We found 9824 price guide item(s) matching your search
There are 9824 lots that match your search criteria. Subscribe now to get instant access to the full price guide service.
Click here to subscribe- List
- Grid
-
9824 item(s)/page
Three watercolours: Hereford Cathedral from the River Wye, signed H. Jones bottom right, (16cm x 21.5cm) seascape of a fisherman's cottage with skiffs and a windmill, monogrammed R.O. 23.4.13 bottom right, (15 x 22cm), scene of a cow herd and windmill signed Albt Bowers bottom right, (14 x 34cm), plus two prints, the first of Nuneham looking towards Oxford by J. Farrington, 1795. (23 x 33cm) together with another print of fisherman crossing a bridge
A Royal Worcester porcelain circular plaque hand painted with seascape with ships, signed R Rushton lower right (Raymond Rushton), marked and titled in puce to the back "Off Hastings", date code for 1915, diameter 10.5cm, framed and glazed. CONDITION REPORT: Extensive crazing throughout the top of the plaque.
**Henry Scott (British, 1911 - 2005, Fellow of the Royal Society of British Artists) "Crossing the Line", a dramatic oil on canvas seascape depicting a fast moving tea clipper in full sail, signed to the lower right; original, quality frame with the MacConnal-Mason and Son, 14 Duke Street gallery label to verso and hand written annotations: "Tea clipper 'Spindrift' built 1867, wrecked on Dungeness in 1870" 29cm x 44cm. (The Spindrift was built by Charles Connell & Co of Scotstoun for James Findlay & Co of Greenock. Sailing with up to thirty-six sails, she was one of the fastest tea clippers of her day carrying cargoes to London from Shanghai and Foochow. Nicknamed "Giblet Pie" because she was "all wings and legs", she was also one of the finest looking tea clippers. Her career however was short lived - in 1869 she foundered off Dungeness and was subsequently abandoned as a complete wreck. A 1:48 scale model is held in the Glasgow Museum of Transport.)
**Henry Scott (British, 1911 - 2005, Fellow of the Royal Society of British Artists) "The Night Watch", an atmospheric oil on canvas seascape depicting an iron clipper in full sail, signed to the lower right; original, quality frame with the MacConnal-Mason and Son, 14 Duke Street gallery label to verso and hand written annotations: "Iron clipper 'Wellington' 1,247 tons built 1874 by Robert Duncan, Clyde shipbuilder" 29cm x 44cm. (The Wellington's dramatic thirty-two year career, mostly spent between the United Kingdom and New Zealand, is recounted in Basil Lubock's book, The Colonial Clippers)

-
9824 item(s)/page