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Lot 50

Silver three piece tea service

Lot 69

Bisto Pembroke child`s part dinner service, two child`s part tea sets and other miniature pottery

Lot 70

A Victorian English porcelain gilt and blue border tea service with floral decoration and pattern number 8766 (on two trays)

Lot 164

A standard china tea service and a Spode tea set (on two trays)

Lot 179

A Copeland Spode green ground tea service, an Aynsley rose decorated tea service, Dresden floral painted tea service, Felspar porcelain part dessert service and a Masons tureen cover

Lot 2263

A Piquot ware tea service of teapot, hot water pot, milk jug and sugar bowl

Lot 2264

A Piquot ware tea service of teapot, hot water pot, milk jug, sugar bowl and tray

Lot 362

A Royal Crown Derby part six sitting tea service decorated with floral sprays on a mottled red ground CONDITION REPORT: one cup badly damaged

Lot 425

A modern silver four piece silver tea service of melon shaped form, Mappin & Webb, Birmingham 1970/71, 97 ozs CONDITION REPORT: ivory finials and insulators removed PLEASE NOTE HANDLES NOW DETACHED AFTER REMOVING INSULATORS

Lot 429

A silver four piece tea service of plain vase shaped form, Edward Barnard & Sons Ltd., London 1938/39, 30 ozs CONDITION REPORT: some minor tarnishing and surface scratches

Lot 520

A silver three piece tea service of plain boat shaped form, William Hutton & Sons Ltd., Sheffield 1914/15, 35 ozs CONDITION REPORT: good

Lot 524

A William IV silver three piece tea service of bombe form, the teapot with flower head finial and conforming decoration, each item with leaf capped c-scroll handles, Edward, Edward junior, John & William Barnard, London 1834, 47 ozs CONDITION REPORT: good

Lot 528

A silver three piece tea service of vase shaped form, William Greenwood & Sons, Birmingham 1933/34, 22 ozs CONDITION REPORT: good

Lot 572

A silver three piece tea service of vase shaped form, maker CS&H, London 1924, 30 ozs CONDITION REPORT: some minor wear

Lot 329

A Newhall part tea service, circa 1800 pattern, comprising sandwich plate, cream jug, sugar basin with lid, slop bowl and six trios of cups and saucers

Lot 6

A Paragon Porcelain Tea Service, with a foliate decoration upon a green and cream ground

Lot 11

A Copeland Spode Italian Pattern Underglaze Blue Decorated Tea Service, comprising cups and saucers, a teapot, coffee pot, small plates and other items

Lot 18

A Grafton China Tea Service, together with a collection of other tea and coffee ware

Lot 25

A Royal Vale Tea Service, together with a collection of other tea ware

Lot 37

A 19th Century Porcelain Tea Service, comprising cups, saucers, plates and dishes

Lot 58

A Noritake Extensive Porcelain Dinner and Tea Service

Lot 97

Royal Doulton Forest Glade part dinner service to include tureens, tea and coffee pot (59)

Lot 335

A Victorian three-piece plated tea service, of shaped oval outline and an egg cruet.

Lot 417

A three-piece silver tea service of plain form with gadrooned rim, London 1926, gross___30oz.

Lot 434

A silver three-piece tea service of plain form, Sheffield 1937, gross___33oz.

Lot 486

An Edwardian three-piece bachelors tea service of oval bellied form with foliate embossed decoration, on short legs with trefoil legs, Birmingham, 1903 ___19oz.

Lot 193

Approximately 66 pieces of Spode Persia design ware including dinner, coffee and tea service. Please note: Condition of items or other faults for this sale is not stated within the catalogue and items are sold strictly as seen (please read terms and conditions below) If you are interested in an item and no condition report is present please email auctions@peterwilson.co.uk for more information. Due to volume of inquires we receive we are not able to answer requests on group lots or items with an estimate of less than £50.

Lot 231

Mid 19th century tea service. Please note: Condition of items or other faults for this sale is not stated within the catalogue and items are sold strictly as seen (please read terms and conditions below) If you are interested in an item and no condition report is present please email auctions@peterwilson.co.uk for more information. Due to volume of inquires we receive we are not able to answer requests on group lots or items with an estimate of less than £50.

Lot 3

A Shelley Ireland pattern tea service, 43 pieces, twelve cups, twelve saucers, twelve plates, two basins, two cream jugs, two sandwich plates and large grandfather cup and saucer.

Lot 60

A 19th century Worcester porcelain tea and coffee service, comprising ten coffee cups, twelve saucers, lidded dish, two sandwich plates, eleven tea cups, eleven saucers, twelve plates, sugar basin and cream jug, each piece handpainted with floral sprays (see illustration).

Lot 109

A George Jones & Son Crescent Ware part tea service, decorated with swags and holly heightened with gilding.

Lot 115

A Tuscan China tea service, Plant pattern, cream and gilt, 39 pieces.

Lot 343

A three piece silver tea service, Birmingham 1933, half lobed, 1259 grams gross (see illustration).

Lot 366

A four piece silver tea service, Mappin & Webb, 1973, 1648 grams gross (see illustration).

Lot 367

A four piece silver tea service, Sheffield 1909, 1530 grams gross (see illustration).

Lot 376

A Victorian silver three piece tea service, by John Russell of Glasgow, decorated in the Indian style with signs of The Zodiac, hallmarked 1873, 1226 grams (see illustration).

Lot 414

A George VI silver tea service, Birmingham 1937, 979 grams gross (see illustration).

Lot 427

An Edwardian silver tea service, three piece, half lobed, London 1903, 610 grams (see illustration).

Lot 430

A small silver three piece plated tea service, with ebonised handle, together with a large three piece silver plated tea service, stamped “EPBM, James Dixon & Sons, Sheffield” and a Britannia Metal teapot in the George III style by James Dixon & Sons, Sheffield.

Lot 103

A large early 20th Century German silver cutlery/flatware service (marked F J Schroder, this mark now over the original mark), marked 800, and with other factory marks, each piece double struck (engraved with initial, possibly E) with scrolling foliate designs and comprising six large Dinner Knives and Forks, six smaller Knives and Forks, six Fish Knives and five matching Forks, six Dessert Knives and Forks, six Serving Spoons, six smaller Table Spoons, a Cake Slice, a Basting Spoon, Butter Knife and small Ladle with gilded bowl, a Stilton Slice, a Dessert Spoon with elongated gilded bowl, six Tea Spoons, six smaller Coffee Spoons with gilded bowls and six Grapefruit Spoons, each with shaped and engraved gilded bowl (varied selection), total approx. weight (including steel knife blades and steel fork heads etc.) 3,560g

Lot 104

A German silver Flatware/Cutlery Service (some pieces marked H.J. Wilm, Berlin) with crescent moon and crown mark (Halbmond Und Krone), .800 grade, and comprising Fish Slice and Fork, eight Fish Eater Forks and eight matching Fish Knives, a Serving Spoon and Meat Fork, two further smaller Pickle Forks, eight large Table Knives and eight matching Forks, eight smaller Knives and Forks, nine Dessert Knives and Forks, eight Table Spoons and seven smaller Tea Spoons (selection), total gross weight approx. 4,643g

Lot 84

Seán Keating PRHA (1889-1977) 'Pipes and Porter' Oil on canvas, 101.5 x 127cm (40 x 50") Signed Provenance: A Dublin Collection Exhibited: RHA, Annual Exhibition 1915 Cat. No. 78 Having won the coveted RDS Taylor Award for painting in 1914, Seán Keating moved to London to work as a studio assistant to William Orpen. The First World War had begun, and as conscription beckoned, Keating decided to return to Ireland in late 1915 or early 1916. Orpen, already a well-renowned portrait painter, remained in London and accepted an appointment to the Army Service Corps. He was sent to France under the war artists' scheme in 1917, where, initially as a Second Lieutenant and later a Major, he produced some of the most extraordinary and thought provoking images of his entire career (1). Meanwhile, Keating returned to Dublin, joined the Gaelic League (Conradh na Gaeilge), and began to make a series of paintings that placed the west of Ireland in general, and the Aran Islands in particular, at the centre of his personal sense of national and political identity. He sought to make his nationalist allegiance clear in his work, but arrest for sedition was commonplace, and as a result, his use of symbolism or allegory can be understood in the context of the socio-political conditions at that time. The best known of those images is Men of the West, a painting that Keating began in 1915, but completed and exhibited in 1917, the year after the Easter Rising had taken place(2). An allegorical work, it features a self-portrait of the artist holding the Irish tri-colour flag, and a double portrait of his brother, Joe Hannan Keating, who was then a member of the IRB and the Irish Volunteers, and both are dressed in traditional Aran Island clothing. But there was an image that prefigured Men of the West. It was shown in the RHA in 1915 and it was titled Pipes and Porter(3). An extraordinary painting, Pipes and Porter features a self-portrait of the artist with his ubiquitous beard, together with a portrait of his aforementioned brother, Joe, an unnamed young boy, and an unidentified piper(4). A castle tower dominates the background, while the lower landscape is dotted with several white-washed and thatched cottages, and the sun is setting in the western sky. Keating, his brother, and the young boy regard their audience with confidence. But the piper's gaze suggests that he is lost in concentration of his tune. He is playing the bagpipes, also known as the 'war pipes' because they were 'played in medieval Ireland to lead soldiers or sporting groups' (5). Importantly, in terms of Keating's artistic objectives, 'both the uilleann pipes and the war pipes had political links' in the early years of the twentieth century. 'Thomas Ashe was a well-known war piper', while 'Éamonn Ceannt played the uilleann pipes and was leading member of the Dublin Pipers' Club' (6). The war pipes that feature in Pipes and Porter appear to be 'an occasional set' that may have been made by 'MacCullough' of Belfast and seem to have 'two drones, beaded and combed like Highland pipes' with 'plain projecting mounts on the drones, and metal ferrules' (7). The colour combination illustrated on the piper's conspicuous hat may well refer to his place of birth, and/or his national sporting allegiance. Black and amber are the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) colours for Kilkenny. While the GAA was not a political organization, several members fought in the Easter Rising in 1916 (8). Although he remains anonymous at present, the man playing the 'war pipes' may have been a piper that Keating knew from among those that played at nationalist gatherings and marches in Dublin, if not from his own branch of Conradh na Gaeilge, or who perhaps played at GAA matches. Thus, far from being a simple scene of the west of Ireland, Pipes and Porter has symbolic meaning, which is amplified by the presence of the artist, and his nationalist brother, Joe, both of whom are dressed in the traditional Aran Island clothing that was to feature in Men of the West a little time later. At the same time, the realities of the socio-political conditions are evident in the painting. Irish artists were physically and geographically restricted by the rules of the Defence of the Realm Act (DORA), introduced to Ireland in 1914, as a result of which they were not allowed to paint the Irish coastline, or harbours, without written permission from the authorities. Therefore, there is little by way of a detailed coastline in Pipes and Porter or in Men of the West. Keating was a painter of honest, no nonsense portraits. It was a skill that provided him with a constant source of income throughout his life. He did not believe in flattering his models, which meant that his insightful honesty got him into trouble at times. Trained by Orpen in the necessary techniques, he never forgot to include a fleck of light in the eyes, a detail that gave life and personality to his portraits and that is seen to excellent effect in Pipes and Porter. Furthermore, although it is an early work, the painting also demonstrates Keating's expertise as a painter of still life, landscape, sky scape, and the detailed texture of clothing. What of the porter to which the title of the painting also refers? It would appear that necessity was the cause of invention, and porter, a type of beer, was served in any type of vessel that came to hand. The glass is empty, but is there porter in that mug, or does it contain a cup of tea? Keating was having a little fun with his title and content. He continued to use such puns throughout his career, evident, for example, in Good Old Stuff (1928), a painting that is also featured in this auction catalogue (lot 86). The artist typically signed his paintings using his surname in Irish or English, but he wrote his full name on the bottom right of Pipes and Porter. This detail suggests that the painting, which has not been seen in public for many years, may have been a commission in 1915, although the identity of the likely patron is not known at present. © Dr Éimear O'Connor HRHA Research Associate TRIARC-Irish Art Research Centre Trinity College Dublin October 2013. (1) See Bruce Arnold, Orpen: Mirror to an Age, (London, 1981), pp. 307-380. (2) Collection: The Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane. (3) Keating is known to have painted two images featuring pipes. The first, Pléaráca in Arainn (A Gay Time on Aran)(1913), won the Orpen Composition Award at the Dublin Metropolitan School of Art in 1913. It would appear that this painting did not include a self-portrait of the artist. It was described some years later as 'a rather large painting…depicting an Aran piper in full “war paint”…playing lustily on his Píob Mor (large pipes) for the delectation of several of his friends, who, to judge by the expression on their faces, are thoroughly enjoying themselves', John J. R. O'Beirne, 'A Coming Irish Artist: The work of John Keating' in The Rosary, Vol. 21, 1917, pp. 571-577. (4) Information on the identity of the piper and the young boy would be gratefully received by the author on info@eimearoconnor.ie (5) The author would like to acknowledge and thank Nicholas Carolan, Director of the Irish Traditional Music Archive, 73 Merrion Square, for his help and advice with regard to the pipes illustrated in Pipes and Porter. See www.itma.ie (6) The author would like to acknowledge and thank Emmett Gill, Administrator, and Terry Moylan, Archivist, Na Píobairí Uillean, 15 Henrietta Street, Dublin 1, for information pertaining to Thomas Ashe and Éamonn Ceannt, and the political significance of the uilleann pipes and the war pipes in 20th century Ireland. See www.pipers.ie (7) With thanks to Nicholas Carolan and Seán Donnelly. MacCulloughs opened premises in Dublin in the 1920s, and in 1926 the company published MacCullough's Irish War Pipe Tutor and Tune Book, written by Liam Mac Andreis (William Andrews), leader of a pipe band at Trinity College Dublin. See Adam Sanderson on (8) Coincidentally, James Nowlan, a native of Kilkenny, served twenty years, from 1901 to 1921, as president of the GAA. He was interned in England after the 1916 Easter Rising. Nowlan was a supporter of Sinn Fein and an alderman of Kilkenny Corporation for many years. See

Lot 22

A three piece silver tea service, Frank Cobb & Co Ltd, Sheffield 1918, each piece of shaped oval form, comprising; a teapot with ebonised handle and finial 12.5cm high, a two handled sugar bowl 8.5cm high and a cream jug 7cm high, total weight 20oz (3)

Lot 241

An Art Deco Shelley 'Delphinium' pattern tea service, decorated with blue delphiniums, pink hollyhocks, green leaves, grey foliage and yellow sky against a white ground, with blue lined rims, comprising six Queen Anne shaped cups, six saucers, 13cm diameter, six sandwich plates, 16cm diameter, cake plate, 22.5cm diameter, cream jug, sugar dish, and twin handled spoon tray, 13.5cm diameter, pattern marked G.2169/N, green Shelley backstamp (22) *This pattern was registered into the Shelley pattern during or after 1931.

Lot 1242

A George III silver two piece tea service, by McHattie & Fenwick, Edinburgh 1799, and cream jug ensuite

Lot 1628

A Royal Albert `Old Country Roses` dinner, tea and coffee service, for twelve place settings, including a three tier cake stand and table mats, approximately one hundred and seventy pieces in total

Lot 1633

A Royal Worcester `Royal Garden` dinner and tea service, with eight dinner plates, twelve side plates, twelve saucers, six tea and six coffee cups, and a coffee and teapot

Lot 1655

A Royal Albert `Dimity Rose` pattern six place setting tea service

Lot 39

A miniature four piece Tea Service and Tray, a WMF silver mounted glass Ice Bucket with swing handle, a plated Soup Ladle and a musical Powder Compact

Lot 132

A George V Tea Service of boat shape engraved initial L, London 1914/15, maker: GH, viz: kettle on stand with spirit burner, teapot, sugar bowl and jug on ball feet, teapot and kettle with ivory handles

Lot 142

Plated Items: condiment sets, sugar sifter, tea service, mug, glass pickle jars on stand, cake baskets, boxed sets of cutlery including fish servers, dessert knives, pastry forks, loose cutlery including caddy spoon, pickle forks, fish eaters, etc etc

Lot 147

A Walker & Hall four piece plated Tea and Coffee Service of lobed circular form engraved rosettes

Lot 421

Six Royal Worcester Thimbles painted flowers and birds, etc, two small lidded Pots, a Mug, Hadley Vase, Tea Caddy and a Coalport miniature Tea Service floral decorated

Lot 444

A Chien Lung part blue and white Tea Service decorated landscapes with gilt rims, viz: teapot with cross-over handle, tea caddy and cover, sucrier, lacks cover, slop bowl, five saucers, six tea bowls and six cups (4 & 2), few pieces A/F

Lot 484

A Continental 19th Century part Tea Service comprising eight cups and saucers, a tea bowl, teapot lid, three shallow bowls, two leaf shaped dishes, all painted with floral specimens including fritillaries and dahlias, some A/F, and a Davenport miniature teapot

Lot 539

A Spode `Sheffield` Dinner Service for 8 settings, viz: dinner, breakfast, side and tea plates, soup cups, tea cups, saucers, tureen and cover, sauce boat, coffee pot, teapot, etc (68 pieces)

Lot 554

A part Royal Crown Derby Tea Service, for six persons, in two original boxes

Lot 564

A Wedgwood Napoleon part Dinner and Tea Service with green ivy leaf pattern,approx 70 items including lidded tureens

Lot 566

A Royal Crown Derby Tea Service, "Chatsworth" pattern, viz: six cups, saucers, teaplates, lidded two handled sucrier, jug and cake plate (A/F)

Lot 64

An entree dish and cover and other selected silver plate, including a three piece tea service, and an hors d`oeuvres dish.

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