The Mural Monument to William Wither (d. 1733).
St Lawrence Church,
Wootton
St Lawrence, Near Basingstoke. Hampshire.
Dated beneath the main inscription 1735.
The bust here attributed to Louis Francois Roubiliac.
For Roubiliac's repeated use of similar drapery on busts see
-
I experienced the usual difficulties in the photography of this monument - particularly the bad light and its inaccessibility but I don't give up easily!
The carving on the shirt on this bust particularly the detailed stitching on the collar should be noted.
Note the stitching on the collar - a fabulous detail only visible on close inspection.
......................
The Gounter Nicholl Monument.
The Marble Bust of Charles Gounter Nicoll (1704 - 33).
and also on the Thomas Missing Monument which both use the same dress in the same post.
see -
There is an article online by Dr Clive Easter.
The Three Gunter family monuments at Racton, West Sussex. published in Sussex Archaelogical Collections 156 (2018), 147–158. see -
https://www.academia.edu/39333654/Three_Gunter_family_monuments_at_Racton_West_Sussex
For the thorny question of its removal for safekeeping? to the home of Sir Michael Hamilton, Lord Dartmouth and substitution with a resin replica see -
The Report and Conclusions of the Chichester Consistory Court.
Ref the bust and monument.
https://cofechichester.contentfiles.net/media/documents/document/2019/02/011019_Racton_St_Peter.pdf
The bust was removed and conserved and a cast taken off it by Messrs Plowden and Smith in the late 1990's.
It was intended to replace the original with a resin cast, payed for by Sir Michael Hamilton, a distant relative.
It has since been replaced in its original position, with I believe a stainless steel dowel fixing it firmly to the sarcophagus.
Here be the Remains
/ Of the Honourable Sr. CHARLES
GOUNTER NICOLL / Knight of the most Honourable Order of the
Bath; /
Descended from a long Train of Ancestors
/ Fam’d for their Religion, Loyalty and Virtue, / He
had all the Qualifications / Of a compleat and accomplishe’d Gentleman, / Amiable in his Person, /
Gracefull in his Address. / In
Private, / He was easy, affable, condescending’ / In
Publick, / He was steady, uniform consistent; /
Favour’d by this Prince, / And a Friend to his Country. / In
this distinguish’d Situation, /
Esteem’d, belov’d and honour’d, /
He died the 24th Day of November 1733
/ In the 30th Year of his Age.
Plate CXVII from A
Book of Architecture by James Gibbs pub. 1728.
Below.
.........................
Charles Gounter Nicoll (1704 - 1733). - a brief biog.
Charles Gounter Nicoll, was baptised on 7 October 1704, the
eldest son of George Gounter, MP of Racton, and his wife Judith Nicoll,
daughter of Richard Nicoll of Norbiton Place, Surrey. His grandfather, Colonel
George Gounter, helped Charles II to escape from England after the battle of
Worcester. Gounter succeeded his father to Racton in 1718. He matriculated at
New College, Oxford on 4 April 1722, aged 17.
...................................
The Thomas Missing Monument.
Thomas Missing (d. 1733).
Photographs here very kindly provided by David Dawson Taylor of
the Friends of Crofton Old Church.
http://www.fococ.co.uk/cochistory.php
Thomas Missing - some notes -
Thomas Missing built the south transept of the church in
1725 to accommodate his family pews and mausoleum. He was MP for Southampton
and the merchant responsible for victualling Gibraltar. He was presumably
responsible for the shaped gable and segmental windows to the south transept
shown in a mid C19 illustration in the National Monuments Record.
A cursory inspection (given the not very high resolution quality of this
photograph) suggests to me that the clothing on these two busts s the same.
...............................
The Life Size Plaster bust of Nicholas Hawksmoor.
Once again we have Roubiliac adapting a bust and adding the head.
Much of the dress on this bust is repeated on the Gounter Nicholl and Thomas Missing Busts.
For the last fifteen years of his life he was responsible for the designs for the redevelopment of All Souls and was the architect of what was formerly called the Codrington Library, the Buttery, the North Quadrangle and the Hall, all built between 1716 and 1740.This bust is the only known likeness of Hawksmoor. The bronze cast was given by the Warden and Fellows of All Souls in 1962 to the National Portrait Gallery in London.
Photograph at All Souls from the Art UK Website.
With Grateful thanks to Gaye Morgan, Chief Librarian and Conservator at the Codrington (now renamed), All Souls for making this entry possible with reference to the plaster bust of Hawksmore at All Souls College Oxford.
Both of these busts are noted as at All Souls (Bennett in
the Buttery) in A History of the University of Oxford Including the Lives of
the Founders ... By Alexander Chalmers
pub.1810.
This dating of the Giles Bennet bust (if the 1736 date is correct) is perhaps important in dating the bust of Hawksmore which
For an introduction to Hawksmoor and the Codrington Library see
https://www.asc.ox.ac.uk/sites/default/files/2022-10/Scrn3_Arch_edit1.pdf
............................
Roubiliac and the re use of the drapery on his busts.
see http://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2015/07/jonathan-tyers-and-his-bust-by-roubiliac.html
The busts of Andrew Fountain at Wilton House and its several variants, the bust of Thomas Winnington on his monument at Stanford on Teme, Worcestershire and the bust of John Bamber on the monument in Barking Church, Essex.
see - https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2019/03/monument-to-thomas-winnington-stanford.html
The busts of Hawksmoor at All Souls College, Oxford and that on the Monument to William Wither. d.1732 in Wootton St Lawrence Church, Hampshire which both use the same almost baroque drapery as on the busts on the monument of Thomas Missing at Crofton and Gounter Nicholl monument at Racton.
This suggests to me that Roubiliac used some sort of fairly sophisticated pointing machine so that he or his assistants could transfer the details from the original clay, terracotta or plaster prototypes.
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