Monday, 10 February 2025

Wax Portraits by Isaac Gosset Missing from Chevening House.

 

A work in progress!

The Nine Missing Wax Portraits by Isaac Gosset (1713 - 99).

C. 1745.

Disappeared!

formerly at Chevening House, Kent.

For 250 years, the house was the principal seat of the earls Stanhope, a cadet (and ultimately the final) branch of the earls of Chesterfield, from 1717 to 1967.

Perhaps originally from Mellerstain.



I was recently contacted by the Curator at Chevening House, in Kent who had been alerted to my ancient post on the Wax Portraits by Isaac Gosset which were previously at Chevening and as far as we know were last seen at the 1985 Exhibition - The Quiet Conquest - Huguenots, 1685 to 1985, at the Museum of London.

The Catalogue for The Quiet Conquest pub 185 was prepared by Tessa Murdoch (available on Amazon etc).


see - https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2016/06/group-of-wax-portrait-reliefs-of.html


The images I used in this post were very low resolution but by coincidence whilst trawling the very useful Paul Mellon Photographic Archive I came across some much better although not ideal images which I am posting here.

https://photoarchive.paul-mellon-centre.ac.uk/people/2471/isaac-gossett/objects


The search box on the Paul Mellon Photographic Archive website could do with a bit of tweaking but persistence should bring results.


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It would be fantastic if someone sees these beautiful little objects and helps to restore them to Chevening.

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see - https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2016/06/group-of-wax-portrait-reliefs-of.html

I had put this old post together in order to perhaps see what the connections were between the Gosset family and Louis Francois Roubiliac. The website was then very much in its infancy a - I believe my research skills have much improved since 2016.

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The veiled portrait of  Lady Grizel Baillie which initiated my original researches.


Lady Grizel Baillie (1665-1746).

Daughter of 1st Earl of Marchmont and Grandmother of Grizel, Countess Stanhope 1745

Isaac Gosset.

She met George Baillie when they were twelve and supposedly, fell in love at that point. What is known for certain is that after returning to Scotland, Lady Grizel turned down the offer to be one of Queen Mary's maids of honour,and insisted to her parents on marrying Baillie over a more advantageous match. The couple had two daughters: Grizel (1692–1759), who married British Army officer Sir Alexander Murray of Stanhope in 1710; and Rachel (1696–1773), who married Charles Lord Binning in 1717 (and whose son Thomas became the seventh Earl of Haddington)


Lady Grisell Baillie died 6 Dec. 1746 and was buried beside her husband; Judge James Burnet, Lord Monboddo, a Scottish judge (1714-1799), wrote an inscription of 40 lines in English for her monument. Burnet was the youngest son of George Baillies cousin Bishop burnet.

The inscription of 60 lines of Latin text for her husband was written by Walter Harte.

This inscription was prepared in the workshop of Roubiliac.


Information below from Grisel Baillie by Lesley Abernethy pub Troubadour. 2020.

In November 1747, included in 'Mr Roubillac Statuary in London his '2 plates of Marble for the Monument containing 40 foot at 6 sh: a foot Æ12' followed with 'By ingraving of inscriptions on these plates of 2844 letters at 2d a letter Q3:14s'. 

Louis-Francois Roubiliac is unlikely to have  carved the lettering for the Monument himself, leaving that to an assistant, but certainly carved the marble bust of Grisell still on display at Mellerstain  probably working from the 'mold in Plaster of Paris' taken on the morning of her death, 

The bust costing Æ31:10s and 'a pedistel for it with an inscription' a further two guineas. 

Grisel herself also sat to Roubiliac for a marble bust, his studio in St Martin's Lane being only a mile from her lodgings in Albemarle Street. Grisie's bust also cost Æ31:10s with two guineas for the socle.

Terracotta busts at 10 guineas each of Grisie and her mother were sent to Tyninghame, and plaster of Paris busts at two guineas each were cast from moulds made from these, the moulds remaining with Roubiliac.

The inscription on the masoleum


BUILT BY GEORGE BAILLIE OF JERVISWOOD

AND LADY GRISELL BAILLIE

A.D.1736

pious parents rear'd this hallowed place,

A monument for them, and for their race.

Descendants, be it your successive cares,

"Ihat no degenerate dust ere mix with their's.



Lady Grizel Baillie.

Louis Francois Roubiliac.

The life size marble bust in the Library at Mellerstain.

Dated 1746 on the Socle.


Inscription

on the the front of the socle: LADY GRISEL-BAILLIE / AETAT 81AD / MDCCXLV1.


Roubiliac used this form of socle on bust of Sir Andrew Fountaine at Wilton House and on a marble bust of  the Poet Paul Whitehead at West Wycombe Park.

Image above courtesy Paul Mellon Photographic archive.

https://photoarchive.paul-mellon-centre.ac.uk/objects/401081/lady-grizel-baillie-16651746-daughter-of-1st-earl-of-marc?ctx=22c10598cce466614d02d7a631fa05c0428c0bc7&idx=5

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Memoirs of the lives and characters of the Right Honourable George Baillie of Jerviswood, and of Lady Grisell Baillie by Lady Murray of Stanhope pub, 1822.

https://deriv.nls.uk/dcn23/9556/95563588.23.pdf

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For an incomplete chronological list of the Portrait sculpture o Roubiliac see -


Bath, Art and Architecture: Chronological List of the Roubiliac Portrait Busts First Draught.












Lady Grizel Baillie.

Maria Verelst.

c 1692







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Lady Rachael Binning  (d. 1773).

1745.

Isaac Gosset.


https://photoarchive.paul-mellon-centre.ac.uk/objects/401101/rachael-lady-binning-1745-d-1773?ctx=22c10598cce466614d02d7a631fa05c0428c0bc7&idx=0




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The Hon. Rachel Hamilton (d. 1797).

Isaac Gosset.

https://photoarchive.paul-mellon-centre.ac.uk/objects/401021/hon-rachel-hamilton-1745-d-1797?ctx=22c10598cce466614d02d7a631fa05c0428c0bc7&idx=6



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Philip, 4th Earl Chesterfield 1745 (1694- 1773).

Isaac Gosset.


https://photoarchive.paul-mellon-centre.ac.uk/objects/401080/philip-4th-earl-chesterfield-1745-1694-1773?ctx=22c10598cce466614d02d7a631fa05c0428c0bc7&idx=2




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Philip, 2nd Earl Stanhope  (1714-1786).

1745.

Isaac Gosset.





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Thomas 7th Earl,of Haddington.(1721-1794).

Isaac Gosset.

https://photoarchive.paul-mellon-centre.ac.uk/objects/401102/thomas-7th-earl-of-haddington-1745-17210794?ctx=22c10598cce466614d02d7a631fa05c0428c0bc7&idx=1



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The Hon. George Baillie (d.1797)

Isaac Gosset.

https://photoarchive.paul-mellon-centre.ac.uk/objects/484601/hon-george-baillie1745?ctx=22c10598cce466614d02d7a631fa05c0428c0bc7&idx=7



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In the unpublished accounts, at Mellerstain - Lady Murray, on a page headed 'Sundry expenses London 1747' writes  'For ten little picturs by Mr Gooset (sic) in wax his price to sit 3 guinies, a copy one guinie -   £15:15:0

 

For Mr St Clair four of these picturs   £4:4:0'

 

Also of interest in Lady Murray's accounts, on 6th December 1746, the day of Grisel's death:

 'For taking a mold in Plaster of Paris' £1:5:0'.

Unfortunately there it seems there is no mention of who actually took the mask - was it Gosset or Roubiliac?

 

It would appear that Roubiliac perhaps worked from a death mask for his portrait bust of Grisell.


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Isaac Gosset was the sixth son of Jean Gosset and was probably born in St Helier, Jersey.

 Also active as a frame maker. Initially he may well have been associated in this aspect of his work with his elder brother Gideon, and for some of the earlier commissions it is not easy to distinguish responsibility. 

Until 1774 he worked from the same address as his brother in Berwick Street, but from this year moved to 14 Edward Street, Portman Square. In January of that year he was appointed ‘Joyner to His Majesty’ and from the next year the business is sometimes referred to as Gossett & Co.

Isaac Gosset was married to Françoise Buisett (also a Huguenot) in Soho in 1737. They were parents to six children.

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https://bifmo.furniturehistorysociety.org/entry/gosset-isaac-1713-99


https://bifmo.furniturehistorysociety.org/entry/gosset-jacob-1701-1788

James Gossett is recorded as working as a modeller in wax and picture framer in Berwick Street, Soho, in The Universal Director, or the Nobleman's and Gentleman' True Guide to the Masters and Professors of the Liberal and Polite Arts by Thomas Mortimer, 1763.






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Wax Portrait Relief of Isaac Newton by Matthew Gosset (1683 - 1744).

10.5 x 8.5 cms.



 



 

It is recorded in the minutes of the Spalding Gentleman's Society that in 1729 George Johnson of Durham School presented to the Society's Museum 'a curious effigy of the Hon. Sir Isaac Newton ... made in profile in the manner of a medaglion by the ingenious Mr Gosset'.

 

The Spalding Gentleman's Society of Spalding in Lincolnshire was established

 by Maurice Johnson of Ayscough Hall,  (1688 - 1755) in 1710 and incorporated as 'a Society of Gentlemen, for the supporting of mutual benevolence, and their improvement in the liberal sciences and in polite learning', in 1712. With the death of Maurice Johnson in 1755 the Society became moribund but was  revived in the mid 19th Century. It is still active today and has a Museum in Spalding.

 

For their website see - http://www.spalding-gentlemens-society.org/

 

For the Gentleman's Society at Spalding: Its Origin and Progress pub. 1851. see -

 

https://archive.org/details/gentlemenssociet00moorrich

 

This work includes a list of members of the Society, amongst whom the lumineries were in no particular order Sir Isaac Newton himself, Dr William Stukeley the Antiquary, George Vertue the artist and engraver, Alexander Pope, John Gay the poet, Michael Rysbrack the Sculptor, Dr Richard Mead, Sir Hans Sloane, Samuel and Nathaniel Buck engravers, Martin Folkes, Theophilus Desaguliers, Charles Jennens of Gopsall Hall. Smart Lethuillier

 

Maurice Johnson - also established the Stamford Society, c.1721; he was barrister in the Inner Temple, 1710; hon. librarian of the Society of Antiquaries, 1717;



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Of tangential interest Robert Adams Drawing at the Soane Museum for the Library at Mellerstain.


https://collections.soane.org/prints/item-print?id=THES97127





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