to the prosperity of the Country. A French inscription sets the present lot apart but is not unusual considering that French was the lingua franca of the Netherlands spoken by the aristocracy in the 18th century. Only the example dated 1760, formerly in the Guépin Collection (no.1760.12) sold by Christie's Amsterdam, 5 July 1989, lot 125, together with that dated 1762 (no.1762.7) bear scenes of virtually identical composition to that on the present lot. The others differ in the additional inclusion of either distant buildings (no.1757.2) or a view of the Nieuwe Kerk in Amsterdam (no.1760.13 and unrecorded).This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A fine Dutch engraved light baluster 'Friendship' goblet and cover attributed to Jacob Sang, circa 1760The round funnel bowl with an elaborate rococo scroll cartouche hung with swags of beads, containing a pair of clasped hands with large frilled cups, surmounted by a crown, the reverse inscribed 'MIND GY EDELE VRIENDSCHAP TEEDER,/ VULD MY DAN TOT AAN DEN RAND./ DRINKT MY LEEG, EN VULD MY WEEDER,/ STELD MY ZOO UW VRIEND TER HAND.' (If you value tender noble friendship, then fill me to the brim. Drink me empty and refill me, and thus hand me to your friend), set on a stem with an upper angular knop above a slender beaded inverted baluster with a small basal knop, over a conical foot, the domed cover with a beaded finial, 26.5cm high (2)Footnotes:ProvenanceWith Leslie Antiques, New York, 23 September 2015Stephen Pohlmann CollectionThe verse on this glass is taken from 'Opschrift voor een Drinkglas' (Inscription for a Drinking Glass), written by Dirk Smits (1702-1753) and first published by Philippus Losel in Rotterdam in 1740, see Dirk Smits, Gedichten van Dirk Smits (1740), p.231.Several light baluster goblets similarly decorated with a crowned cartouche containing clasped hands and bearing the same inscription on the reverse, all signed by Jacob Sang and dated 1759 or 1760, are recorded by F G A M Smit, A Concise Catalogue of Eighteenth-Century Wine-Glasses Wheel-Engraved and Signed by Jacob Sang (1992), p.12, nos.1759.10, 17.59.11, 1759.12 and 1760.1. Further unsigned examples all attributed to Sang include one in the Museum De Lakenhal, Leiden (inv. no.2015), one illustrated by Anna Laméris, Amicitiae (2018), pp.50-1, no.20 and one with a replacement silver foot was sold by Sotheby's Amsterdam on 3 April 2001, lot 134. All differ slightly from the present lot in that they bear the additional inscription 'PROSOPOPIA' (Personification) above the crown. The lot is the only example recorded without this inscription and the only example to have survived with a cover.Although unsigned, the engraving on this goblet can be attributed to Jacob Sang on the basis of stylistic similarities with the four closely related fully signed and dated examples recorded by Smit, particularly in the lettering, together with the high quality of the engraving and polished detail itself. The form of the glass is also typical of the type much favoured by Sang, see Smit (1992), p.4, fig.A and also lots 44 and 46 in this sale.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Dutch engraved armorial light baluster wine glass, circa 1755The round funnel bowl decorated with the coat of arms of Amsterdam beneath a crown, flanked by lion supporters, resting on a scrollwork bracket, the reverse with a sunburst, on a multi-knopped stem with an angular shoulder knop and a teared cushion knop, above a beaded inverted baluster and basal knop, over conical foot, 19.2cm highFootnotes:ProvenanceChristie's, 13 February 1979, lot 116Stephen Pohlmann CollectionA virtually identical armorial wine glass for Amsterdam, but lacking the sunburst to the reverse of the bowl, is illustrated by Pieter C Ritsema van Eck, Glass in the Rijksmuseum, vo.2 (1995), p.227, no.252. Compare also to lot 50 in this sale.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Dutch engraved armorial light baluster wine glass, circa 1750The round funnel bowl decorated with the coat of arms of Amsterdam beneath a crown, flanked by lion supporters, resting on a scrollwork bracket, on a multi-knopped stem with an angular shoulder knop over a short beaded inverted baluster set between knops, above a short teared basal inverted baluster and conical foot, 19.4cm highFootnotes:ProvenanceWith Frides Laméris, 30 September 2011Stephen Pohlmann CollectionAn armorial wine glass with very similar engraving, but a different stem formation, is illustrated by Pieter C Ritsema van Eck, Glass in the Rijksmuseum, Vol.2 (1995), p.227, no.252. See also lot 49 in this sale.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A very rare Dutch stipple-engraved light baluster goblet by Frans Greenwood, circa 1744The round funnel bowl decorated with a half-length portrait of a fishwife, her head slightly turned and with a downward gaze, wearing a low-cut bodice and a flat-topped wide-brimmed hat, holding a herring by its tail in her left hand, another fish on an oval platter with a wavy border resting on her lap beneath her right arm, a spray of flowering lilies in a jug behind a pail of herrings on a table to her right, on a densely stippled ground, the reverse signed 'Frans Greenwood fecit.' in diamond-point script, raised on a tall slender multi-knopped baluster stem, above a later replacement parcel-gilt foot chased with strapwork and foliate scrolls, 24.3cm highFootnotes:ProvenanceSotheby's, 3 June 1974, lot 116Viscount Newport, Earl of Bradford, Weston Park, Shifnal, Christie's, 4 June 1985, lot 30With Heide Hübner, Würzburg, 1986Mühleib Collection, Bonhams, 2 May 2013, lot 57Stephen Pohlmann CollectionLiteratureNoel Riley, 'Antique Glass in Shropshire', The Antique Dealer and Collectors Guide (June 1975), p.147, fig.5The Earl of Bradford, 'Making a Collection', The Antique Collector, Vol.56, No.6 (June 1985), pp.108-9, fig.1Frank Davis, 'Talking about Salerooms', Country Life, Vol.178 (July 1985), p.215, fig.1David Watts, 'Glass', in Elizabeth Drury (ed.), Antiques (1986), p.87Frans Smit, Frans Greenwood (1988), p.151-2, no.44.1, figs.97 and 99Frans Smit, Uniquely Dutch Eighteenth-Century Stipple-Engravings on Glass (1993), p.121, no.Dc.3ExhibitedWeston Park, Shifnal, 198331. Deutsche Kunst- und Antiquitäten-Messe, Haus der Kunst, Munich, 1986Frans Greenwood (1680-1763) was a Dordrecht merchant of English extraction, born in Rotterdam. An amateur artist, poet and glass engraver, he is traditionally credited as being the first artist to experiment with stipple engraving in the early 1720s and the first engraver to produce a whole picture on a glass in the technique. The techniques he developed had a profound influence on the work of a number of other glass engravers in Dordrecht, including Aert Schouman, making him one of the most important glass artists of his time.The herring industry or 'Groote Visscherij' (Great Fishery) played a very important role in the Dutch economy and the fishwives of Scheveningen were a favourite subject of Greenwood. They traditionally wore hats with flattened tops to accommodate the fish baskets they carried on their heads, with the wide brim offering protection against resulting drips. The poet Jacob Cats published a poem 'On a woman from Schevenigen carrying a basket of fish on her head' as early as 1654.The scene on the present lot is paralleled by an almost identical portrait of a fishwife against a different background, signed by Greenwood and dated 1744. This is in the Huis van Gijn in Dordrecht, illustrated and discussed alongside the present goblet by Smit (1988), pp.151-3, no.44.2, figs.98 and 100. Another goblet but with a different portrait of a fishwife, signed by Greenwood and dated 1742, was in the Anton Dreesman Collection sold by Sotheby's on 3 June 1974, lot 115 and again by Christie's in Amsterdam on 16 April 2002, lot 1279. This is illustrated and discussed by Smit (1988), pp.146-7, no.42.1, fig.90.All three glasses unusually depict a fishwife holding a herring by its tail. This is echoed in several contemporary Dutch Old Master portraits of women selling herrings by artists including Gerrit Dou (1613-1675), Godfried Schalcken (1643-1706) and Carel de Moor (1656-1738). In Dutch painting this is sometimes interpreted as a demonstration of promiscuity, but the lilies shown behind her traditionally symbolise purity and it is clear from Greenwood's poetry that he held fisherwomen and the fishing industry as whole in particularly high regard. Interestingly, one of the Directors of the Dutch East India Company, Pauls Schepers, bequeathed a 'haringwijfje' goblet to his second Cousin Gerard Schepers in the mid-18th century, which may refer to either the present goblet or the example from the Dreesman Collection, see Smit (1988), pp.146-7.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
An exceptional Dutch stipple-engraved light baluster goblet by 'Alius', circa 1760-80The generous round funnel bowl finely decorated with a chinoiserie scene depicting an elderly Chinese gentleman seated on a stool before a tree, playing a Chinese lute or pipa with both hands, the hairs of his beard and moustache picked out with fine lines in diamond-point, accompanied by a boy playing a Bianzhong comprising a set of musical bells suspended from an arch, the tall multi-knopped stem with an upper beaded dumbbell above an inverted baluster containing an elongated tear extending into the basal knop, over a conical foot, 22cm highFootnotes:ProvenanceJ van Buren Collection, Scheurleer, The Hague, 11 December 1808, lot 98, purchased by Hultman for 15 guildersBoom Collection, BredaJoseph Gregory Littledale Collection, WeybridgeAnthony Waugh Collection, Wolverhampton, Sotheby's, 28 April 1980, lot 209With Ward Lloyd, LondonMühleib Collection, Bonhams, 2 May 2013, lot 58With Kunsthandel Jacques Fijnaut, 13 March 2018Stephen Pohlmann CollectionLiteratureD H de Castro, 'Een en ander over glasgravure', Oud-Holland 1(4) (1883), p.285, pl.1883 Wilfred Buckley, D Wolff and the Glasses that he Engraved (1935), p.30Hugh Tait, ''Wolff' glasses in an English private collection', Connoisseur 168 (1968), p.105, figs.5 and 6George Turnbull and Anthony Herron, The Price Guide to English 18th Century Drinking Glasses (1970), p.78, Group 4, no.4/13Frank Davis, 'Talking About Salerooms', Country Life, Vol.168 (August 1980), p.687F G A M Smit, Uniquely Dutch Eighteenth-Century Stipple-Engravings on Glass (1993), p.106, no.Ch.18Stephen Pohlmann, 'An Eclectic Collector', Glass Matters, no.14 (June 2022), p.22, fig.5Exhibited300 Years of British Glass 1675-1975, Wolverhampton Art Gallery and Museum, 14 June 1975, no.208Kunsthandel Jacques Fijnaut BV, TEFAF Maastricht, 10-19 March 2017, catalogue p.240Although he never signed any of his engravings, 'Alius' was one of the most important Dutch master glass engravers of the 18th century. The incredible lightness of touch which he so breathtakingly achieved on this goblet demonstrates the remarkable degree to which this engraver mastered the stipple technique. It is perhaps no surprise that for many years this piece was considered to be the work of his contemporary, David Wolff.In his 1935 monograph on Wolff, Wilfred Buckley identified a group of glasses which he considered to be of higher quality both technically and artistically, with finer stippling and better draughtsmanship, than examples signed by Wolff himself, see p.26 and 'Group C'. These were subsequently attributed to 'Alius' in Frans Smit's 1993 catalogue. Whilst there are close similarities between the designs chosen by both engravers and they may have worked in association with one another, 'Alius' is the only Dutch engraver known to have stippled chinoiseries on glass and he attained a level of skill which undoubtedly surpassed that of Wolff.Only six other glasses stippled with chinoiseries by 'Alius' are recorded including the present lot, all of which incorporate the full-length figure of a Chinese gentleman. Two of these are similarly decorated with musical scenes in which an elderly seated man plays a Chinese lute or pipa. This includes a light baluster goblet of similar form to the present lot in the Brunnier Art Museum (Smit no.Eb.28) and a facet stem goblet in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (Smit no.Ch.19). Another goblet of similar size and form to the present lot but decorated with a different chinoiserie scene (Smit no.Ch.20) is illustrated by Hubert Vreeken, Glas in Het Amsterdams Historisch Museum (1998), p.258, no.293. The remaining two chinoiserie decorated goblets recorded include an opaque twist example in the Rijksmuseum (Smit no.Ch.17) illustrated by Pieter C Ritsema van Eck, Glass in the Rijksmuseum, Vol.2 (1995), p.432, no.548 and a further facet stem example in the Manoir de Saussey (Smit no.Ci.28).This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Two light baluster wine glasses, circa 1750With round funnel bowls and plain conical feet, one Dutch engraved with a formal border to the rim incorporating three birds within foliate scrollwork ornament alternating with sprays of flowers suspended from strapwork, the stem with a triple-annulated shoulder knop above a slender inverted baluster, 18.2cm high, the other on a stem with upper globular and cushion knops above a wide inverted baluster terminating in a basal knop, 17.7cm highFootnotes:ProvenanceChris Crabtree CollectionFor further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Dutch engraved light baluster goblet and an armorial wine glass, circa 1750-60The first with a generous round funnel bowl with a woman seated upon military trophies, an olive branch in her right hand and a bundle of seven tied arrows emblematic of the Seven United Provinces in her left, above a banner inscribed 'PAIX' (Peace), the stem with two teared shoulder knops above a slender teared inverted baluster, over a folded conical foot, 23.9cm high, the other with a slightly flared round funnel bowl decorated with the arms of Utrecht, flanked by lion supporters and resting on a diaper and strapwork bracket, the stem with two shoulder knop above a beaded inverted baluster with a basal knop, over a conical foot, 19.7cm high (2)Footnotes:ProvenanceKrug Collection, Sotheby's, 14 March 1983, lot 666 (armorial glass)LiteratureBrigitte Klesse, Glassammlung Helfried Krug, Vol.2 (1973, p.248, no.675 (armorial glass)The glass inscribed 'PAIX' may commemorate the Peace of Utrecht, a series of peace treaties in Utrecht between 1713 and 1715 which brought the War of the Spanish Succession to a close.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
June Whitfield signed small album page cutting. Whitfield DBE was an English radio, television, and film actress. Her big break was a lead in the radio comedy Take It from Here, which aired on the BBC Light Programme in 1953. 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
A collection of Herend porcelain Orange Apponyi 'Chinese bouquet' dinnerware, each piece decorated with orange floral sprays with gilt highlights, comprising a two handle tureen and cover of ribbed oval form with floral bocage, 13in. (33cm.) handle to handle; a hors d'oeuvres dish, with five triangular dishes and central circular dish with lidded jar, on a large circular tray, 14¾in. (37.4cm.) diameter; a large two handle oval tray, 15¾in. (40cm.) long; a twin handle sauce boat with integral stand; eight crescent shaped dishes; four small quatreform dishes; and three small vases on four gilt feet with square plinths; and three leaf shaped dishes of varying forms, all with blue underglaze marks to bases; together with two boxes of Herend coasters. (quantity). * Tureen & cover - tiny nibbles to tip of flowerhead on handle; Hors d'oeuvres dish - good with very light surface marks to gilt highlights; Tray - light scratches to gilt decoration; Sauce boat - appear to be good, light wear; Crescent dishes - all good, very light wear only; Quatreform dishes - all good; Vases - all good, very light gilt rubbing only; Leaf dishes all with broken or repaired handles
A vintage Cartier 18ct gold rose and ladybird brooch, signed ‘Cartier France’, stamped serial numbers to centre of back, French hallmarks and Cartier London import marks for 1963, the matted gold rose with an enamel ladybird to the edge of one petal, 1 7/8in. (4.7cm.) long.. Very good condition with no faults. Light scratching only to outside of petals.
A Channel Islands silver fiddle pattern table spoon, maker's mark GH with crown above, struck once (George Hamon I and II, Jersey c.1775-1835), deep narrow bowl with flat point, bifurcated shoe piece, inscribed 'GPB' to terminal, 8¾in. (22.4cm.) long, weight 1.78 tr.oz.. * light surface wear, overall good.
A Channel Islands silver bright cut Old English pattern table spoon, maker's mark T.DG J.LG struck once (Thomas de Gruchy and John le Gallais, Jersey, c.1834-1849) with flat edge tip, bifurcated shoe piece, inscribed initials 'AP' to terminal, 8¾in. (22.3cm.) long, weight 1.96 tr.oz.. * Light surface scratches and wear, good.
A small collection of loose, unmounted gemstones, including a 3.01ct emerald, of medium light colour; a 4.47ct pear cut Zoisite; and a 23.72ct round cut yellowish-orange Citrine, all three with online purchase paperwork; together with six other unmounted cut gemstones without paperwork, unidentified. (9).
An 18ct gold, jade and diamond ring, the light, mottled apple green jade cabochon flanked by diamond set shoulders, size M½; together with a matched 9ct gold bracelet with pierced fancy links and seven cabochon jade stones, 7in. (17.8cm.) long; a matching 9ct gold pendant on a 9ct gold rope chain, 16in. (40.6cm.) long; and a pair of 14ct gold stud earrings, each set with a single pear shaped cabochon. (5).
A ladies Cartier Tank Francaise stainless steel and diamond wrist watch, ref. W4TA0008, serial no. 3217434800ZX, c.2020, the silvered dial with secret signature at eleven, blued steel hands, cabochon crown, diamond set bezel, 20mm. case, brushed and polished steel Cartier bracelet, quartz movement, with the original box, outer box and papers, in excellent condition, worn just a few times.. The watch is in excellent condition, with just very light scratches to the case and bracelet from use. It is currently running and the hands adjust correctly. The box is in very good condition.
An Art Deco style silver three piece tea service, James Dixon & Sons Ltd, Sheffield, 1946/47, comprising of teapot, milk jug, twin handle sugar basin, of bombe form with rounded scroll handles, each piece inscribed with letter 'B', reeded rims, raised of four scroll feet, teapot, 9¾in. (24.8cm.) long, weight 40 tr.oz.. * Very light surface wear only, very good, hallmarks clear.
A mid-century ladies 9ct gold cased Accurist wrist watch, hallmarked Edinburgh 1949, manual wind, signed 15J movement, 15mm. silvered circular Arabic dial with subsidiary seconds at six, the octagonal case on a 9ct gold sprung bracelet; together with a gents gold plated Longines quartz wrist watch, 1970s-80s. (2). Accurist winds and runs. Good overall, with some spotting to outside of dial and some light pitting to gold on caseback. Longines is not running. Some wear to plating on case and strap worn.
A ladies Rolex Oyster Perpetual Datejust stainless steel wristwatch, ref. 178274, serial no. 7A151736, circa 2011, white gold fluted bezel, mother of pearl diamond set dial, 63160 jubilee bracelet, 31mm. case, with Rolex leather case, outer box, leather wallet with service guarantee card dated 27 Oct 2020, tags, spare links and Datejust / Service Guide booklets.. Movement currently running and adjustments function correctly. Serviced by Rolex in Oct. 2020. Expected light scratches to bracelet and case from use with a couple of slightly larger scratches to sides of case, but very good overall. Several small nicks to bezel. Box & case VG overall. Small sticker tear to surface of card to outer box front flap.
A vintage 18ct gold cased Piaget ladies wrist watch, late-1950s, manual wind (not currently running), champagne dial with gilt batons, 15mm. circular case, rolled gold sprung strap.. Not running (possibly overwound). Scratching and spotting to dial. Light scratching to crystal. Expected scratching to case from use. Caseback with presentation inscription, dated 1958. 9ct gold St Christopher charm attached to lug.
A mid-century Rolex Shock-Resisting stainless steel mid-size manual wind wrist watch, 1950s, the 24.5mm. silvered dial with minute tracks, centre seconds, gilt Rolex crown and lumed gilt dot and batons markers with Arabic numerals at 2,4,6,8 and 10, the 30mm. case with plain crown, the signed Dennison for Rolex caseback numbered 12324 2789, signed 15 Rubis movement, no. 68000, with later black leather strap, in a blue flock Rolex box,. Winds and runs. Hands adjust correctly. One securing screw is detached from the movement but present - it appears to lack the lower threaded section, so cannot be re-fitted. Silvering to dial has dulled and light surface scratches to centre. Luming to batons and dots has dulled and degraded. There is no luming to the hands. Some scratching to plastic crystal. Expected scratching and small nicks to case from regular use. Strap good but not original or by Rolex. Box probably later.
A TAG Heuer Monaco stainless steel chronograph automatic wrist watch, ref. CS2111, serial no. 59007986, square black dial with baton makers with luminous dots, minute markers, square subsidiary hour, minute and constant seconds dials, date aperture at six, chronograph centre seconds, lumed hands, Tag Heuer black crocodile leather strap, boxed with papers.. Currently running, chronograph functions working correctly. Hands and date change correctly. Dial VG. Glass has a chip to the edge at 2.30 and some small scratches. Case good, with light scratches and two small marks to left side of case. Five small scuffs to caseback. Strap good but shows signs of wear. Box fair - faux-leather is worn and chipped around the edges. Watch cushion has heavier damage to faux-leather covering. Outer card box good.
A TAG Heuer Carrera stainless steel chronograph automatic wrist watch, ref. CV2013/1, no. FJ0737, automatic chronograph movement, 25 jewels, cal. 16, dark claret red dial, applied baton markers with luminous dots to outer minute track, luminous hands, orange centre seconds, subsidiary dials for constant seconds, 30 minute and 12 hour recording, date aperture at 3 o'clock, claret red bezel with tachymeter scale, screw down glazed back, case, dial and movement signed, on a Tag Heuer dark brown leather strap, diameter 41mm, boxed with Service Guarantee card dated 06.09.2018.. Currently running and chronometer functions working correctly. Dial VG. Crystal VG. Some wear visible to outside edge of bezel. Light scratching to case. Strap heavily worn and leather starting to split at clasp. Box is tatty with losses to faux-leather covering to inside and exterior.
A ladies Michel Herbelin gold plated dress watch, ref. 7065.B, c.2001, the mother-of-pearl dial with gilt dot cardinal markers and gilt sword hands, the 21mm. circular case with CZ set bezel and lugs, with original dumbbell link bracelet, in the original box with papers and spare links.. In excellent condition, with virtually no evidence that it has been worn - just very light handling scratches. In running condition. Hands adjust correctly. Box very good
A Rolex Oyster-Perpetual Datejust stainless steel automatic gents bracelet watch, 1970s, ref.1603, the 27.5mm. silvered sunburst dial with polished baton markers with lumed dots to the outer minute track, magnified date aperture at 3, 36mm. stainless steel case with fluted bezel, Rolex screw down crown, screw down plain caseback, Rolex stainless steel 6251H polished and brushed steel jubilee bracelet, Rolex calibre 1570 automatic movement, 26J, no box or papers.. Winds and runs. Hands and date adjust correctly. Dial good - two tiny scuff/scratches above 12, slight dulling and spotting to silvering around lumed markers and light spots to a couple of batons. Glass has a few tiny scratches. Case and bracelet good with expected light scratching and tiny marks. Clasps functions correctly.

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