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Lot 435

A GROUP OF CERAMICS AND GLASSWARES, to include Copeland Spode's Italian 22cm diameter bowl and oval tray (crazing and large chip to reverse of tray), modern Spode's Italian pin tray and candlesticks, two Copeland Spode Chinese Rose dinnerplates, Royal Doulton Gone Away D6531 character jug, green glass Art Deco style dressing table set, large blue and white case (sd), royal commemoratives, etc (qty) (Condition:- some pieces chipped/missing pieces, generally good condition)

Lot 712

A BOX AND LOOSE LAMPS AND SHADES, ETC, to include a glass Art Deco style lamp, electric oil style lamp, metal and blown glass shades, modern table lamps still in protective wrapping, vintage lamps, etc

Lot 5004

A reproduction Art Nouveau patinated metal wall hanging depicting the bust of a maiden, 41cm by 24cm; a reproduction Art Deco patinated metal figure of a female dancer, 45cm high; and a modern patinated metal figure of a female dancer on a circular base, 3.5cm high (3).

Lot 349

BATMAN: KILLING JOKE - (2 in Lot) - (1988 - DC) - KEY Modern Batman Book - First Printings - Both DC & Titan Books Editions - The Joker cripples Barbara Gordon (Batgirl) who becomes Oracle + More detailed Joker origin - Alan Moore story with Brian Bolland cover and interior art - Flat/Unfolded

Lot 345

SANDMAN: MASTER OF DREAMS #1 - (1989 - DC) - KEY Modern Book - Pre-Vertigo - First appearance of Morpheus + appearance by Wesley Dodds, the original Golden Age-era Sandman + A Netflix TV series is currently in production - Neil Gaiman story, Dave McKean cover with Sam Kieth interior art - Flat/Unfolded - a photographic condition report is available on request

Lot 394

BATMAN ADVENTURES #12 - (1993 - DC) - First appearance of Harley Quinn in comics + Low initial print run only adds to the factors making it one of the most desirable comics of the 1990s + Currently valued at #5 on Overstreet's Top 20 Modern Age Comics list - Mike Parobeck cover and interior art - Flat/Unfolded - a photographic condition report is available on request

Lot 279

A modern silver clad and enamelled double photo frame in the Art Nouveau style, 8x11cmCondition report: Some chips to the enamel.Otherwise appears OK.

Lot 531

An Art Deco lady's 18ct gold cased tank watch, having manual wind movement, on gilt metal bracelet; together with two lady's vintage mechanical wristwatches; and two modern fashion watches (5)

Lot 7

Tom Wesselmann (1931-2004)Cut Out Nude (Green) 1965 signed and dated 65acrylic, pencil and paper collage laid on board43.1 by 57.5 cm. 16 15/16 by 22 5/8 in.Footnotes:ProvenanceSidney Janis Gallery, New York (#11266)Private Collection, USBarbara Mathes Gallery, New York (CA1833)Guy Pieters Gallery, Knokke Acquired directly from the above by the present owner in 1995In the late 1950s, Tom Wesselmann began a series of small collaged nudes in interior settings, composed from magazine cuttings. From 1961, these provided the compositional basis for his acclaimed and iconic Great American Nude series. Wesselmann's nudes, with their simplified curves and passages of rich colour are arguably the most widely recognised pieces, not only of his extensive and celebrated career, but epitomise the American Pop avant-garde that defined a generation championing progressive attitudes in the midst of the glamourisation of Hollywood and the proliferation of televisual and print media. In this present work, Cut Out Nude (Green) from 1965, the enticing image of a brunette woman, languishingly posing with her arms stretched over her head is rendered in piquant clarity in painted, collaged elements. She appears to us as an idealised and attractive female form, a modern Venus. Her relaxed pose suggests she is completely at ease in her nudity with visible tan lines and a wide joyful smile, reclined in an intimate display evoking historical depictions of women in their private spaces. This is not a figure that is submitting to the viewer, but instead appears to be relishing the attention and freedom her position allows. Wesselmann is not concerned with surface or sculpting – there is no hint of dimension to his nude – but rather we are presented with flat forms and brilliant colours, so definitive of iconic works produced at the height of Pop Art in the 1960s.He often intentionally left the faces of his models blank, avoiding the suggestion of a portrait and allowing his viewers to be open to individual interpretation and leave room for the imagination. The only features Wesselmann includes here are those essential to sensual simplification such as lips and nipples, poignantly identified in bright red, believing that any intonation of personality would interfere with the forthrightness of the subject.Wesselmann consistently referenced the classical representation of the nude throughout his figurative painting. In the present work, the one-dimensional, central figure of the nude is illuminated with a bright green palette and flattened composition. His theme has strong art historical credentials in the motif of the sleeping Venus, evolving into the reclining Odalisque, that adorns the walls of the world's greatest museums in the paintings of Ingres, Manet and Matisse. The latter's influence on Wesselmann was especially profound, identified in his own fluid and supple forms. Wesselmann's voluptuous reclining nudes put a new spin on Matisse's Odalisques, yet we can clearly identify inspiration from the sensuousness of Matisse's forms and vibrant palette. Invigorated by the shifting, luxurious forms of Matisse; Wesselmann shunned the almost clinical eye of his Pop contemporaries in favour of colours and subjects that were at once recognisable and ideal.Wesselmann approached and revived the theme of the artist's muse in a completely novel way. His Great American Nudes as modern odalisques represent the most exceptional examples of his iconic visual language and capture the cultural energy of Post-War America that was going through significant shifts in second wave feminism, sexual liberation and hippie movements. The Great American Nudes established Wesselmann as a master of colour and collage, whose deft manipulation of art historical and contemporary symbols distinguished him as one of the leading American Pop artists of his time.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

Lot 20

Yves Klein (1928-1962)Untitled Blue Monochrome (IKB 53)1959 signed and dated 59 on the reversedry pigment and synthetic resin on stonewareDiameter: 24.5 cm. 9 5/8 in.Footnotes:ProvenanceRené de Montaigu Collection, FranceSale: Tajan, Paris, Succession René de Montaigu, 13 June 1995, Lot 20 Private Collection, FranceSale: Cornette de Saint Cyr, Paris, Art Contemporain, 29 January 2001, Lot 61Acquired directly from the above by the present ownerLiteraturePaul Wember, Yves Klein Catalogue Raisonné, Cologne 1969, p. 72, description of the work listedRadiant in colour and sublime in form, Untitled Blue Monochrome (IKB 53) from 1959 is a truly captivating work by the acclaimed French artist Yves Klein. Born in Nice in 1928, Klein's influence on the landscape of contemporary art has been extraordinarily profound. Despite a fatal heart attack at the young age of 34, Klein had a remarkably active career creating a vast body of work that continuously pushed the boundaries between painting, sculpture and thought-provoking performance art. Klein's exhibition The Void, at Iris Clert Gallery in 1958, held only a year before the present work was created, was a revolutionary conceptual masterpiece where the artist presented a completely empty gallery space in Paris. Thousands of visitors attended the exhibition and expected to see his latest paintings, but instead they were confronted with an empty room and provocative bare white walls. Klein's pioneering Anthropometries also shocked the art world at the time. The artist engaged nude female models covered in paint and used them as human paint brushes, creating impressions of their bodies and working their flesh directly onto the surface. Whilst incredibly controversial and daring at the time, Klein endeavoured to create a more religious, intellectual, and immersive theatrical experience in his practice.Untitled Blue Monochrome (IKB 53) was executed at a pivotal moment in Klein's career. His monochrome paintings which originally began in various colour tones - vibrant oranges, deep purples and exuberant greens – had been exhibited for the first time at the Club des Solitaires in Paris only four years earlier in 1955. Quoted in the exhibition catalogue, Klein discusses his journey to this crucial monochrome series and the assertive experience of his paintings which was achieved through uniformity: 'After passing through several periods, my pursuits have led me to the creation of uniformly monochrome paintings. Using multiple techniques, after appropriate preparation of the foundation, each of my canvases is thus covered by one or more layers of a unique and uniform colour. No drawing and no variation of hue appear there is only strictly uniform colour. In such manner, the dominant force asserts itself upon the entire painting.' (the artist in: Yves Klein Yves Peintures, Paris 1955, p. 33).Two years later in 1957, Klein finalised the fabrication of the deep and intense ultramarine pigment that he would patent in his name. It is this emotive blue that would dominate his oeuvre and form the basis of his monochrome abstraction, sublimely realised in Untitled Blue Monochrome (IKB 53). In the present work, layers of powdery International Klein Blue pigment, otherwise known as IKB, saturate the stoneware in a rich variation of colour, drawing the eye over the striations that mark the concave plane. The viewer is drawn into the surface starting from outer edges and circling inwards. Few artists have been so closely affiliated to one colour as is the case with Klein and the electric IKB. As a result, the two are inextricably linked and synonymously bound to each other. Klein believed the purpose of colour was to strip back the materiality of the canvas or the surface, creating a doorway to a higher experience that transcends the mere physical. His powdery IKB pigment represents a physical representation of a cosmic force or an otherworldly experience which is dependent on the light, the individual viewer and their own sensibility. Indeed, this cosmic energy is palpable when you are placed in front of Klein's monochromes. Regardless of the size or the form; whether applied to canvas, ceramic or to the ethereal anthropomorphic Sculpture-Eponges, you are immediately drawn to the velvety colour, losing yourself to the limitless plane and thereby experiencing infinite freedom as his works act as a conduit into a deep void, unhindered from a specific narrative. Transfixing the viewer and artist alike, IKB evoked the transcendental experience of Klein's childhood spent in Nice, from gazing up towards the luminosity of the limitless sky and out towards the endless azure Mediterranean Sea. This release of the body and mind presents a certain spirituality to Klein's work that was evident throughout his life. Before devoting himself to his artistic practice, Judo was Klein's first love. He travelled to Japan in 1952 and trained as a judoka for a period of fifteen months. Klein's interest in Eastern philosophy was also piqued on this trip, studying Zen Buddhism where the tenets of emptiness and the disavowal of the self can be seen in many of his works. With his interest in Zen Buddhism and combined with his Catholic faith, Klein was rather philosophical and interested in religious iconography. He would often use gold and rose along with his signature colour in his works, recalling the holy trinity. Gold for the Father, blue for the Son and pink for the Holy Spirit. Untitled Blue Monochrome (IKB 53) was originally held in the esteemed collection of the prominent collector and businessman René de Montaigu. Born in Paris in 1897, Monsieur de Montaigu was incredibly passionate about the arts, acquiring works by many of the leading artists of the Twentieth Century such as Ellsworth Kelly, Jean Dubuffet, Christo, Lucio Fontana, Georges Mathieu and Yves Klein. Many works from his collection have been admitted into international institutions; one such example is the Wisteria Dining Room, Paris, now in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. An entire room complete with walnut wall panels and intricately painted murals, the Wisteria Dining Room is a celebrated example of Art Nouveau design and architecture and was conceived by the French Symbolist artist Lucien Lévy-Dhurmer. A generous patron, René de Montaigu was a founding member of the 'Association of Friends of the Centre Pompidou' in Paris and gifted a painting by the German artist Wols to the museum in 1979.Harmonious in form and size, Untitled Blue Monochrome (IKB 53) presents a wonderful opportunity to acquire an incredibly rare work from the artist's oeuvre. Residing in the collections of prominent international institutions including The Museum of Modern Art, New York, The Centre Pompidou, Paris, The Tate Modern, London, The Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebaek and the Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum, Tokyo, Klein's legacy continues to endure and mesmerise through a world of endless colour and possibilities.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: * AR* VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.AR Goods subject to Artists Resale Right Additional Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 5

Robert Rauschenberg (1925-2008)Intersection (Copperhead) 1989 signed and dated 89; numbered 89.46 on the reversesilkscreen ink, acrylic, enamel and tarnish on copper, in a bronze frame244 by 122 cm.96 1/16 by 48 1/16 in.Footnotes:This work is registered in the archives of the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation, New York, under RRF 89.46.ProvenanceM. Knoedler & Co., New York (A 116778)Private Collection, LondonAcquired directly from the above by the present ownerExhibitedNew York, M. Knoedler & Co., Robert Rauschenberg: Works, 1989, no. 13, illustrated in colourWith its lustrous, subtly reflective copper surface and vivid blend of silkscreened and painted imagery, Intersection (Copperhead) from 1989 is a truly spectacular example from a celebrated series of paintings on metal created during Robert Rauschenberg's ROCI project. Over the course of his 60-year career, Rauschenberg worked in a wide range media including painting, sculpture, fabric collage, printmaking, photography and performance, challenging gestural abstract painting at a time where Abstract Expressionism was the dominant creative philosophy in America. Studying at the famed Black Mountain College under the tutelage of Josef Albers, he quickly rose to be one of the most influential and experimental artists of his time, a progenitor of practically every post-war artistic development since Abstract Expressionism and the first American to win the Golden Lion, the top prize at the Venice Biennale in 1964. Today, his works are highly sought after internationally, and with only two comparable works having been offered at auction in the past ten years, this is a rare opportunity to acquire a signature work by this singular artist.Robert Rauschenberg believed in the power of art as a catalyst for positive social change. He travelled widely throughout his life, participating in numerous international ventures and from 1984 to 1991 he embarked on the ROCI project, the Rauschenberg Overseas Culture Interchange (ROCI) - pronounced 'Rocky,' like the name of his pet turtle. The project was an expression of his long-term commitment to human rights and intended to spark a dialogue and achieve mutual understanding through creative work. As part of the project, Rauschenberg explored diverse cultures and local art-making practices, steering him to countries where artistic experimentation had been suppressed, including Chile, China and Cuba. On his trip to Chile in 1984 Rauschenberg visited a copper mine and foundry and learned from artist Benito Rojo about the potential of tarnishing agents on copper. Mined locally and widely exported around the world, the material was not only of huge significance to the country, but by using it, Rauschenberg demonstrated his solidarity with the Chilean people during the rule of Dictator, President Augusto Pinochet. It also possessed warm reflective qualities that he liked for his own practice, explaining that, 'the metal carries the image instead of the opposite way around, where the paint is the image on the surface.' (the artist in: Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac press release, BOREALIS 1988-92, www.ropac.net, 21 September 2021) The Copperheads (1985/89) are a series of paintings using copper supports, tarnishing agents, acrylic, enamel and silkscreened photographs taken by the artist on his travels. Photography and printmaking were two of his abiding interests, allowing him to document and reflect the countries he visited and the world around him. While the fourteen Copperheads made in 1985 are part of the larger series ROCI Chile, the present work belongs to the first of fifteen series of paintings on metal that Rauschenberg made between 1985 and 1996. With the addition of hand painted enamel, Intersection (Copperhead) is a melange of textures and shadow play, first captured in Rauschenberg's black and-white photographs and then transformed into graphic signs and bursts of colour on the copper surface. A painting that is suffused with the politics of the emergent globalization at the end of the 1980s, it wonderfully demonstrates the artist's adroitness and keen eye for imagery in modern media culture; how they could be propagated, transformed and composed. Set over a both lustrous and murky copper background, the eye is drawn upwards across the vertical pane to find a selection of five distinct images, each assigned a colour or colour combination. Some are more readily recognizable than others: the wheel of a bike for example is centrally positioned between stark letters at the top of the composition. Three small men are encased by the lamp of a traffic light, an image that was photographed in Chile and is clearly referenced in the work's title 'Intersection'. At the base, a yellow chair against a vibrant red background is serenely positioned between two windows and beautifully grounds the composition.Rauschenberg took the photograph of the bike and letters in Moscow; the image of the chair at the bottom of the composition was taken in either Captiva, Florida or the neighbouring Pine Island, near Rauschenberg's studio. Besides the reference to the prominently positioned traffic light, the title of the work also draws attention to the various layers of apparently unrelated imagery intersecting across the picture plane and the juxtaposition between two different modes of paint application: gestural brushstrokes and mechanically reproduced imagery. No specific narrative can be inferred from the figurative motifs and in some areas the imagery is dense, even overlapping, in others it is sparser, leaving part of the copper base bare, only broken up by incidental gestures, including wipes and drips, streaks, washes and spots.Rauschenberg didn't want his paintings to be didactic; rather they are a collection of motifs that lead the viewer on their own journey, and are subject to the viewer's own thoughts, perceptions, and feelings. The present work is a truly magnificent example of some of the artists most recognizable techniques with an imposing and striking presence. Rauschenberg's impact on art history is still felt strongly today, with his works being incredibly popular and amongst the highlights of the most prestigious public and private collections around the globe, including the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Guggenheim Bilbao, Bilbao; Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebaek; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam and New York's Museum of Modern Art.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: TPTP Lot will be moved to an offsite storage location (Cadogan Tate, Auction House Services, 241 Acton Lane, London NW10 7NP, UK) and will only be available for collection from this location at the date stated in the catalogue. Please note transfer and storage charges will apply to any lots not collected after 14 calendar days from the auction date.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 18

Howard Hodgkin (1932-2017)Out of the Window 2000 signed three times, titled and dated 2000 on the reverseoil on wood97 by 113.6 by 10.6 cm.38 3/16 by 44 1/2 by 4 3/16 in. This work will be included in the forthcoming catalogue raisonné being compiled by The Estate of Howard Hodgkin.Footnotes:ProvenanceAcquired from the artist by the present owner in 2001ExhibitedLondon, Dulwich Picture Gallery, Howard Hodgkin at Dulwich Picture Gallery, 2001, p. 25, illustrated in colourLiteraturePaul Levy, 'Hanging it Howard's way' in Evening Standard, 28 June 2001, p. 38, illustrated in colourM. Price (ed.), Howard Hodgkin: The Complete Paintings Catalogue Raisonné, London 2006, p. 336, no. 357, illustrated in colourFresh to the market, after remaining in the same collection since its acquisition from the artist in 2001, Out of the Window from 2000 is a dazzling and vibrant display of Howard Hodgkin's masterful practice. Hodgkin's virtuosic brushwork is exquisite and expressive, his choice of colour bold and unapologetic. Emerging from the Bath Academy of Art at Corsham in 1954 under the pupillage of William Scott, Hodgkin's early inspiration came in The New American Painting exhibition of Abstract Expressionist artists at the Tate Gallery in 1959: one cannot help but draw comparisons with Rothko's serene planes of colour or De Kooning's exaggerated brushstrokes. Yet he rejected the flatness of American Modernism, pushing the painting out of its frame and creating abstract depths of field that translate as windows onto a vivid and luscious landscape. Abstract at first glance, Hodgkin's paintings consistently deal with memory and psychic landscapes that are often exposed to the viewer most opaquely in their titles, such as Goodbye to the Bay of Naples, A Rainbow or Night Thoughts. He captures and transforms moments of intimacy, memories of travels, relationships, both erotic and platonic, the recollection of a beautiful view or sunset, shifting weather or the feeling of the first days of a new season. Hodgkin's close friend and writer Julian Barnes wrote: 'H.H.'s paintings are not narratives. Mostly, they are memories. But it is not a case of emotion recollected in tranquillity. Rather, it is emotion recollected in intensity. In that sense his pictures are operatic' (Julian Barnes, Keeping an Eye Open, London 2015, p. 260). Hodgkin was given his first solo show in 1962 at Arthur Tooth & Sons and his international appeal and career grew steadily from there. In 1984, he represented Britain at the Venice Biennale, and the next year he was awarded the Turner Prize. In 1992, Hodgkin was knighted. A retrospective in 1995-96, organized by the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, travelled to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and Dusseldorf, Germany. In 2000, Hodgkin was invited to exhibit ten recent works, the present painting included, alongside the permanent display in South London's Dulwich Picture Gallery. The exhibition sought to centre Hodgkin's practice as part of a longstanding history of painting. Influences in Hodgkin's work can be seen across centuries, including Henri Matisse, Albert Pinkham Ryder, Ellsworth Kelly, Pierre Bonnard and Les Nabis, as well as painterly dialogues with contemporaries such as David Hockney. At Dulwich Picture Gallery, the artist searched for roots and qualities in the works of the predominantly 17th Century museum collection that inspired him and nurtured his own practice. What Hodgkin was able to do, however, was establish a timelessness to abstract painting that emphasised the nature of painting – drawing attention to composition, colour, speed and execution, even the traditional moulded and gilt framing. Here, the pieces were not selected to highlight difference and encourage comparisons, but rather to show Hodgkin's in a renewed context and cast them in a deeply historical light. Out of the Window was placed between The Locksmith by a follower of Ribera and Guernico's St Cecilia. The work was also reproduced alongside a poem by James Fenton for a Tate poster to mark the opening of the Tate Modern in May 2000.In the present work, a rapturous rainbow of colour is composed in broad orchestral brushstrokes and confident strokes of vibrant jewel like paint, reminiscent of the colours of India, a country he would adore and return to throughout his life. The pigments intermingle, push, and pull on each other, instilling a sense of vivacity in its boisterous movement and energy. The size and shape of the antique oval picture frame – a less common format in Hodgkin's oeuvre – adds to the sense of a real window, transporting the work to a third dimension. Hodgkin made frames integral to his practice. He would fit the wooden panels to found old frames and treat them as one joint painting surface. With paintings residing in museums internationally, including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Museu de Arte Contemporanea de Sao Paulo, Brazil; and the Centro de Arte Moderna, Lisbon, this represents an opportunity to acquire a work of exceptional quality with wonderful provenance, by one of the most prominent and celebrated British painters of the modern era.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: * AR* VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.AR Goods subject to Artists Resale Right Additional Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 4

Josef Albers (1888-1976)Homage to the Square: Study to Young Prediction 1951 signed with the artist's monogram and dated 51oil on masonite40.6 by 40.6 cm.16 by 16 in.Footnotes:This work will be included in the forthcoming catalogue raisonné currently being prepared by the Josef and Anni Albers Foundation, under no. JAAF 1976.1.193.ProvenanceThe Estate of Josef Albers, ConnecticutThe Josef and Anni Albers Foundation, ConnecticutWaddington Galleries, London (no. B37854)Acquired directly from the above by the present ownerExhibitedLondon, Waddington Galleries, Josef Albers: Works on Paper and Paintings, 2007, p. 37, no. 13, illustrated in colourAn exquisitely vibrant and mesmerizing example of Josef Albers' most celebrated series, Homage to the Square: Study to Young Prediction from 1951 offers a rare opportunity to acquire a true masterpiece from one of the most influential artists of the 20th century. Boasting an immaculate provenance directly from the estate of the artist and the Josef and Anni Albers Foundation in Connecticut, the work only went into private hands in 2008 where it has remained since. With its three concentric squares of oil paint, each slightly gravitating to the lower edge of the Masonite panel, the disarmingly simple work features a rare combination of vivid pigments - pink, ochre, and orange - reminiscent of a blazing sky at sunset. The grouping of colour is only seen in three other examples throughout the entire series to which the artist dedicated over twenty-five years of his life. Having studied at the Bauhaus in Germany, where he was later a faculty member, Albers was among those who decided to close the school rather than comply with the Third Reich and adhere to its rules and regulations. Together with his wife Anni, he arrived in the United States in 1933 to programme the visual arts curriculum at the influential Black Mountain College. His subsequent influence as a teacher to generations of artists that followed would be without equal; Albers' students included Robert Rauschenberg, Jasper Johns, Cy Twombly, Ruth Asawa, Eva Hesse, Sheila Hicks and Richard Serra. Years later, Rauschenberg would say 'I'm still learning what he taught me, because what he taught had to do with the entire visual world [...] I consider Albers the most important teacher I've ever had' (M. E. Harris, The Arts at Black Mountain College, Cambridge, MA 1987, p. 126). The Homages occupied Albers from 1950, when he began teaching his colour theory course at Yale University's Department of Design, until his death in 1976. He set about examining the compositional and formal effects of colour and shape, fascinated as he was by the versatility and fragility of perception. In Albers own words, 'every perception of color is an illusion [...] We do not see colors as they really are. In our perception they alter one another. [...] This play of colors, this change in identity, is the object of my concern. It leads me to change my color tool, my palette, from one picture to the next' (the artist in: Eugen Gomringer, Josef Albers, New York 1967, p. 104). What may initially be read as a strict, narrow compositional framework, the Homage to the Square series allowed Albers to explore the finite, expressive potentials and optical properties of colour and their intrinsic relationships. Entirely based on a mathematically determined format of several squares, each element appears to overlap and nestle within one another, conjuring advancing and receding planes, appearing as both autonomous shapes and integral parts of a complete system. Applied with a palette knife directly from the tube onto a white, primed Masonite panel, Albers worked his way from the inside outwards with the board flat on the table, achieving perfect edges and lines without a ruler or masking tape. The perception of depth- for some the squares recede, for others they are stacked on top of each other and protrude- is down to the individual perception of the viewer and can shift from viewing to viewing. Sometimes the differences in tone are minimal, but in the present work, Albers has opted for a more dramatic and striking tonal difference between his elements. There is a vibrancy to some early Homage to the Square paintings before 1955-56, the present work included, that can surprise those who know the artists more restrained, classical works of the late 1950s and through the 1960s. The pigments seen in Homage to the Square: Study to Young Prediction from 1951 - a vibrant pink, rich ochre, and luminous orange - were used in only three other paintings of the series. Whilst all four works vary in appearance due to different tonalities of the inner pink square (a mixture of pink and white), and the density of the paint application on the surface of the ground, they all bear the same title and feature the same composition. The present work is the very first study and has a denser, more thickly painted surface, as is typical of Homage paintings from 1951. It also features an overpainted earlier Homage on the reverse, along with the carefully recorded inscriptions of technical details typical for the series. The second study recorded in Albers' notes was completed in 1954; a third example dated 1951-1955 is presently in a private German collection. The last and final work called Young Prediction (Homage to the Square) has remained in the same private collection since it was acquired in 1955 and is currently on view in the exhibition 'Anni et Josef Albers: L'art et la vie' at the Musée d'art Moderne de Paris which will run through to January 2022 before travelling to the Instituto Valenciano de Arte Moderno in Valencia.Josef Albers was the first living artist ever to be honoured with a solo retrospective at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York in 1971. His Homage to the Square paintings are cornerstones of the most prestigious public and private art collections around the world. Not only is his influence on the timeline of modern art largely unparalleled, but Albers' legacy endured in the artists he taught, collaborated with, and guided through the early years of their career, influencing the emergence of Colour Field Painting, Geometric Abstraction and Op Art.Far from, a mere variation of a strict format of squares within squares, Homage to the Square: Study to Young Prediction from 1951 pulsates with light, tension and energy, and brilliantly incorporates the qualities that made Albers such a stalwart of the modern period. His exceptional aesthetic sense plays out between the simplicity of his composition and colours, and in turn produces a work of outstanding, complex beauty.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 39

Jenny Holzer (B. 1950)Living Series: You should limit the number of times... 1980-1982 cast bronze plaque20.3 by 25.4 cm. 8 by 10 in. This work was executed in 1980-1982, and is number one from an edition of three plus one artist's proof.Footnotes:This work is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity signed by the artist.ProvenanceBarbara Gladstone Gallery, New YorkPrivate Collection, UK Thence by decent to the present ownerAnother example of this edition is in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art, New York.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 2A

Group of 6 Villeroy & Boch plates, all decorated with Art Nouveau style prints, but modern issue, 26cm diam (6

Lot 34

FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT. 'Princeton Monographs in Art and Archaeology. Modern Architecture being the Kahn Lectures for 1930.' Decorative paper-covered boards. London Humphrey Milford/Oxford University Press to rear of ffep. Covers are worn and fragile at edges and browning with age. Paper has age spotting; Plus FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT. 'Sixty years of living architecture: The Work of Frank Lloyd Wright.' From the library of and signed by John Miller. Card covers which are browning at edges. Condition: please request a condition report if you require additional information regarding the condition of this lot Postage: £19.56 Please note that the postage quote is an estimate of the amount that we would charge to send the item to a buyer in the UK. If you are outside of the UK, or there is no estimate shown here, please contact postage@davidlay.co.uk for a bespoke quote.

Lot 286

W.J. Miles: "Modern Practical Farriery, A Complete System of Veterinary Art", late 19th Century volume published by William Mackenzie, coloured and black & white plates throughout, folio, half calf gilt, together with "The Complete Farrier & British Sportsman", circa 1816, engraved plates, a/f very worn (2)

Lot 51

John Duncan Fergusson RBA (British, 1874-1961)Boats at Royan oil on board27 x 34.6 cm. (10 5/8 x 13 5/8 in.)Footnotes:Fergusson moved to Paris is 1907, where he taught at the Académie de la Palette. He mixed with other avant-garde artists and was able to see the latest paintings by Picasso, Matisse and Derain. Living in the French capital gave him new impetus, and the years 1909/1910 were a transitional moment in his career. It can be argued that this was the starting point for Scottish modern art. He became the leader of a group of Anglo/American artists (later to be known as the 'Rhythmists') that moved in the most progressive circles, and in recognition of his contribution to the modern movement he was elected one of the sociétaires of the Salon d'Automne.This work was painted in the summer of 1910 when Fergusson and Peploe stayed at Royan on the west coast of France. Although they worked side by side, Fergusson's interpretations are altogether more progressive than Peploe's at this stage. Both artists were particularly inspired by the harbour. There were big technological advances in terms of the manufacture of paints around this time and they made maximum use of this, using the brightest colours that makers could produce. As a result, Fergusson's palette had become fresher and brighter and in this painting he has emphasised geometric shapes, such as the sails and outlines of the boats. Having hung on the same walls of a private home in Edinburgh for many decades, Boats at Royan is an exciting discovery to come on the market.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 95

Sir William George Gillies CBE LLD RSA PPRSW RA (1898-1973)Dahlias signed 'W.Gillies' (lower left)oil on canvas59.5 x 71 cm. (23 7/16 x 27 15/16 in.)Footnotes:ProvenanceWith Aitken Dott & Son, Edinburgh Sale; Sotheby's, London, 26 April 2007, lot 124Sale; Sotheby's, London, A Way of Life - The Tim Ellis Collection of Modern British Art, 19 November 2014, lot 76ExhibitedEdinburgh, Aitken Dott & Son, 1970, no.7This 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 9044

A large lidded storage box containing a quantity of Cowdray Park, Dunecht House guest towels, diaper and linen weaves, lettered in red, blue or gilt with coronets, 1914 and earlier 20th Century (qty) PROVENANCE: The linen formed part of the Household Linen at Cowdray Park, Sussex and Dunecht House, Aberdeenshire.The first Viscount Cowdray, Weetman Dickinson Pearson, bought the Cowdray Estate in 1908 for £340,000.The following year he purchased Dunecht House to give them a house "North of the border".Lord Cowdray gave Dunecht House, with its 9,000 acres, to his wife Annie (nee Cass) and from 1919 this became their principal seat.The restoration of the estate, together with works of art to fill them was matched by an eagerness to make them comfortable, employing the best firms to fit them with modern conveniences and lavish furnishings.This is reflected in the quantity and quality of the household linen. Nearly every item of linen is embroidered with "C" in red, blue or gold surmounted by a Viscount's coronet. The numbers below theses indicate the total number in the household. (i.e. 144 means there were once 12 dozen)

Lot 9063

A lidded storage box containing a quantity of Cowdray Park / Dunecht House table napkins including linen damask embroidered with "C's" and coronets, (Qty)PROVENANCE: The linen formed part of the Household Linen at Cowdray Park, Sussex and Dunecht House, Aberdeenshire.The first Viscount Cowdray, Weetman Dickinson Pearson, bought the Cowdray Estate in 1908 for £340,000.The following year he purchased Dunecht House to give them a house "North of the border".Lord Cowdray gave Dunecht House, with its 9,000 acres, to his wife Annie (nee Cass) and from 1919 this became their principal seat.The restoration of the estate, together with works of art to fill them was matched by an eagerness to make them comfortable, employing the best firms to fit them with modern conveniences and lavish furnishings.This is reflected in the quantity and quality of the household linen. Nearly every item of linen is embroidered with "C" in red, blue or gold surmounted by a Viscount's coronet. The numbers below theses indicate the total number in the household. (i.e. 144 means there were once 12 dozen)

Lot 9258

A pair of linen damask tablecloths woven in a pattern of trellis and flowers. Early 20th Century. Each length 14' 10" or 4.5m, width 7' 4" or 2.25m approx. One embroidered with a red monogram "C" surmounted by a coronet PROVENANCE: The linen formed part of the Household Linen at Cowdray Park, Sussex and Dunecht House, Aberdeenshire.The first Viscount Cowdray, Weetman Dickinson Pearson, bought the Cowdray Estate in 1908 for £340,000.The following year he purchased Dunecht House to give them a house "North of the border".Lord Cowdray gave Dunecht House, with its 9,000 acres, to his wife Annie (nee Cass) and from 1919 this became their principal seat.The restoration of the estate, together with works of art to fill them was matched by an eagerness to make them comfortable, employing the best firms to fit them with modern conveniences and lavish furnishings.This is reflected in the quantity and quality of the household linen. Nearly every item of linen is embroidered with "C" in red, blue or gold surmounted by a Viscount's coronet. The numbers below theses indicate the total number in the household. (i.e. 144 means there were once 12 dozen)

Lot 9041

A large lidded storage box containing five Cowdray Park linen damask banqueting cloths in a stylized chequered pattern circa 1910. Each measuring 24' 4" or 7.36m long x 5' 8" or 1.73m wide approx with an embroidered "C" in blue surmounted by a coronet (5) PROVENANCE: The linen formed part of the Household Linen at Cowdray Park, Sussex and Dunecht House, Aberdeenshire.The first Viscount Cowdray, Weetman Dickinson Pearson, bought the Cowdray Estate in 1908 for £340,000.The following year he purchased Dunecht House to give them a house "North of the border".Lord Cowdray gave Dunecht House, with its 9,000 acres, to his wife Annie (nee Cass) and from 1919 this became their principal seat.The restoration of the estate, together with works of art to fill them was matched by an eagerness to make them comfortable, employing the best firms to fit them with modern conveniences and lavish furnishings.This is reflected in the quantity and quality of the household linen. Nearly every item of linen is embroidered with "C" in red, blue or gold surmounted by a Viscount's coronet. The numbers below theses indicate the total number in the household. (i.e. 144 means there were once 12 dozen)

Lot 9025

An Irish linen damask banqueting cloth. Early 20th Century by "Walpole Bros Ltd Irish Hand-woven Damask Belfast" (Woven Signature) Woven in a classical rococo pattern. Embroidered "C" in a lozenge surmounted by a coronet. Length 20' 8" or 6.3m width 7'3" or 2.2m approx. Woven tag added indicating "7 yds"PROVENANCE: The linen formed part of the Household Linen at Cowdray Park, Sussex and Dunecht House, Aberdeenshire.The first Viscount Cowdray, Weetman Dickinson Pearson, bought the Cowdray Estate in 1908 for £340,000.The following year he purchased Dunecht House to give them a house "North of the border".Lord Cowdray gave Dunecht House, with its 9,000 acres, to his wife Annie (nee Cass) and from 1919 this became their principal seat.The restoration of the estate, together with works of art to fill them was matched by an eagerness to make them comfortable, employing the best firms to fit them with modern conveniences and lavish furnishings.This is reflected in the quantity and quality of the household linen. Nearly every item of linen is embroidered with "C" in red, blue or gold surmounted by a Viscount's coronet. The numbers below theses indicate the total number in the household. (i.e. 144 means there were once 12 dozen)

Lot 9059

An Irish linen damask tablecloth. Early 20th Century by "Walpole Bros. Belfast" (Woven signature). Woven in a pattern of classical urns and wreaths. Embroidered "C" in a lozenge surmounted by a coronet. Woven tape measurement sewn in "3¼ yards by 3¼ yards PROVENANCE: The linen formed part of the Household Linen at Cowdray Park, Sussex and Dunecht House, Aberdeenshire.The first Viscount Cowdray, Weetman Dickinson Pearson, bought the Cowdray Estate in 1908 for £340,000.The following year he purchased Dunecht House to give them a house "North of the border".Lord Cowdray gave Dunecht House, with its 9,000 acres, to his wife Annie (nee Cass) and from 1919 this became their principal seat.The restoration of the estate, together with works of art to fill them was matched by an eagerness to make them comfortable, employing the best firms to fit them with modern conveniences and lavish furnishings.This is reflected in the quantity and quality of the household linen. Nearly every item of linen is embroidered with "C" in red, blue or gold surmounted by a Viscount's coronet. The numbers below theses indicate the total number in the household. (i.e. 144 means there were once 12 dozen)

Lot 9190

A large lidded storage box containing a quantity of Cowdray Park / Dunecht House table linen including linen damask tablecloths, runners etc, embroidered with "C's" and coronets. (Qty) PROVENANCE: The linen formed part of the Household Linen at Cowdray Park, Sussex and Dunecht House, Aberdeenshire.The first Viscount Cowdray, Weetman Dickinson Pearson, bought the Cowdray Estate in 1908 for £340,000.The following year he purchased Dunecht House to give them a house "North of the border".Lord Cowdray gave Dunecht House, with its 9,000 acres, to his wife Annie (nee Cass) and from 1919 this became their principal seat.The restoration of the estate, together with works of art to fill them was matched by an eagerness to make them comfortable, employing the best firms to fit them with modern conveniences and lavish furnishings.This is reflected in the quantity and quality of the household linen. Nearly every item of linen is embroidered with "C" in red, blue or gold surmounted by a Viscount's coronet. The numbers below theses indicate the total number in the household. (i.e. 144 means there were once 12 dozen)

Lot 9297

A large lidded storage box containing a quantity of Cowdray Park / Dunecht House bed linen including sheets and pillow cases, embroidered "Cs" and coronets. Early 20th Century PROVENANCE: The linen formed part of the Household Linen at Cowdray Park, Sussex and Dunecht House, Aberdeenshire. The first Viscount Cowdray, Weetman Dickinson Pearson, bought the Cowdray Estate in 1908 for £340,000.The following year he purchased Dunecht House to give them a house "North of the border".Lord Cowdray gave Dunecht House, with its 9,000 acres, to his wife Annie (nee Cass) and from 1919 this became their principal seat. The restoration of the estate, together with works of art to fill them was matched by an eagerness to make them comfortable, employing the best firms to fit them with modern conveniences and lavish furnishings. This is reflected in the quantity and quality of the household linen. Nearly every item of linen is embroidered with "C" in red, blue or gold surmounted by a Viscount's coronet. The numbers below theses indicate the total number in the household. (i.e. 144 means there were once 12 dozen)

Lot 9198

A linen damask banqueting cloth woven in a border pattern of roses surrounding a field of repeating Gothic crosses. Early 20th Century. Length 17' 5" or 5.3m, width 5' 6" or 1.66m approx. Edge of cloth laundry mark for "Dunecht House" PROVENANCE: The linen formed part of the Household Linen at Cowdray Park, Sussex and Dunecht House, Aberdeenshire.The first Viscount Cowdray, Weetman Dickinson Pearson, bought the Cowdray Estate in 1908 for £340,000.The following year he purchased Dunecht House to give them a house "North of the border".Lord Cowdray gave Dunecht House, with its 9,000 acres, to his wife Annie (nee Cass) and from 1919 this became their principal seat.The restoration of the estate, together with works of art to fill them was matched by an eagerness to make them comfortable, employing the best firms to fit them with modern conveniences and lavish furnishings.This is reflected in the quantity and quality of the household linen. Nearly every item of linen is embroidered with "C" in red, blue or gold surmounted by a Viscount's coronet. The numbers below theses indicate the total number in the household. (i.e. 144 means there were once 12 dozen)

Lot 9197

An Irish linen damask tablecloth. Early 20th Century by "The Irish Linen Stores Dublin and Belfast" (Woven signature). The centre woven in formal stripes. Embroidered "C" in a lozenge surmounted by a coronet. Length 18' or 550cm, width 15' or 460cm approxPROVENANCE: The linen formed part of the Household Linen at Cowdray Park, Sussex and Dunecht House, Aberdeenshire.The first Viscount Cowdray, Weetman Dickinson Pearson, bought the Cowdray Estate in 1908 for £340,000.The following year he purchased Dunecht House to give them a house "North of the border".Lord Cowdray gave Dunecht House, with its 9,000 acres, to his wife Annie (nee Cass) and from 1919 this became their principal seat.The restoration of the estate, together with works of art to fill them was matched by an eagerness to make them comfortable, employing the best firms to fit them with modern conveniences and lavish furnishings.This is reflected in the quantity and quality of the household linen. Nearly every item of linen is embroidered with "C" in red, blue or gold surmounted by a Viscount's coronet. The numbers below theses indicate the total number in the household. (i.e. 144 means there were once 12 dozen)

Lot 9295

A large lidded storage box containing six Cowdray Park linen damask banqueting cloths in a stylized chequered pattern, circa 1910. Each measuring 24' 4" or 7.36m long x 5' 8" m or 1.73m wide approx with an embroidered "C" in blue surmounted by a coronet PROVENANCE: The linen formed part of the Household Linen at Cowdray Park, Sussex and Dunecht House, Aberdeenshire.The first Viscount Cowdray, Weetman Dickinson Pearson, bought the Cowdray Estate in 1908 for £340,000.The following year he purchased Dunecht House to give them a house "North of the border".Lord Cowdray gave Dunecht House, with its 9,000 acres, to his wife Annie (nee Cass) and from 1919 this became their principal seat.The restoration of the estate, together with works of art to fill them was matched by an eagerness to make them comfortable, employing the best firms to fit them with modern conveniences and lavish furnishings.This is reflected in the quantity and quality of the household linen. Nearly every item of linen is embroidered with "C" in red, blue or gold surmounted by a Viscount's coronet. The numbers below theses indicate the total number in the household. (i.e. 144 means there were once 12 dozen)

Lot 105

South America.- Chile.- Wood Taylor (Charles "Carlos" Chatworthy, painter, engineer, mariner, and military officer, 1792-1856) H.M. Ships "Collingwood" 80 Guns, "Asia" 84, and "Constance", 50 - Taken with the Camera Obscura, in the bay of Valparaiso by Lieut. Col. C. C. Wood, pencil, watercolour heightened with white on wove paper, with pencil inscription lower centre, signed 'C. C. Wood' lower left, and inscribed 'Valparaiso April 5th 1848' in the lower right corner, 313 x 472 mm (12 1/4 x 18 5/8 in), mounted onto board, associated toning and browning throughout the sheet, some spotting and surface dirt, large repaired tear in the lower centre, another smaller in the upper left corner, other minor nicks to the extremities, unframed, 1848⁂ Considered one of the most influential foreign artists who shaped modern painting in Chile. Wood Taylor worked in Boston in North America in 1817-1818, before joining an expedition to South America, arriving in Chile in 1819. In 1824, he arrived back in Valparaiso, following a trip to Peru, and while recovering from his journey he met the woman who would be his future wife; he subsequently converted to Catholicism to marry Dolores Chacon Ramirez de Arellano, and was to reside in Chile until 1852. An engineer as well as an artist, he worked on various planning and construction projects in Valparaiso, including work on the railways. He also designed the Coat of arms of Chile, which was adopted by the government in 1834.Another closely comparable view by the same hand, showing 'A View of H.M.S. Collingwood at the instant of shifting the Flag of Admiral Sir Geo S[eymo]ur from white to red and crossing top gallant yards at 8 A.M on the (Valparaiso)', was offered on the London art market in September, 2021 [unsigned but 'Attributed to Wood Taylor', see Bonham's London, Travel and Exploration, 14th September 2021, lot 183]. This work was likely a preliminary study for the slightly larger version dedicated and gifted by the artist to Admiral Seymour [see Christie's South Kensington, 26th May 2004, lot 398]. Another smaller version of this subject appears to have also utilised the camera obscura technology that the artist employs in the present work, with it being inscribed and dated "Chas C Wood November 1847. / Taken by the Camera Obscura" [see Christie's London, 8th April 1998, lot 29].

Lot 1085

A box of assorted vintage and modern ceramics & glass. To include: a pair of Royal Worcester coffee cans, Spode hors d'oeuvre dish and a large art glass vase in the shape of a bust.

Lot 1591

ART NOUVEAU CHROMOLITHOGRAPH - AFTER HENRI PRIVAT LIVEMONT (1861-1936) a coloured rectangular chromolithograph titled Ameublement, with a depiction of a lady in the Art Nouveau style. Marked, Privat Livemont del Editeur Bruxelles, mounted in a modern frame. Frame 42cms by 29cms, chromolithograph 25.5cms by 12cms

Lot 1580

ART NOUVEAU PEWTER BIRD INKWELL probably by Kayserzinn Jugendstil, made in pewter with a red pottery liner, 11cms high. Also with two modern bronze frogs, each with a youngster on their backs. (3)

Lot 2742

Four modern reference books relating to playing cards, comprising 'Spielkarten Jugendstil und Art Deco' by Christian Brandstätter, Uwe-Volker Segeth, 1994, 'Les Merveilleuses Cartes à Jouer du XIXe Siècle' by Jean Verame, 1989, 'Sublimes cartes à jouer' by Jean Verame, 2007 and 'Les Très Beaux Objets du Jeu' by Jean Verame, together with a modern cased set of 'The Art of Erté' playing cards by Sobranie.Buyer’s Premium 29.4% (including VAT @ 20%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 6% (including VAT @ 20%) of the hammer price.

Lot 2684

A pair of 20th century cast plaster and gilt painted figures, 'Morning Dew' and 'Evening Dew', height 36cm, together with a modern Art Deco style resin figure of a lady, height 52cm.Buyer’s Premium 29.4% (including VAT @ 20%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 6% (including VAT @ 20%) of the hammer price.

Lot 2743

Two modern cased sets of 'The Art of Erté' playing cards by Sobranie.Buyer’s Premium 29.4% (including VAT @ 20%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 6% (including VAT @ 20%) of the hammer price.

Lot 2120

A modern Art Nouveau style cold painted cast metal wall mirror by Veronese, depicting a maiden with flowers, 50cm x 49cm.Buyer’s Premium 29.4% (including VAT @ 20%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 6% (including VAT @ 20%) of the hammer price.

Lot 443

A group of various costume jewellery, diamante set necklaces, a modern art brooch, possibly silver, various dress rings, etc. (1 box)

Lot 188

An Art Nouveau style modern silver and amber pendant and matching drop earrings. Pendant approx. 5cm long including bale. 925 mark to pendant.

Lot 228

A collection of vintage and modern diamante and stone set costume jewellery to include collar style necklace, bracelets, classic style necklaces, earrings and an Art Deco style brooch.

Lot 61

3 modern design pendants on silver chains. An art glass pendant on a 16 inch silver rope chain, a single faux pearl on an 18 inch fine belcher chain and a wooden pendant with bird decoupage decoration on an 18 inch silver box chain.

Lot 913

•AN INTERESTING FOLIO OF MODERN ART POSTERS for exhibitions by Richard Diebenkorn, Noel Forster (3 of the same one), Lucian Freud, Max Gill (?), Gunther Haese, David Hockney, R. B. Kitaj, Henri Matisse, Ian McKeever, Victor Pasmore, Pablo Picasso, Mark Rothko, Andy Warhol, and others, 1970-1982, various sizes (23) ++ Good condition throughout; minimal handling creases; the majority very fresh

Lot 900

•IAN HAMILTON FINLAY, CBE (1925-2006) and JIM NICHOLSON (1924-1996) HOMAGE TO MODERN ART Screenprint, 1972, signed by Finlay verso and numbered 51/70 73.5 x 51cm. ++ Good condition

Lot 906

•CHRISTO (1935-2020) ALLIED CHEMICAL TOWER PACKED (PROJECT FOR 1 TIMES SQUARE); WRAPPED BUILDING (PROJECT FOR 1 TIMES SQUARE); THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART - WRAPPED (PROJECT FOR THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART - NEW YORK, JUNE 1968) Four, offset lithographs, one with an applied photograph, each with blindstamp, each signed and numbered 5/100 Each 70.5 x 55cm. (4)

Lot 30

* Circle of George Romney (1734-1802). A group of oppressed male and female figures, brown ink and red chalk on pale buff textured laid paper, inscribed in brown ink to lower right corner with the date July 1781, two additional sketches in brown ink to verso, of a cardinal or bishop, and a young mother cradling an infant, sheet size 48 x 32 cm (19 x 12 1/2 ins), hinge-mounted in modern cream card window-mount, with 20th century pencil inscription to lower corner 'George Romney', together with another pen, brown ink and brown and pale blue wash study on paper of a family group in supplication, edges unevenly trimmed and several closed tears to margins, laid down on old pale brown textured backing paper, inscribed in pencil to verso with the date 1785, sheet size approximately 36 x 25cm (141/4 x 9 3/4ins), hinge-mounted in 20th century cream card window mount, with 20th century inscription in pencil to lower corner 'George Romney'Qty: (2)NOTESProvenance: Cyril & Shirley Fry. Sold as lot 11, in Chiswick Auctions, Cyril & Shirley Fry: A Life in Art, 9 July 2021.

Lot 1563

A Continental Art Deco gilt blue glass box and cover, decorated with leaves, height 11cm, together with an Art Deco hallmarked silver mounted cut glass scent bottle and stopper and two modern scent bottles and stoppers, (4).Additional InformationThe blue glass box and cover with some rubbing to the gilding and two chips to the glass at the base, the hallmarks to the silver collar are rubbed and with some small nicks to the glass of the Art Deco clear glass example here and there.

Lot 2262

Six assorted modern table lamps including a Victorian style bronzed example representing a cherub supporting the branch, with pseudo diamond registration mark to the base, a pair of Art Nouveau style metal examples with Tiffany style glass shades of square form, height 50cm, a carved wooden example, etc.

Lot 84

Art Nouveau style silver finish mirror with flowers and figure (modern).(B.P. 21% + VAT)

Lot 408

Three boxes of assorted china to include: an oval Portmeirion 'Birds of Britain' meat dish, wood duck design (seconds), a modern Japanese set of china decorated with peacocks comprising: lidded ginger jar, pedestal bowl and three lidded trinket boxes, brass pitcher, Royal Vale plate decorated with gilded flowers, pair of wall vases, large art pottery vase, teacups and saucers, coffee mugs, Victorian red and white ribbed jug and bowl etc. (B.P. 21% + VAT)

Lot 10

Berthold Lubetkin and Margaret LubetkinUnique sofa, designed for the Penthouse flat, Highpoint Two, Highgate, London, 1936-1938Norwegian yew, sandblasted pine, Cowhide, leather, chromium-plated metal. 77 x 196 x 80 cmFootnotes:ProvenanceBerthold Lubetkin, Penthouse flat, Highpoint Two, Highgate, LondonThence by descentBonhams, London, New Bond Street, 'Important Design', 21 November 2018, lot 169Acquired from the above by the present ownerLiteratureLionel Brett, The Things We See Houses - No. 2, Houses, Middlesex, 1947, p. 49 for the armchairs and daybed'Tall Order', The Architects' Journal, June 1985, illustrated p. 55John Allan, Berthold Lubetkin: Architecture and the tradition of progress, London, 2016, illustrated pp. 303, 305, 307, 562The Victoria and Albert Museum, London, Collections, https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O1458096/-armchair-berthold-lubetkin, (accessed September 2021) for the armchairHighpoint by Nick Wright'There are only four kinds of artistic activity: fine art, music, poetry and ornamental pastry cooking, of which architecture is a minor branch.' So began Berthold Lubetkin's speech to the Art Worker's Guild in 1932. Over a fifty-year career he baked many fine pastries.His origins are opaque. A passport showing his birthplace as Warsaw in 1903 was false. He was born in Georgia, a colonial outpost of Tsarist Russia, in 1901. During the Russian revolution he enrolled as a student at the Stroganov School of Applied Art. He studied carpet design in Berlin, architecture in Warsaw, concrete construction in Paris under August Perret, though achieved few if any formal qualifications. Nonetheless, he worked on the Soviet Pavilion in the Paris Exposition of 1925 and, in partnership, with Jean Ginsburg whose bona fide degree facilitated planning permission, had built an apartment block on Rue de Versailles by the age of 30.Arriving in Britain with two passports, no family or verifiable CV, he was free to become the architect of his own identity. His nationality was International, his faith communism, the denomination Modernism. The penguin pool he designed for Regent Park Zoo became instantly emblematic of the movement. More commissions came; suburban houses in Plumstead, a beach house in Aldwyck, a bungalow cut into the chalk hills of Whipsnade. Then, following the Tottenham factory designed for Gestetner Ltd, he designed Highpoint. 'Nothing,' he said, 'is too good for the ordinary person' and Highpoint is the physical embodiment of that ideal. New materials, concrete, glass, and steel were presumed impervious to the elements, the elemental design to fashion. Although undeniably 'an achievement of the first rank' to quote Le Corbusier, Highpoint now appears very much of its time. Rather than housing the workers of an office equipment manufacturer the apartments were sold to private individuals whilst the white-washed concrete appears an homage to white liner modernism, new in Britain but rehearsed the decade prior on the Mediterranean coast and already rust streaked.It is the adjacent Highpoint II which appears the more prescient, bridging as it does the stark modernity of its elder sibling on one side with Georgian Highgate on the other. Indeed, it's startling to realise that what one takes to be a low linear building shares a roofline with its high-rise neighbour and this dual aspect continues throughout. The choice of Staffordshire blue brick nods to the Victorian engineers such as Brunel whom Lubetkin admired. The glass bricks of the stair wells were contemporary. Then there are the caryatids. Classical figures cast at the British Museum support the modernist portico, these draped ladies passed water though pipes cast within but remain a source of debate. Are they 'pastry decoration'? Are they a recreation of the figures on a childhood home? Or are they the earliest post-modern joke, an acknowledgement that a function of architecture is to entertain? In 1951 Lubetkin wrote 'for too long modern architectural solutions were regarded in terms of abstract principles, with formal expression left to itself as a functional resultant. The principles of composition, the emotional impact of the visual, were brushed aside as irrelevant. Yet this is the very material with which the architect operates.' Alessandro Mendini said much the same fifty years after Highpoint's construction.Preeminent among the residents of Highpoint II was Lubetkin himself who had designed the penthouse for his family and the apartment displays the same meld of old and new. A vaulted ceiling recalls the breakfast room at John Soane's Pitzhanger, suspended from it was a mobile made and installed by Alexander Calder. Expansive glass affords views of London, in the free space below was a suite of furniture designed in the vernacular style of Lubetkin's native Georgia.John Allen writes of Lubetkin: 'No longer content merely to revere the grand tradition of architects who design their own furniture – Aalto, Le Corbusier, Mies, Rietveld – he now steps up to join it. The low chairs and sofa were unique pieces of soft sculpture made personally by Lubetkin and his wife Margaret from hand chosen lengths of Norwegian yew and cow hide from Argentina.' Such a quest seems indulgent but careful selection of the timber is necessary to the design. The rear posts all require the same curvature, even the knots are regularly spaced to create symmetrical aprons and, as with the building for which they were designed, the traditional and avant-guard coexist; fitted into the rustic frames are airfoil sections adjusted via engine-turned bosses.These pieces of furniture are of real architectural significance - evidenced by the Victoria and Albert Museum's acquisition of the third chair. They were designed by the architect responsible for much of Britain's post-war social housing and the Finsbury Health Centre, effectively the first hospital for the NHS. They drew on his early life in Georgia yet sit well in his home on top of Britain's preeminent modernist building. Indeed, so attached was Lubetkin to the furniture that on leaving Highpoint in 1955 the suite went with him. Images of the farm cottage to which he relocated show sofa and chair wedged beside the hearth. Then when he retired to a terraced Georgian house in Bristol the pieces again accompanied him. Throughout a transient life it was as though this suite represented home more than any building. Perhaps home had always been Georgia.Bonhams wishes to thank Nick Wright, co-author, Cut and Shut: The History of Creative Salvage, London, 2012.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: TPTP Lot will be moved to an offsite storage location (Cadogan Tate, Auction House Services, 241 Acton Lane, London NW10 7NP, UK) and will only be available for collection from this location at the date stated in the catalogue. Please note transfer and storage charges will apply to any lots not collected after 14 calendar days from the auction date.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 30

Yki Nummi'Modern Art' table lamp, model no. 44-405, designed 1955, produced 1960-1980Acrylic.40 cm high, 28.5 cm diameterManufactured by Stockmann Orno, Kerava, Finland.Footnotes:ProvenancePrivate collection, FinlandAcquired from the above by the present ownerLiteratureFinsk Konst Industri, Helsinki, 1962, p. 40'Valaisimia lampor 64', Stockmann Orno, Kereva, 1964, p. 94Stockmann-Orno, Kerava, 1966, n.p.Marianne Aav and Kaj Kalin, Form Finland, exh. cat, Museum of Applied Arts, Helsinki, 1986, fig. 47Marianne Aav and Nina Stritzler-Levine, eds., Finnish Modern Design: Utopian Ideals and Everyday Realities: 1930-1997, exh. cat., The Bard Graduate Center for Studies in the Decorative Arts, New Haven, 1998, p. 313Charlotte and Peter Fiell, eds., 1000 Lights, Vol. 1: 1879 to 1959, Cologne, 2005, p. 511Charlotte and Peter Fiell, scandinavian design, Cologne, 2002, p. 471Charlotte & Peter Fiell, Plastic Dreams: Synthetic Visions in Design, London, 2009, p. 84Pekka Korvenmaa, Finnish Design: A Concise History, Helsinki, 2010, p. 265This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ΩΩ VAT on imported items at the prevailing rate on Hammer Price and Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 20

Benedict Chukwukadibia Enwonwu M.B.E (Nigerian, 1917-1994)The Blue Headscarf signed and dated 'BEN ENWONWU/ 1953' (lower left)oil on board 30.5 x 24.5cm (12 x 9 5/8in).Footnotes:ProvenanceMichael Stevenson, Cape Town;A private collection.Girl with a Blue Headscarf is a clear reference by Enwonwu to the c.1665 portrait, Girl With The Pearl Earring, by Dutch Golden Age painter, Johannes Vermeer. The posture of the sitter, the direction of the eyes, the clothing and even the earring, are all direct references to the 17th century Vermeer painting. This was by no means meant as a copy but rather as an interpretation. There are several other examples of this throughout Enwonwu's career from his 1946 self-portrait, which references Vincent Van Gogh, to his Negritude paintings of the 1970's and 1980's, which echo the paintings of Harlem Renaissance artist, Aaron Douglas.Enwonwu had a vast knowledge of African, European and American art history. As early as his time spent under the tutelage of Kenneth C. Murray at Umuahia Government College, Enwonwu was reading books on art history. In letters from this period, Enwonwu is seen to reference Van Gogh, Jacob Epstein, Augustus John, Cyrus Leroy Baldridge and William Blake. Enwonwu however, was still of the opinion that his art must be African. In a letter from November 1942, Enwonwu wrote:'Modern Nigerian art must grow from the old art because it was a most sincere form of art. Art in Nigeria today cannot expect to survive if it tends to grow out of European art. Reproductions of William Blake bid one to appreciate the way he composes and the idea behind his paintings, yet he is realistic. Van Gogh an Impressionist yet his art is not primitive and void of proportion, nor even perspective. William Turner's are transformations of the beauty of Mother Nature but Turner was realistic.'Enwonwu understood the importance of European art history but by no means imitated it. For example Girl with a Blue Headscarf was Enwonwu's own interpretations of celebrated European masterpieces, painted in his style and of African themes. As Enwonwu wrote in August 1943:'I am keeping my art African – even if I stay in England for 60 years, I will still figure in my works, a plain blunt African. I believe very strongly in being myself and to be original and African.'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

Lot 1039

Postcards, a good mixed subject and UK topographical collection of 99 cards in modern album, incl. RPs of Cardiff Rd Caerphilly, Cross St Abergavenny, Canon St Aberdare, Tal-y-Llyn station Towyn, Station Rd Narbeth, Charles St Milford Haven, Railway at Ashley Down Bristol etc. Subjects incl. Harry Payne illustrated Tuck published 'British Army' No 113, greetings (dice), Barham (4), nudes (art (2)), b/w Fantasy heads (skull (2), Napoleon, Un Faune), black humour (2), Santa HTL (small crease), chickens etc (mixed condition, fair/gd)

Lot 1241

Postcards, a modern photo album containing approx 140 mixed cards, mostly printed inc. UK topographical, glamour, classic art, dogs etc (mixed condition, fair/gd)

Lot 364

λ Paul Morrison (British b. 1966)Black DahliasThe complete portfolio of twelve screenprints, 2004Each sheet initialled in pencil verso, numbered 24/45 to the justification, published by Paragon Press, London, in original black presentation boxOverall: 73 x 97cm (28½ x 38 in.)Morrison is a contemporary British painter best known for his methodical black and white floral paintings and prints. His works are produced through a process of scanning and projecting historical and vernacular prints and illustrations depicting flowers and gardens. "I'm interested in cognitive landscape, the terrain that one sees, somewhere behind the eyes," he has said of his work. Born in Liverpool in 1966, Morrison received his MFA from Goldsmiths College of Art in 1998. He was awarded the 2002 Jerwood Painting Prize and has exhibited at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles and Cheim & Reid in New York. The artist lives and works between London and Sheffield, United Kingdom. Morrison's works are held in the collections of the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, The Museum of Modern Art in New York, and the Städel Museum in Frankfurt. 

Lot 378

John Swannell (British b. 1946)HM Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee, 2012Chromogenic print, flush-mounted on formcore boardSigned in pen and dated 2012 (to lower margin) Sheet: 136 x 94cm (53½ x 37 in.)Inc. frame:151 x 109cm (59 1/2 x 43in.)Provenance:Sale, Dreweatts, Aynhoe Park: The Celebration of A Modern Grand Tour, 20-21 January 2021, lot 563John Swannell is one of the most important names in British photography. Over the last four decades he has created iconic images of fashion models, celebrities, actors, musicians, politicians and royalty. After beginning his career at Vogue Studios, Swannell went on to work as an assistant to David Bailey for four years before setting up on his own. Over the next ten years his work appeared regularly in publications such as Vogue, Tatler, Harpers & Queen and The Sunday Times. His distinctive style coupled with unrelenting hard work garnered him international recognition and further success followed in the form of a one-man show at the Royal Academy in Edinburgh in 1989 and, in 1990, with an exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery in Edinburgh and a retrospective of his fashion work at the Royal Photographic Society. In 1993, he was awarded the Fellowship of the Royal Photographic Society, at the time, one of the youngest members to have received this accolade.Swannell has since gone on to have numerous further exhibitions as well as publishing a number of books. His work is held in the permanent collections of some of the most important galleries in the work including The National Portrait Gallery, London, The National Portrait Gallery, Edinburgh and The Museum of Modern Art, New York.  Condition Report: It is unexamined out of its frame. There are some very minor creases at the edges of the board, but generally it appears to be in excellent original condition. There are some minor abrasions to the frame. Condition Report Disclaimer

Lot 184

λ Lynn Chadwick (British 1914-2003) Walking Cloaked Figures VIIIBronze with a black patina and polished bronzeEach stamped with the Lypiatt Foundry mark and numbered 795S and 1/9 (inside the cloaks)Height: 28cm (11 in.)Conceived in 1980 and cast in a numbered edition of 9.Provenance:Private Collection, London (acquired in 1983)Thence by descent to the present ownersLiterature:Lynn Chadwick (exhibition catalogue), Fondation Veranneman, Kruishputen, Belgium, 1980, illustration of another cast n.p. Dennis Farr & Eva Chadwick: Lynn Chadwick Sculptor, With a Complete Illustrated Catalogue 1947-2003, Farnham, 2014, p. 343, no. 795 (illustration of another cast)For additional videos or images of the pieces included in this lot please contact the department on pictures@dreweatts.com Together with his contemporaries Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth, Jacob Epstein and Eduardo Paolozzi, Chadwick is inextricably associated with the British Modernist Sculpture movement of the mid-20th century. Initially specialising in architectural design both before and after the Second World War, by 1946, Chadwick had started to move away from the intangible world of design instead finding himself increasingly drawn to the tangible nature of objects. A year later, in 1947, Chadwick made his first mobile. Encouraged by his employer at the time, Rodney Thomas, these wire, metal, copper, and brass shapes were first used to decorate the exhibition stands of Thomas' company and then later turned into 'stabiles' by adding ground supports. Around 60 mobiles were created between 1947 and 1952.Although very few of these mobiles survive today, this was clearly the very beginning of what would eventually evolve into Chadwick's signature bronze and steel abstract figures that we know so well today. In 1951, Chadwick was commissioned by the Arts Council of Britain to produce a large-scale sculpture for the Festival of Britain, The Fisheater, which went on to be exhibited at the Tate Gallery until 1952. It was also at this time that Chadwick was asked to present to the selection committee of the XXVI Venice Biennale who selected him together with seven other emerging British artists including Kenneth Armitage, Robert Adams, and Eduardo Paolozzi to exhibit in Venice that year. It was after this exhibition that Chadwick really established his reputation as a member of the New British Sculptors. In 1956, Chadwick returned to the Venice Biennale, this time winning the International Sculpture Prize - the youngest artist ever to do so. During this period Chadwick became increasingly interested in form with his designs becoming more identifiable as figures; their thin and tapering legs and geometric heads, in Chadwick's words 'adding flesh to the skeletons'. By the 1960s, Chadwick was experimenting with bronze casting and by the 1970s, he had established a visible vocabulary of sexual differentiation - triangle or diamond heads for female and square or rectangular heads for male. In addition, the technique of adding polished facets to his figures both added texture and accentuated specific parts of anatomy. This is clearly demonstrated in Walking Cloaked Figures VIII which also combines the artist's timeless architectonic forms with elements of the human, animal and mechanical. The use of clothing, specifically flaring cloaks helps to add a sense of movement to the work. There is no real narrative to Chadwick's works, but it is perhaps the stoic silence and anonymous strength which makes his works so intriguing and timeless.Chadwick remained active until only a few years before his death in 2003, aged 88. Throughout his career and beyond Chadwick remains a recognised household name. In 1964, he was awarded a CBE, and later in 1984 made Officer de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres in France. In 2001 he was appointed Senior Academician at the Royal Academy of Arts, London. His work is held in major collections and galleries around the world including the Tate Gallery, London, and Museum of Modern Art, New York.Condition Report: In overall good original condition. Some surface dirt, notably to crevasses. May benefit from a light clean. Condition Report Disclaimer

Lot 171

λ Emmy Bridgwater (British 1906-1999)Surrealist Figure and Cat Pen and InkSigned (lower centre left)18 x 24.5cm (7 x 9½ in.)Executed circa 1941.Provenance:Blond Gallery, London (June 1989)Emmy Bridgwater was the last surviving female member of the original generation of British Surrealist painters. She occupied a distinctive place in the history of Surrealism in Britain as an "Automatist", using a technique deployed by Surrealists for liberating the imagination and for stimulating the subconscious. She produced a small but highly original output of paintings, drawings, collages and poetry.Bridgwater was introduced to the London Group in early 1940 by the painter Conroy Maddox and the critic Robert Melville, members of the group who were also living in Birmingham. From that moment on she was committed to the "liberation of the imagination", as theorised by André Breton in his Manifesto of Surrealism, published in Paris in 1924.In 1942 she held a one-woman exhibition at Jack Bilbo's Modern Art Gallery in London. From 1986, the 60th anniversary year of the International Surrealist Exhibition, hardly a year elapsed without her participating in retrospective or group Surrealist exhibitions: The Mayor Gallery, London (1986), Canterbury (1986), Leeds City Art Gallery (1986), Retretti, Finland, Milan and Frankfurt (1989). Among many others was a touring exhibition during 1992 called "10 Decades: careers of 10 women artists born 1897-1906" and "Real Surreal", in Wolverhampton (1995). Condition Report: Under glass, unexamined out of glazed frame. Hinged to the mount along each edge. Slight undulation to the sheet. A short flattened crease to the upper corners of the sheet. Slight discolouration throughout the sheet. Some minor spots and blemishes scattered throughout. Otherwise in generally good original condition. Condition Report Disclaimer

Lot 131

A modern art Perspex 'Cloud' by N Senst, RA,

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