Monday, 23 June 2025

Two unidentified busts by Michael Rysbrack.



 The Ashmolean Museum Marble Bust and The Bust at West Wycombe Park.


The Ashmolean Bust on loan from a Private Collection.































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The West Wycombe Bust.


















More Missing Rysbrack Busts.

 Culled from Biographical Dictionary.... pub. Yale 2009.

 

Samuel Butler pre 1732 (Vertue).

 Ben Johnson (Vertue).

 Sir Thomas and Lady Hewitt untraced Vertue.

 Thomas Ripley - Architect - Rysbrack Sale of 1765, lot 18.

 Matthew Tindall, from a death mask (Biographica Britannica 1763).

 Captain Aubin (Vertue) pre 1732.

 Colonel James Pelham (Vertue) pre 1732.

 Lord Macclesfield (Vertue) pre 1732. A so called bust of Macclesfield is discussed in an article in the Georgian Group Journal Vol XV!! 2009 by David Wilson. I am not convinced. The Socle and support would suggest a much later date. see -

https://georgiangroup.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/GGJ_2009_02_WILSON.pdf

 

Mr and Mrs Booth (Vertue) pre 1732.

 Mr Halsey.

 Mr Holland 'Herald Painter'.

 Sir Thomas and Lady Hewett (Vertue) pre 1732.

 Mr Mason.

 

Mr Milner.

Mr Morett.

 Mrs Davenport.

 Mrs Nash.

 Sarah Duchess of Marlborough.

 Queen Caroline - almost certainly the plaster version at Queens College, Oxford.


Chiselden (Cheselden) a recently exhibited portrait.

 




William Cheselden by Jonathan Richardson the Elder.

Drawing with London Dealers Lowell Libson and Jonny Yarker.

Summer Exhibition 2025.

https://www.libson-yarker.com/exhibitions/summer-exhibition/william-chiselden


Graphite on vellum.

5 ¾ × 4 ⅞ inches · 146 × 124 mm

Signed with initials.

Inscribed and dated ‘Wm Chiselden Esqr Feb. 13. 1735-6’, 

also inscribed on the verso ‘Wm Chiseldon Esq. Surgn 12. Feb. 1735/6’

Jonathan Richardson snr. collector’s mark: bottom left [Lugt. 2184]

Jonathan Richardson jnr. collector’s mark bottom right [Lugt. 2170]



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Portrait of William Cheselden.

Jonathan Richardson the Elder

The doctor, at the age of forty-seven; wearing a wig.

Pen and brown ink, over graphite.

British Museum

https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/P_1866-0714-17




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William Cheselden.

by Jonathan Richardson.

1720's or 1730's.

140 x 118 mm.

 

This portrait is of the anatomist and eminent surgeon William Cheselden, who was one of the closest friends of the artist, Jonathan Richardson. It is one of a series of small chalk and graphite drawings of friends and acquaintances that Richardson made in his retirement. Some of these images were drawn from memory and together, they represent a sustained project in recording friendships across Richardson's whole life. Drawing was the perfect medium for this project as it allowed Richardson to produce a large number of images quickly and was closely associated with friendship and intimacy.

 

Text and image © National Portrait Gallery, London.








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Cheselden.

by Jonathan Richardson.

British Museum.




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Cheselden.

Mezzotint Faber after Richardson.

1753.

Image courtesy Wellcome Collection.

The original oil painting is in the Royal College of Surgeons.









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I have posted on the portraits of Cheselden previously -


Cheselden from Roubiliac Esdaile.








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The Bust of Cheselden in the Royal College of Surgeons paired with the bust of Belchier.

Photograph from a tweet by Eleanor Crook Sculpt @CrookEleanor




William Cheselden (1688 - 1752).

The  Plaster bust.

It has sustained some damage to the drapery.

 Life Size. Height 61 cms.

 I suspect the turned socle is a replacement.

 I am very grateful to Bruce Simpson, Curator, Royal College of Surgeons for providing this photograph.



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Cheselden after Roubiliac 

Henry Weekes.

1871.
St Thomas Hospital London

Photographed by the author.

On 3 June 1871, Dr Leonard W. Sedgwick, wrote to the Governors of St Thomas', offering, on behalf of 'old Students of the Medical School of this Hospital', marble busts of William Cheselden and Sir Richard Mead, both by Henry Weekes RA. 

The offer was formally accepted by the Grand Committee at its meeting of 6 June 1871.






























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Of tangential relevance to this post.

 

A Medallion by William Wyon c. 1827/8

in the BM.

The Profile Adapted from the Roubiliac Bust.

https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/C_M-8617





Saturday, 21 June 2025

A Lead River God - by Stourhead by Manning

 


This statue has been copied by the Bulbeck Foundry.

https://www.bulbeckfoundry.co.uk/page/statues-river-god/

https://www.bulbeckfoundry.co.uk/page/statues-large/


The lead original from Parham Park in Sussex. The figure was brought to Parham by Robert Curzon from Hagley Hall in Staffordshire in the second half of the nineteenth century.


A terracotta was sold by Sotheby's late 80's early 90's if memory serves.

Prior to it appearing in sotheby's, I had seen this statue in a garden in Marlborough.



The Parham River God from English Lead work by Lawrence Weaver pub 1909.














A River God.

Corrado Giaquinto. (1703 66) attrib.

Temple Newsam House.

Image Courtesy Art Uk Website.





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The Other River God at Stourhead.

Thomas Manning (d.1747).

https://drawingmatter.org/the-temple-of-flora-stourhead-a-paradise-revisited/

This is an extract from Stourhead, Henry Hoares Paradise Revisied by Dudley Dodd pub 2021 Head Zeus.

Maybe not the last word on the architecture and sculpture in the garden at Stourhead but the best work on the subject to date - highly recommended!


 The Temple of Flora, Stourhead, Wiltshire, designed by Henry Flitcroft (1697–1769).

1753

Drawing by by C. W. Bampfylde (1720–1791). 

Pen and colour wash, 280 × 470 mm.

 © The Trustees of the British Museum.











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Henry Flitcroft (1697–1769), elevation, Rocky Arch (the Cascade below the Temple of Flora), Stourhead, c.1744. Pen and colour wash, 178 × 315 mm. DMC 1233.


Henry Hoare Ledger 1734-49, 28 January 1743/44, ‘Thos Manning for a River God &c’ £15-15s. Anonymous 1764 (Stourton Gardens 1749), p. 102, 

‘For yonder silver god they sigh, they burn, | And pour their tears incessant thro’ his urn; | But cold as lead, and deaf when they complain, | Supine he lies, and they but weep in vain. | See from beneath him (tinctur’d by the sun | With colours radiant) sheets of water run’.


WSA, 383/907(1), Henry Flitcroft to Henry Hoare, 25 August 1744, ‘My Next shall bring you… the Temple of Ceres with the Rocky Arch in which I propose to place the River God, & a Sketch how I conceive the head of ye lake’; 

Henry Flitcroft to HH, 7 September 1744, ‘I have inclosd to you the Plan & Elevation of ye Temple of Ceres with a Sketch of ye Entablature showing how the Tryglyphs & Metops should be proportioned with the Skuls &c introduced therein… I have also sent a plan & Section for the Manner of Laying the Foundations… a Section of ye inside of this Building shall be soon sent, with particular drawing of ye Doorcase & pedestal Mouldings’. 


Payments to William Privett which may relate to the Temple of Flora: HH Ledger 1734-49; 27 September 1745, ‘on accot of ye Temple’ £40; 3 November 1746, ‘in full of all Demands’ £28-8s-1d; 30 March 1747, ‘on accot of Buildg’ £30. C. Hoare & Co., HB/5/A/6, Partners’ Ledger 1742-51, HH account, 5 October 1745, ‘His Bill to Willm Privet (Mason)’ £40; 30 December 1745, ‘Willm Privet of Chillmark’s Bill’ £30.








Henry Flitcroft (1697–1769), elevation, Rocky Arch (the Cascade below the Temple of Flora), Stourhead, c.1744. Pen and colour wash, 178 × 315 mm. DMC 1233.

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Thomas Manning (d. 1747).


He was related to the Manning family of masons, but was a notable statuary in lead and artificial stone. 

 'Thomas Manning' who is described in John Nost I's will of 1710 as 'my manservant,' and was left a suit of apparel (LMA AM/FW 1710/89). 

It is likely that he learned his craft with Nost. 

His earliest recorded works date from 1720 and were sent, at a cost of £l 17s, by 'Waggon and car' to Gough Park (7).

In 1729 Manning moved into a property in Portugal Row next door to Catherine Nost and, from 1734, to Thomas Carter I. His premises were initially rated at £8, but his business must have expanded by 1737, when he had two properties in the street, rated at £IO and £12. He appears to have taken over the second premises from Andrew Carpenter, who died

that year. By 1744 he had taken over another property, with tenants, in the street, renamed White Horse Street in 1737.

In 1735 Manning supplied a statue of Britannia to an insurance company in Westminster, one of the earliest recorded works in artificial stone produced in this country (5). Manning stood as a character witness in the trial of Mary Johnson, otherwise Sudley, otherwise Barker, on 5 December 1746, who was accused of the theft of a gold ring from a William Archer. Manning described himself as a 'Master Statuary of Hide-Park and testified that the defendant had 'lived in two houses of mine for these two years'. The properties were in 'White-horse street, just as you go down the hill' (POB 1674—1834, ref t17461205-24).

Manning died in 1747. An obituary describes him as 'an ingenious statuary near Hyde Park Corner' (GM 1747, 545).

In his will, proved on 19 November, he left his stock in trade, utensils, chattels, books, plate and his house on the corner of White Horse Street to his wife Mary. Another 'little house' in White Horse Street was left jointly to his wife and his mother, Elizabeth, together with the lease of three houses and a stable in the same road. He mentions two brothers, Edward and Arnold, and his nephews, Thomas and John Manning (PROB 11/758/6). 


Wednesday, 18 June 2025

A Lead Statue of a Reclining Nymph. Private Collection.



There are only two versions of this statue that I am aware of  - the one below in the colour photographs and the one illustrated below in black and white at West Wycombe Park.


A Lead Statue of a Reclining Bacchante or Nymph. 

In her left hand she has a bunch of grapes.

Private Collection.








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The West Wycombe Bacchante or Reclining Nude.

Lead Statue 






Two Plaster Busts attributed to the workshop of Louis Francois Roubiliac.


 


Some notes -



I have recently been taking a closer look at the socles used by Louis Francois Roubiliac on his busts.

This came about after being asked to consult on the identity of the sculptor of two anonymous marble busts- of Laocoon and the Anima Dannata..


A visit to photograph the busts at Goodwood House (in particular that of a young man in the guise of the "good" Emperor Trajan which uses the Roubiliac type socle), served to further confirm my belief that the use of this type of socle (with one exception by Wilton) was unique to Roubiliac.

I discuss these socles in my previous posts - apologies for the repetition!





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A Plaster bust of presumably a Classical Lady - possibly an Ideal Head.

 Perhaps Aphrodite.

 Life Size.

 at Saltram House, Devon. Home of the Parker family since the mid 1740's.Transferred to the National Trust in 1957.

 Photographed by the Author.

 The loose hair on the shoulders is similar to that of the Cesi Venus or the Venus d'Arles but the topknot is quite different and resembles that on to Capitoline Venus, in  Rome.


Equally one has to be careful as the hairstyle could be described as unisex. The Apollo Belvedere sports a similar topknot but without the long tresses over the shoulders.

The Roman marble seated Apollo with Lyre in Museo Nazionale Romano di Palazzo Altemps has distinct similarities in the hair as does the Apollo in the Sala della Biga in the Vatican.

There are distinct echoes of the Farnese Dionysus.

I have contacted Saltram and hope to learn more in due course.


















Engraving from Raccolta.... Cavaceppi Vol.1.

1768.


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Link to all three Volumes bound together of Cavaceppi's Raccolta pub. 1768 - 1772.













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The Altempi Apollo.


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The Statue of Apollo Citharoedus in the Capitoline Museum.


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The Young Marcus Aurelius (type A) or Commodus at Seaton Delaval Hall, Northumberland.

An 18th Century Plaster bust which uses the Roubiliac type socle.


In the posthumous Roubiliac sale of  13 May 1762  under the heading of  Antique busts etc in plaister - Lot 46, Marcus Aurelius.

 700 x 480 x 330 mm.

This bust was previously at Melton Constable Hall, Norfolk. 

Images courtesy National Trust website. 

https://www.nationaltrustcollections.org.uk/object/1276622


























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The Young Marcus Aurelius (or Commodus).

 Cornell University.

 Marble Bust.

Bartolemeo Cavaceppi (attributed!).

 The use of the eared support on the  socle certainly suggests that it might have come from the workshop of Cavaceppi.

 Equally the slightly concave front of the eared support is a form used by Joseph Nollekens early in his career - it would be useful to have further images.

 For a look at the eared support socles of Nollekens busts see -

 https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2024/11/some-earlier-nollekens-busts.html

 

Image below and info from -

 https://emuseum.cornell.edu/objects/50004/bust-of-the-young-marcus-aurelius-after-the-ancient-origina?ctx=30248343468d533dd90d04a86e328c441b12ee42&idx=34





These busts illustrated above are based on the marble bust of the young Marcus Aurelius in the Capitoline Museum, Rome







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The marble below is carved after a bust in the Capitoline Museums (inv. no. 454) which was discovered in the so-called Villa of Antoninus Pius, Lanuvium (Lanuvio), in 1701, and was subsequently in the collection of Cardinal Alessandro Albani.




To complicate issues there is a second bust of Commodus or the young Marcus Aurelius with a more complicated drapery seen here in the Tomasso Marble and the John Cheere plaster 

The Tomasso Brothers Commodus.

 Height 71 cms.

  Sotheby's. Lot 94 - 29 April 2021 attributed to Bartolemeo Cavaceppi.

 It has the eared support typical of Cavaceppi's workshop.

 The oval plan shape of the Socle suggests that this bust was perhaps sculpted by Joseph Wilton whilst he was in Italy between 1749 - 1765).

 Better photographs of the socle would help to identify the author - the busts of Commodus have been much copied.

The marble is carved after a bust in the Capitoline Museums (inv. no. 454) which was discovered in the so-called Villa of Antoninus Pius, Lanuvium (Lanuvio), in 1701, and was subsequently in the collection of Cardinal Alessandro Albani.

https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2021/tomasso-the-more-a-thing-is-perfect/bust-of-the-emperor-commodus-as-a-boy-ad-161-192




Another Anonymous Marble described as Commodus  is at Chiswick House.

H. 71 x W 59.5 x D 26.5 cm

It again utilises the Cavaceppi type socle.

https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/commodus-161-ad192-ad-278008






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Another also previously with the Tomasso Brothers.

Again attributed to Cavaceppi.

Lot 56 Christie's 10 June 2022.

https://www.christies.com/en/lot/lot-6377696






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Another plaster bust of Commodus or the young Marcus Aurelius at Burton Constable.

This one has the typical socle used by John Cheere. with the slightly convex, recessed panelled front.




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The Royal, Academy Plaster Bust.
Described as Commodus

720 mm x 485 mm x 330 mm,








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