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A mixed lot of good miscellaneous items to include a pair of sailors type shell frames with scallop shell clasps and other various shells together with a set of four Blackamoor type figural candlesticks with polychrome painted highlights, two Victorian bead work crests and a collection of old family crests for Keble, Clayesmore, Wadham, British Legion, a collection of carved treenware to include various Black Forest type figures etc (a collection)
SIX BOXES AND LOOSE SUNDRY ITEMS, to include a pair painted horses hames, horse tack, large painted jug (barge), shepherds portable slate desk, anniversary clock, metalwares, Easter novelty chick and egg items, Peggy Nisbet collectors costume dolls, Henry VIII and his six wives, various shells, candles etc
Original vintage WWII US propaganda poster published by the U.S. Government Printing Office for the home front: Save waste fats for explosives - Take them to your meat dealer. Save Waste Fats for Explosives by Henry Koerner, 1943, for the Office of War Information Artist: H. Koerner Period: Second World War A hand coming from the upper right corner pours fat from a frying pan into an explosion at the centre of the poster. From the explosion thirteen assorted shells speed outwards, towards the viewer. On the home front during World War II, posters urged women to conserve precious resources for the war effort, whether that was by breeding rabbits for their meat or collecting cooking fats for conversion to glycerin, an ingredient in explosives. An article in The Nevada Daily Mail from October 30, 1942, explained "Every drop of waste kitchen fat is needed to make the high explosives necessary to blast Hitler & Co. off the map. And glycerine makes explosives for the U.S. and our allies. So, save all your waste fats after you've got the good from them." Henry Koerner (born Heinrich Sieghart Körner; August 28, 1915 – July 4, 1991) was an Austrian-born American painter and graphic designer best known for his early Magical Realist works of the late 1940s and his portrait covers for Time magazine. Born in the Leopoldstadt District of Vienna to non-observant Jewish parents Leo Körner (1879–1942) and Feige ("Fanny") Dwora Körner née Mager (1887–1942), Koerner attended the Realgymnasium Vereinsgasse. Trained in graphic design at Vienna's Graphische Lehr- und Versuchsanstalt (1934–36), he worked in the studio of Viktor Theodor Slama, designing posters and book jackets. Following Hitler's annexation of Austria in 1938, he fled via Italy (Milan and Venice) to the United States, settling in New York and in 1940 marrying Viennese-born Fritzi Apfel. Employed as a commercial artist in Maxwell Bauer Studios in Manhattan, he achieved initial success as a poster artist, receiving first prize from the American Society of the Control of Cancer Poster Competition and two first prizes from the National War Poster Competition. In 1943, the Office of War Information hired Koerner in its Graphics Division in New York, where he worked alongside artists Ben Shahn, Bernard Perlin, and David Stone Martin. Shahn's pictorial style, along with the photography of Walker Evans and German Neue Sachlichkeit painters (e.g., Otto Dix), inspired Koerner's painting, which began with a rendering of his family home in Vienna (My Parents I, 1944). That first painting is the subject of the film "The Burning Child". Drafted into the U.S. Army, he was ordered in 1944 to the Graphics Division of the Office of Strategic Services in Washington, D.C. where he made war posters, including Save Waste Fats and Someone Talked, the latter winning an award from the Museum of Modern Art. Shipped to London, he documented, in pen and ink sketches and photographs, everyday life during wartime. After VE Day (8 May 1945), Koerner was reassigned to Germany, working in Wiesbaden and Berlin, and sketching defendants at the Nuremberg trials. Good condition, folded as issued, restored folds, backed on board. Country: USA, year of printing: 1943, designer: H. Koerner, size (cm): 57.5x41
A Chinoiserie three piece bergere suit to include a three seater settee and two arm chairs, the frames with chinoiserie decoration of pagodas, flowers, shells and claw on ball (3)Condition report: Canework on one chair with area of damage (see pics) Paint knocked and scruffed Settee with area of damage on back panel
A FINE QUALITY JAPANESE MEIJI PERIOD CARVED IVORY & SHIBAYAMA MINIATURE TABLE SCREEN, the screen made of a carved base section with a slotted panel, the base inlaid with carved semi precious stones & shells to depict scenes of flora, insects and butterflies, the panel inlaid using the same materials to depict a cockerel and quail grazing amongst native flora and insects, the verso inlaid to depict a grasshopper aside a spray of flora, 18.5cm high x 21cm wide.
Jim Dine (b.1935)Lost Shells (D'Oench & Feinberg 186)Diptych etching with drypoint and hand-colouring in colours, 1985, signed and numbered from the edition of 32 in pencil, on two sheets of BFK Rives wove paper, printed by Atelier Crommelynck, Paris, published by Pace, New York, each the full sheet, each sheet 762 x 540mm (30 x 21 1/4in) (framed)
A Plymouth [William Cookworthy] white glazed shell and dolphin centrepiece: in the form of three large shells supporting a central shell, applied with seaweed and smaller shells, the triform base with overlapping shells and dolphin heads, circa 1768-70, 16.5 cm high [repair to two shells, minor losses].
Late 19th century Sorrento ware Olive wood hand mirror, fretwork handle and border L43cm, miniature tin-plate roulette wheel, Victorian mahogany box containing a collection of card display board letters & numbers, cribbage board, boxwood draughts set, qty of cowrie shells, seven one pound banknotes, other banknotes, halfpennies, some pre 1947 coinage etc Condition Report Click here for further images, condition, auction times & delivery costs
A George III religiopolitical commemorative painted and parcel-gilt lead canted rectangular tobacco box, commemorating the Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829, domed cover with cross finial, enclosing a tamper, the sides applied with figures, shells, oak leaves, lion masks and putti supporting the Papal tiara, bold lion paw feet, 16cm wide, c.1815
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24981 item(s)/page