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A 1950/60s chromium plated metal novelty cigarette lighter, fashioned as a fighter aircraft with a detachable central section, rotating on a ball-and-socket connection on the stepped, elongated octagonal plinth, the black (possibly Bakelite) base impressed with the Regd. Design and Pro.Patent numbers 5''h 9.25''L
Paul Henry RHA (1876-1958) WEST OF IRELAND ROAD THROUGH THE BOG, c.1932-1935 oil on board signed lower right 13 x 15in. (33.02 x 38.10cm) In the ownership of the present family for approximately fifty years The overall light tone of this painting suggests a date of c.1932-5. The mountain seen in the background, given this date, is likely to be in Co. Kerry, rather than Connemara. The scene might even have been painted on the Dingle Peninsula, which Henry visited in 1935 (cf. The Mountain Road, S. B. Kennedy, Paul Henry: with a catalogue of the Paintings, Drawings, Illustrations, Yale University Press, New Haven & London, 2007, p. 270, catalogue no. 856) to work on his Iveragh pictures (Kennedy, 'Paul Henry's Iveragh Pictures' in John Crowley & John Sheehan, The Iveragh Peninsula, Cork University Press, 2009, pp. 441-4.) The use of very fluid paint on the roadway and elsewhere also suggests a date of the early 1930s when the artist's mood - which is clearly reflected in his work - was lighter than it had been for most of the previous decade. The mountain, with its shoulder to the left, is also similar to The Mountain Road picture. In characteristic Henry fashion almost half of the picture plane is given to the sky, with its mixture of heavy cumulous clouds, which are not yet ominous, and the lighter cirrus clouds which are much higher. West of Ireland Road Through The Bog is numbered 1304 in S. B. Kennedy's ongoing cataloguing of Paul Henry's oeuvre.Dr. S.B. KennedyApril 2016 L
An early 20th century feather folding fan with faux tortoiseshell guards and sticks of plain form, with loop suspending a purple tassel, the mount of chocolate brown ostrich feathers, guard length 24cm, width approx 51cm, and a further feather folding fan with plain ebonised guards embellished with a silk bow, with plain sticks and gilt metal loop suspending a matching ribbon, the fontange shaped feather mount of dyed ostrich feathers, guard length 23.5cm, width approx 38cm (af) (2). CONDITION REPORT: The ribbon on the sticks of the dark fan have perished. One of the feathers is missing. On the lighter fan, it is not all fixed together so the sticks and feathers are all loose.
Early 20thC Fruit Wood Islamic Novelty Temple/Mosque Table Lighter Compendium Set The Turned Tower With Removable Brass Dome Revealing A Lighter, Second Removable Dome With 4 Sectioned Interior For Cigarettes, Realistically Modelled Building With Brickwork, The Whole With Removable Roof, Interior Wired For Bulbs, Height 15 Inches 15x11 Inches Deep

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