Thursday, 25 June 2015

The Royal Collection Marble Bust of Handel and its Varients - The one with the Hat. The Houbraken Engraved Portrait of Handel -1738.



The 1739 Marble Bust of Handel (1685 - 1759).

by Louis Francois Roubiliac (1702 - 62).

Royal Collection, Windsor Castle,

in the Queens Presence Chamber.




Photograph scanned from Early Georgian Portraits, Kerslake, NPG. 1977.





Size -71.0 x 60.0 x 36.0 cm. - 28 ins x 14.25 ins.

The mole on his left proper cheek is just visible.

It seems very likely that this bust was commissioned from Roubiliac by Handel himself. It was given by Handel to John Christopher Smith Senior (Johann Christoph Schmidt) (1683-1763); thence to his son, also John Christopher Smith (1712-1795); by whom given to George III, c.1772-4.

JC Smith had come to England from Anspach in Germany in 1716 after Handel's visit to Halle in order to work with him. From shortly after his arrival he lived at Dean Street, Soho, by 1720 he had a music shop at the Sign of the Hand and Book in Coventry Street (Daily Courant 2nd Nov. 1720) from 1723 until 1750 his address was at Meard's Court, Wardour Street, Soho. He specialised in Handel's music. He acted as amanuensis and treasurer to Handel until they fell out in late 1756. He was in Bath with Handel in the Summer of 1751.


A portrait of Handel by Denner was bequeathed by John Christopher Smith Jnr. to William Coxe. Smith had retired to Bath and was living at Upper Church Street by the Royal Crescent when he died.






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72.4cms tall.


Provenance - according to Brownlow it belonged to Barrett the proprietor of Vauxhall gardens(perhaps George Rogers Barrett who died in 1818, and then to the Bass singer James Bartleman (1769 - 1821 although it was not included in the Bartleman sale at White's on the 20 Feb 1822. 

It was offered for sale by H. Rodd of 9 Great Newport Street, London and subsequently acquire by Sir Frederick Pollock, 1st Bart (1783 - 1870) and given by him to the Foundling Hospital in 1844.

These photographs were taken on the 8th April 2015 using only the available light without a flash.

The mole or wart on his left cheek is clearly visible.

Although not obvious this terracotta has undergone extensive restoration and conservation at the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1966, prior to which it appeared with extensive cracks and damages, and it was subject again to further conservation in 1995.

Given the position of the bust at the Foundling Hospital Museum the results are reasonably good. 

The bust was tight up against a wall. Getting a shot of the proper right hand profile was particularly difficult and impossible to get a shot of the back. 

I am very grateful to Katherine Hogg and everyone at the Foundling Hospital Museum for allowing me to take these photographs.





The Foundling Hospital Terracotta Bust of Handel.


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The Foundling Hospital Plaster Bust of Handel by Roubiliac.


































The Foundling Hospital, Plaster bust of Handel wearing a Soft Hat.

This bust appears to have been taken from a piece mould taken from the terracotta (above). It seems to be leaning slightly further forward but this is probably because it was manufactured to be set in a high position such as on a library bookcase. This forward lean is easily altered during or after the manufacture of these busts.
These photographs taken on 8th April 2015. This bust was very difficult to photograph - what available natural light was mostly from a skylight above and so unfortunately the resolution is very poor.

The mole or wart on his left cheek is just visible in the first and fourth photographs.









 The Foundling Terracotta bust of Handel -The mole on his cheek is just visible.

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The Huntington Library Plaster Bust of Handel by Roubiliac.


Formerly in the Gambier Parry collection at Highnam Court in Gloucestershire 
and sold by auctioneers Bruton Knowles in 1971, acquired by the Huntington in 1972. 
















Plaster Handel Huntington Library - No mole on left cheek.

Malcolm Baker suggests perhaps on the basis of the socle that this is a late 18th century cast but this form of socle was commonly used from the mid 18th century.


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The 1762 Roubiliac Sale Handel Busts.

There were 5 Plaster busts, a terracotta and two moulds included in the sale .

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Further references to the busts of Handel in the 18th and 19th centuries.

John Blackwood. Feb 1788, lot 1326 Roubiliac Marble busto of Handel.


John Stanley, Christie's 24 June 1786, lot 89, a remarkable fine bust, exquisitely modelled, by Roubiliac.







Morning Post and Advertiser 22 June 1786. 


This is a fascinating snippet which also refers to busts of Milton, Shakespeare and Handel exquisitely modelled by Roubiliac. The wording suggests that these three busts were terracottas modelled by Roubiliac. This is all the more remarkable in that John Stanley (1712 -1786) master of the Kings music was blinded in accident at the age of two. Stanley began a partnership with John Christopher Smith Jnr the former amanuensis of Handel after the death of Handel in 1760.



The snippet above probably refers to the Grimsthorpe terracotta bust of Handel, the other terracotta bust having most likely (I have no evidence)  been passed down through the family from Jonathan Tyers, proprieter of Vauxhall Gardens and the commissioner of the Vauxhall Gardens full length marble of Handel. Tyers was also sculpted by Roubiliac (terracotta in the Vand A, a marble version in Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery although the marble is disputed as being by Roubiliac.




John Stanley.

An engraving by James Macardell, after an Unknown artist.

Mezzotint, mid 18th century.

14 in. x 10 3/4 in. (356 mm x 274 mm) NPG.


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By and published by Thomas Gainsborough, after Mary Ann Rigg (née Scott).

Stipple engraving.

published 9 April 1781.

13 1/8 in. x 9 3/4 in. (333 mm x 247 mm) paper size.




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Handel by Francis Kyte, 1742, (194 mm x 168 mm).

The NPG suggest that this is a copy.

Very little is known about Kyte and this small portrait was probably copied from the engraving below.








 Height: 37.1 cm,  Width: 31.8 cm Print size,

Engraved portrait of Handel, 1738, engraved by Jacobus Houbraken (1698 - 1780), the frame by Hubert-Francois Bourguignon called Gravelot (1699 -1773). Gravelot was working in London (invited to help engraver Claude du Bosc) from 1732 - 45 and was a highly influential member of the St Martin's Lane Academy and the Old Slaughters coffee house set.

The mole on the cheek is just visible on the engraving, the oil portrait is a reversal of the engraving.

The National portrait Gallery website states "The engraving, hitherto associated with the 1769 edition of Judas Maccabeus, was advertised in The Country Journal, or The Craftsman for 22 April 1738: 'This Day is publish'd (And are ready to be deliver'd to the Subscribers for Alexander's Feast) A Print of Mr. Handel Engraved by the celebrated Mr Houbraken of Amsterdam. The Ornaments design'd by Mr Gravelot. Printed for John Walsh in Catherine-Street in the Strand.' This confirms conclusions reached on stylistic grounds, the squaring, in particular, indicating a copy. It also accords with the little we know of Kyte (fl.1710-45) and the improbability that Handel, by then so famous, would have sat to one so obscure".

The signed drawing for the cartouche by Gravelot is in the British Museum, unfortunately not dated but fascinating for the representation of the musician playing the lyre on a plinth which is very similar to the Vauxhall statue of Handel set up in 1738 but shows the musician in classical dress.

This might confirm the close links between the two Frenchmen and suggests that originally Roubiliac might have had other ideas for the Vauxhall statue of Handel.

The NPG goes on to suggest that the prototype was painted abroad, though a small enough portrait could have been taken to Amsterdam. Handel was in Aachen for the waters in September 1737, returning at the end of October or the beginning of November.

Houbraken collaborated with the historian Thomas Birch and artist and engraver George Vertue on the project entitled, Heads of Illustrious Persons of Great Britain, published in parts in London from 1735 to 1743. Number 1 dated 1735, Thomas Duke of Norfolk, in total 108 heads (Kerslake page 130)









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 It is signed Houbraken, Amsterdam.

perhaps suggesting that the portrait itself was separately engraved in Amsterdam.



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Wednesday, 24 June 2015

Bust of Handel by Roubiliac "By Heaven Inspired".



A Marble Bust of Handel "by Heaven Inspired".

By Louis Francois Roubiliac.

Lot 179, Sotheby's London, 9 July 2015.


I have written at length on the subject of the Handel Busts and intend to publish more images on this blog in the near future. For immediate access to my previous blog entry see -

http://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.co.uk/2014/01/asummary-of-researches-into-bust-of.html

I have also referred to these busts in several other posts.


Possibly the ‘remarkable fine bust of [Handel], exquisitely modell’d by Roubiliac’ in a sale of 1766.

 Possibly lot 35 on the second day (21 February) of the John Blackwood sale at Christie’s in 1778, ‘Roubiliac, marble busto of Handel, on a pedestal’.

In the Collection of Alfred Morrison (1821-97), at Fonthill House, Wiltshire, and 16 Carlton House Terrace, London, from c. 1860- 1897.

By descent to his widow, 16 Carlton House Terrace, London.


































Above images from Sotheby's London.

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 In 1741 George Vertue, the 18th-century chronicler of the arts, recorded that 'Mr. Rubbilac Sculptor ... had Modelld from the Life several Busts of portraits extreamly like ... Mr. Isaac Ware Architect Mr Handel - &c. and several others' -

Walpole Society, XXII (1933-4), Vertue Notebooks, 2, p105, also quoted in Katharine A.Esdaile, The Life and Works of Louis Francois Roubiliac, Oxford, 1928, p47.


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Literature.
David Wilson, ''By Heaven Inspired': A marble bust of Handel by Roubiliac rediscovered', The British Art Journal, vol. X, no. 1, 2009, pp. 14-29;

An excellent piece of research which covers most of the ground, marred only by David Wilsons suggesting that this and other busts are based on a life mask taken of Handel by Roubiliac prior to the Vauxhall Gardens statue of 1738, and the contemporary busts sculpted in terracotta and marble and manufactured in plaster by Roubiliac. I have written about these so called life masks in a previous post on this blog and have come to the conclusion that these masks were taken from a plaster by Roubiliac. The first published reference to these masks was on the 19th July 1834 in the Mirror.

The link below is for the full article but without photographs.-


In M. Baker, The Marble Index. Roubiliac and Sculptural Portraiture in Eighteenth-century Britain, New Haven and London, 2014, p. 259 and note. 63.

 Malcolm Baker dismisses this bust as "a puzzling newly discovered marble bust" and refers to David Wilsons article in the British Art Journal. I find it really very puzzling that Mr Baker was unable to make any further comments about this bust or to enlarge on the points made in David Wilson's article.
He had certainly not seen either the Grimsthorp Castle or Gloucester Cathedral Busts.
 Given that he was supposed to be publishing at length on the portrait sculpture of Handel this appears to be an important omission. 

I intend to delve further into the history and manufacture of these busts in some depth in the near future and to provide photographic comparisons of the various versions.

David Hunter, Lives of George Frideric Handel, future publication, references to this bust are to be included.


The Vauxhall Handel by Roubiliac



The Vauxhall Gardens Statue of George Frederick Handel of 1738.
by Louis Francois Roubiliac.




Newspaper clipping from the London Daily Post and General Advertiser, 18 April 1738.


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News[paper clipping from London Daily Post and General Advertiser 27 April 1738.

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The Roubiliac Statue of Handel photographed by the Author at the Victoria and Albert Museum 23 June 2014.

Signed - LF Roubiliac IN "ET SCUL" 1738.











































































































Classified ad from London Evening Post 8 July 1738.

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The following was lifted from the V&A collections website see -




The Statue was commissioned by Jonathan Tyers (also sculpted by Roubiliac) and placed in the pleasure Gardens at Vauxhall in 1738 in a Grand Niche, in the Grove, where it remained for nearly 80 years. 










Undated drawing of the statue of Handel at Vauxhall Gardens attributed to Edward Francis Burney (1760 - 1848). It appears to show the statue underneath a domed rotunda.
Yale Center for British Art, Gift of William Drummond.





The figure is last recorded in the Grove behind the Orchestra in 1813.

 Following the death of Tyers in 1767, management of the Gardens fell to his two sons, Thomas and Jonathan. In 1809 the gardens came into the possession of George Rogers Barrett and the Revd. Jonathan Tyers Barrett, D.D., and in 1818 on the death of George Barrett, the responsibility of the gardens passed to Dr Jonathan Tyers Barrett, whose attempt to sell the gardens in 1818 was unsuccessful.

Before the attempted  sale of Vauxhall Gardens, the 'Handel' was removed to the Stockwell home of George Rogers Barrett, shortly before his death. Around 1818 the figure passed to Jonathan Tyers Barrett, and was placed in the front hall of his house in Duke Street, Westminster.

The death of Tyers Barrett in 1830 resulted in the sale of the figure by Mr Christie, King Street, London on 28 April 1830, lot 80. The 'Handel' was again sold in 1833 by Mr Squibb of Savile Row to 'the sculptor and marble contractor', Joseph Brown of University Street, London, for £215 5s.

Purchased by the Sacred Harmonic Society from Joseph Brown in 1854 for 100 guineas; a pamphlet published by them in 1854 recorded its recent purchase. The marble plinth on which this figure is now displayed was almost certainly made at this time. The statue was displayed in the Society's offices in Exeter Hall, Strand, London until 1880 when it moved premises.

The figure was moved to the offices of Novello and Company at 1 Berners Street, London, as was later purchased by Henry Littleton, chairman of the company. It remained in his possession at his Sydenham home for about twenty years; it was then given by his son to Novello and Company, where it remained at 160 Wardour Street from about 1906 to 1964, until its purchase by the Museum in 1965. Purchased from Novello and Company Ltd in 1965 for £10,000 with assistance from the National Collections Fund.



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The Model of the Vauxhall statue of Handel by Roubiliac in the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge.
Terracotta, hand-modelled and fired, height 47.2cm, width 26.9cm, diameter 36.2cm, before 1738.

 There are two mentions in the mid Eighteenth Century London newspapers of plaster sculptures of Handel.

 Evening Post, 15th March 1751. "To be published by subscription, a figure in plaister of Paris of the celebrated Mr Handel, taken from the statue at Vauxhall. Conditions - the price to the subscriber is one guinea and a half; half a guinea to be paid at the time of subscribing, and the remainder on the delivery, which will be in May next. Subscriptions are taken at Mr Fosters on Ludgate Hill, where the model may be seen.




As far as I know no plaster casts of the Vauxhall statue have have come to light and perhaps this refers to another bust. 
Perhaps it is a coincidence but the fact that Fenwick bull was advertising a plaster bust of Handel in1758. 

Vertue described this terracotta maquette in 1751, as “the model in clay baked of Mr Handel done by Mr Roubiliac - the same from which the Foxhall statue in Foxhall Gardens was done….. this model near 2 foot high is in the possesion of Mr Hudson painter”.

 The Public Advertiser, 19th April 1758. An edition of thirty casts of a bust of Handel was advertised for sale by subscription by F. Bull. 

To the lovers of music particularly those who admire the compositions of Geo Frederick Handel esq. F.Bull at the White Horse Ludgate Hill, London having at Great expense procured a fine model of a busto of Mr Handel proposes to sell by subscription thirty casts in plaister of Paris. The subscription money which is to be paid at the time of subscribing, and for which a receipt will be given, is one guinea and the cast in the order in which they are finished and will be delivered in the order in which the subscriptions are made. The busto which will make a rich and elegant piece of furniture... to be twenty three and a half high and eighteen inches broad. The model may be viewed until Monday next at the place above mentioned.


Fenwick Bull was a map and print seller at The White Horse, Ludgate Hill who married Elizabeth Foster of St Martin’s Ludgate Hill at St Georges Chapel, Mayfair – 25 March 1753.


George Foster (the father of Elizabeth Foster, wife of Fenwick Bull) - Publisher, printer, map-seller, bookseller, in London. was at the White Horse, St Paul's Churchyard (1737-9); and afterwards at the White Horse, Ludgate Hill (1741-7). information from Royal Academy.









This advertisement above from Evening Post, 12 July 1753.


For Vauxhall Gardens see - http://www.vauxhallgardens.com/index.html

Vauxhall Gardens, A History David Coke and Alan Borg, 2011. pub. Yale University Press. £55
ISBN 978 0 300 17382 6