Tuesday, 27 May 2025

The Lead Group of the Rape of the Sabines by John Cheere at Wrest Park - some notes.



The Four Lead Groups at Wrest Park. Part 2.


The John Cheere Lead Group of  the Rape of the Sabines. 


This statue was cast by John Cheere, the statue was previously first cast by John van Nost I (d.1710).

A version by van Nost? was in the plantation at the top of the hill is a clearing known as the Amphitheatre at Painshill Park, near Cobham, Kent.

There is an intriguing fragment of a limestone version of the Rape of the Sabines at Kirby Hall Northamptonshire.


The van Nost / Cheere statue was adapted from the marble original by Giambologna in the 1580's in the Loggia dei Lanzi, Florence.

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The Rape of the Sabines by Giambologna.

Height 161.5 inches

The original statue is signed OPVS IOANNIS BOLONII FLANDRI MDLXXXII ("The work of Johannes of Boulogne of Flanders, 1582"). 

An early preparatory bronze featuring only two figures is in the Museo Nazionale di Capodimonte in Naples. 

Giambologna then revised the scheme, this time with a third figure, in two wax models now in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London. The artist's full-scale gesso for the finished sculpture, executed in 1582, is on display at the Galleria dell'Accademia in Florence.

 The woman and the kneeling man reference figures from the ancient sculpture Laocoön and His Sons.

 Bronze reductions of the sculpture, produced in Giambologna's own studio and imitated by others, were a staple of connoisseurs' collections into the 19th century. (see Christies version below).



The question arises as to where van Nost obtained the model for this statue. vVersions seem to have been available in the low countries as seen in the paintings of Balthasar van den Bossche.


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The English version of the Rape of the Sabines  by John van Nost I (d. 1710).

By 1700 John van Nost Nost was occupied with an extensive contract at Hampton Court. This included several marble chimney-pieces, two of which were costed at £235 and £275 (55, 57). Both are intricately carved and count among his finest works, the first with a relief of a reclining Venus in her chariot and the second with a relief of two intertwined doves.

 

In 1701 he provided ‘several drawings of the King’s statue for the marble fountain’, charged at £2 and clay models for a fountain (64). One had four mermaids seated on dolphins and four shells between them, whilst the alternative had four figures of young men on dolphins and four swans between them (TNA WORK 5/52 fol 32). A third model had shells, dolphins, a sea-horse and 11 other figures (TNA WORK 5/51 fol 506). 

He was also responsible for the statue of a blackamoor and submitted accounts ‘for modelling a figure of a Blackamore kneeling being 5 ft high holding up a sundial’ and then for ‘casting the said Balackamore in hard metal and repainting’ (14). Pedestals of Portland stone were provided by Nost for statues of the Gladiator, Diana, Hercules and Apollo (68) (TNA WORK 5/51 fol 506; 5/52 fol 340).

 

His sculpture was evidently noticed by members of the Court, for one of Nost’s most discerning and extensive patrons was Thomas Coke of Melbourne Hall, vice-chamberlain to Queen Anne. 

Among Coke’s many purchases were the stupendous Four Seasons vase, dramatic figures of Perseus and Andromeda  and copies of the Blackamoor and Indian which Nost had originally supplied to Hampton Court. 

A letter to Coke in the Melbourne archives suggests that there were problems with the casting process and that the sculptor was under pressure: ‘Hon.red Sir, I hope you will pardon my not answering your desires sooner. I had set up 2 moulds of boys but thay weare not to my minde and having had some Exterordinary brake which Call’d me out of towne which hath beene a great hindrance to me in my Buisines. But I wish now with all speed Dispatch y.or Boys’ (Nost I/Coke). 

Enclosed with this letter were his prices for lead figures: ‘The Sabine Rape, £90’, ‘Hercules and Centoure, £70,’ and ‘Hercules and Anteus, £80’. Nost claimed that he ‘made as nice a calculation as can be and find it cannot be done under the prises that is rated above’, but Coke, who was a demanding client, found them too expensive (Melbourne Hall archives, quoted in Gunnis 1968, 280).

































see - Garden Leadwork ................ By Richard Davey. Country Life, 14th .April, 28th .April 1900.

In addition to several photographs of the Melbourne leadwork are "The Rape of the Sabines " at Painshill, and the vases at Drayton House.

It seems the Painshill statue was damaged and sold for scrap in the 1950's.

Van Nost offered various other figures , the list of which is interesting as giving the prices he charged . ' A boy and swan for a fountain £ 10 . A duck and swan as big as life £ 8 . A Sabine rape £ 90 . A Hercules and Centaurs £ 70.

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 The Rape of the Sabine Women by Giambologna, 

Engraving of 1704.

 

Robert van Audenaert, Painter, printmaker, in Rome (1685-ca. 1723) and Ghent (ca. 1723-43).




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Of Tangential Interest

William Henry Fox Talbot and his Photographs of the Rape of the Sabines.


In the Bodleian Library there several photographs by William Fox Talbot of a statuette of the Rape of the Sabines possibly by Edward Hodges Bailey see -

https://talbot.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/search/catalog/artifact-2772

From the Rape of the Sabines photographs in the Bodleian Catalogue Raisonee for Fox Talbot

https://talbot.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/search/?utf8=%E2%9C%93&per_page=100&q=Sabine&search_field=default




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see also -

Sotheby's New York - Auction: an important archive of early photography relating to W H F Talbot to be sold in New York / 12-22 April 2021.

https://britishphotohistory.ning.com/profiles/blogs/auction-most-important-archive-of-early-photography-relating-to-w




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The Getty Museum Photograph of the Statuette

https://www.getty.edu/art/collection/object/104KWA




The V and A Fox Talbot Photograph.

c. 1839.

https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O1387916/statuette-of-rape-of-the-photograph-fox-talbot-william/



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The two following images from -

https://itoldya420.getarchive.net/amp/topics/rape+of+the+sabine+women+at+loggia+dei+lanzi

Leopoldo and Guiseppe Alinari, The Rape of the Sabines by Giovanni Bologna, Loggia Dei Lanzi, Florence, c. 1865, Albumen silver print, 57.6 x 43.3 cm, MoMA, 570.1990





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albumen prints Image No. 94. "Plate No. 1371. Firenze. Loggia Dei Lanzi. II Ratto Della Sabini. Giovanni Bologna." Outdoor sculpture with large barometer in background. 3 3/4 x 6 photo, mounted. c. 1875.


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The Terra Cruda Life Size Model.

1582.

Height 410 cms.

 In the Galleria dell’Accademia di Firenze.

https://www.galleriaaccademiafirenze.it/en/artworks/ratto-delle-sabine/

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A Bronze Statuette by Giambologna (c.1529 - 1608).

One of a number from the studio /workshop of Giambologna.

Further examples of the bronze version survive in the Kunsthistorischesmuseum in Vienna and the Museo Nationale di Capodimonte, Naples and are known to have been cast for Ottavio Farnese in 1579.

c. 1587 - 1598.

Sold by Christie's Lot 30. 10 July 2014.

Height 59 cms.

Among those who expressed  a desire for a copy of it was Henry, Prince of Wales, who asked in 1609, a year after Giambologna’s death, for a stucco reduction (Watson/Avery 1973, p. 498).

There is a very good essay on the subject of this bronze by Demetrios Zekos on the Christie's website

Images here courtesy Christies website -

https://www.christies.com/lot/a-bronze-group-of-the-rape-of-5812499/?intObjectID=5812499&lid=1















































A plaster model, probably the original by Giambologna, was found in the early 1900s by Marino Marinelli, father of Ferdinando Marinelli Jr.


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