Tuesday, 4 August 2015

Notes on Giovanni Battista Guelfi (1691/2 - 1734).



Post adjusted 26 August 2024.


Giovanni Battista Guelphi (Guelfi) (1691/2 - 1734).

see also-


For the Pomfret busts in the Ashmolean, Oxford see-

(definitely not  by Guelphi).



This summation of his life and works lifted from -



The quotations in italics are mine.

An Italian sculptor, he spent a long period in England where he enjoyed the protection of Lord Burlington, the ‘architect earl’ for about 14 years. Vertue’s short account of the sculptor, which suggests an irritation with the Italian’s imperious manners, provides the best insights into the English phase of his career.

 John Bridges, the Northamptonshire antiquary, recorded that Guelfi’s family came from Bergamo in Lombardy and that he was trained in Rome under Camillo Rusconi (1658-1728). Rusconi was a leading practitioner of the late baroque style and under him Guelfi must have developed his skills as a modeller, and was perhaps employed on the lucrative business of restoring antique sculpture. His name is recorded during the years 1714 -1720 in the Stato delle Anime, S Andrea delle Fratte, Rome, the area around the Spanish Steps favoured by artists and English collectors. 

Vertue suggests that he was ‘encouragd. or brought to England’ by Burlington (Vertue III, 50-51), but it is possible that Lord Leominster, later 1st Earl Pomfret, who was in Rome in 1718 and became his first certain patron in England, was responsible for Guelfi’s journey north. William Kent, the painter and architect most closely associated with Burlington, was also in Rome in 1718 and that year painted a canvas for Leominster. Kent may have acted as an intermediary between Burlington and Guelfi. The patron was back in England by July 1720 and Guelfi followed a few months later.

 Leominster had inherited a number of the ancient Arundel Marbles, which he displayed in the gardens of his Northamptonshire seat, Easton Neston, and Guelfi was given the task of restoring them (8). Bridges visited Easton Neston in July 1721 and noted ‘In a corridor or room adjoining to ye South end of ye H[ouse] I saw 15 statues ... I found an Italian employ[e]d by this pre[sent] Lord L[eominster] in making perfect those statues maimed. Si chiama Gio. Battista Guelfi ...’ (Bodleian, Bridges, Top. Northants f.1.60a). 

Horace Walpole condemned the results: ‘the best of the collection are those which he restored the least. He misconceived the original character of almost every statue which he attempted to make perfect, and ruined the greater number of those he was permitted to touch’ (Anecdotes,1876, III, 40).


 It is not clear what other sculpture Guelfi provided for Burlington. Vertue wrote that he was ‘continually almost employed for him several years’ (Vertue III, 73-4) working both at Burlington’s London house and at Chiswick Villa where he carved many statues (10). Faulkner’s guide, published in 1845, mentions that Guelfi’s statues of Venus and Mercury were then in the Gallery (11), together with two little heads (15).

 Guelfi’s most influential work, the monument to Secretary of State, James Craggs, in Westminster Abbey was overseen by Alexander Pope, a member of Burlington’s inner circle. It was designed by the architect, James Gibbs, and broke new ground with its standing, cross-legged effigy, leaning against an urn. The pose, which has antique precedents, was later taken up by a number of other sculptors, notably William Woodman II, Michael Rysbrack, Peter Scheemakers, Henry Cheere and John Bacon RA. Pope superintended the design and its execution as well as providing the epitaph.

In a letter to the patron, Craggs’s sister, he pointed out that Guelfi was at a great disadvantage in not being able to work from the life since her brother had died before the commission came about. The critic, James Ralph, was uncharacteristically charitable about the result, admiring the ‘simple and elegant taste’ of the composition, but he felt that ‘if the face and head had been more finish’d, the whole [would have] been without blemish’ (Ralph 1734, 73). 

A curious terracotta statuette of Craggs with a detachable wax face has survived and appears to be the model for the effigy (Soane Museum - below).

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The Monument to James Craggs. Westminster Abbey.


Drawing attributed to James Gibbs possibly a preparatory sketch for the Craggs Monument carved by Guelfi in Westminster Abbey.







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I am very grateful to Stephen Astley of the Soane Museum, Lincolns Inn Fields, London for providing me with  the above photograph of the terracotta model with wax face of the figure of James Craggs Jnr for the monument in Westminster Abbey made by Guelfi.

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Autumn by Jacobus Sarazin an Engraving by P. Davet of 1642.









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Autumne.

 Jean Baptiste Haussard (printmaker (1680 - 1749) after Francois Verdier (1650 -1730).





Autumne.

 Jean Baptiste Haussard (printmaker (1680 - 1749) after Francois Verdier (1650 -1730).



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Leaning Satyr in the Musei Capitolini, Rome. 



The pose is perhaps, based on a version of the ancient statue of the Leaning Satyr in the Musei Capitolini in Rome thought to be a Roman copy of a bronze original by Praxiteles. There are many versions of this statue.









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Roman statue of the Resting Satyr, Prado, Madrid.







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Low resolution photograph of the James Craggs Jnr. Monument in Westminster Abbey.

Permission is not currently granted for photography in Westminster Abbey (2015).







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Mezzotint by Simon after Kneller of James Craggs Jnr. - 1720.





For an excellent in depth biog. of Craggs see -


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Guelfi worked on a number of monuments for patrons linked to Burlington by family ties or a shared interest in Palladian architecture. Several of these memorials were designed by Kent (3, 5, 7), and most of Guelfi's monuments had busts set off by a variety of architectural grounds (4-7).



In at least one case Guelfi was responsible only for the bust (7), of characteristically elongated form, with the ‘vacuous expression common to all Guelfi’s portraits’ (Grove 13, 782). The sculptor’s most ambitious and successful monument outside London, to Thomas Watson Wentworth (3), is undocumented, but signed Guelfi Romanus fecit. Kent’s elegant design made use of a pyramidal ground (now missing) above a double plinth: a satisfying inner triangle is formed by his effigy, which stands to the left of a central urn and his wife’s seated image at the right.










The Engraving by George Vertue of the monument in York Minster of the Earl of Malton by by Guelfi.

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Guelfi (not) at Great Gaddesden.

Probably Henry Cheere and his workshop.

The busts are very fine and need to be investigated further



A number of other monuments have been attributed to Guelfi by Margaret Webb, notably three to members of the Halsey family at Great Gaddesden, Herts, Thomas (†1715), Anne (†1714) and Jane (†1725). 

She also credits him with the memorial to Brigadier Michael Richards (†1721) at St Luke, Charlton, London.

The form of the socle is suggestive of the work of Henry Cheere.




















The Halsey Monuments attributed to Guelphi by Mrs Webb.

(probably not by Guelfi - far too good and their necks are in proportion!)

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 Among Guelfi’s documented memorials is the trio raised under the terms of the will of Katherine, 6th Countess of Westmorland (†Feb 1730) to members of her family (4-6). These were probably made in 1731 and they all have portrait busts, set either in an architectural frame (5) or more elaborately treated with a tent-like canopy (4, 6). The first of the series was probably that commemorating Lady Westmorland’s parents, Thomas and Katherine Stringer (5) and was the subject of correspondence from John Fane of Mereworth, who negotiated prices on Westmorland’s behalf. Fane approached Guelfi and also Rysbrack, the Italian’s chief rival in London, for estimates calculated on a design by Kent. Guelfi indicated that the two proposed busts would cost about £30 each; Rysbrack apparently rejected Kent’s drawing, substituting ‘a very bad one’ of his own with an estimate of £155. Guelfi won the contract despite raising his price in a detailed estimate communicated by Fane on 5 September 1730, which set a fee of £70 for the busts and £100 for ‘the back part’ (Westmorland Papers fol 99). Westmorland’s accounts itemise a first payment of £150 to Guelfi on 26 March 1731 and three weeks later, on 16 April 1731, another first payment of £100, for the monument to Lady Westmorland’s first husband, Richard Beaumont (4) (ibid, fol. 95).

The success of these monuments probably led the Duke of Richmond, whose Northamptonshire estates adjoined Westmorland’s, to commission a monument for his mother (7), again designed by Kent, with a bust by Guelfi, conspicuously signed Joannes Baptista Guelfi, Romanus fecit. The delicate terracotta model survives as evidence of Guelfi’s skill with the medium. The less familiar London sculptor John Boson (or Bossom), was called in to carve the surround, presumably because Guelfi had returned to Rome.

Guelfi was probably introduced to the court by Kent, who was master carpenter in the office of works from 1726. In 1727 the sculptor received an unusual commission, to carve chandeliers for the sumptuous festivities which were held in Westminster Hall at the coronation of George II (17). A number of other payments are recorded to him in the royal accounts between 1730 and 1733, all associated with Richmond Lodge, a favourite summer residence of the King and particularly of Queen Caroline. In 1730 a library was added to the Lodge with a chimneypiece decorated on the cross-member with three masks by Guelfi. New work was under way late in 1730 on a rustic grotto in the gardens containing 3 graceful rooms, one of them a library dedicated to quiet meditation. Here Queen Caroline planned to install a series of busts of her particular pantheon of scientists and philosophers, Newton, Locke, Clarke, Woolaston and Boyle (14). Four were destined for niches and the fifth, Boyle, was to be on a pedestal in the farthest recess. In 1731 Vertue noted that 4 (he did not list the Boyle) were to be carved in stone by Guelfi and a payment of £160 4s, made in December 1731, probably relates to the 4 terracotta models, which later came into Kent’s possession and were bequeathed to Lady Isabella Finch. A stone bust of Newton which belonged to Pope (13) was probably part of this commission but was rejected when the Queen changed her mind and decided to have the busts carved in marble. The bust of Sir Francis Bacon, whose authorship is undertain, was the last addition, provided in 1733. An assertion by Sir Francis Walsingham in the Free Briton that Rysbrack was the sculptor of the busts was vigorously refuted in the Grub-Street Journal: ‘For in order to do honour to Mr Rysbrack, he [Walsingham] has attributed to him the bustoes in her Majesty’s Grotto; which unfortunately happen to be the Work of another, and as Some think, a much inferior Hand’ (G-St J 193, 6 Sept 1733).

 Burlington’s patronage of Guelfi came to an abrupt halt, and in 1734 the sculptor left England. Vertue reports a general view that ‘Burlington had parted with him very willingly’ and implies that his personality was the reason, describing him as 'a man of slow speech. much opinionated, [who] as an Italian thought no body coud be equal to himself. in skill in this country'. (Vertue III, 74). He drafted a will on 3 October 1734 in London, shortly before his departure, in which he directed that if he should die all of his goods held by a company in Leghorn, along with his possessions in London and Rome, should go to his brother Charles. He died in Rome in 1736.



Guelfi had arrived in London without assistants and he left no followers behind him. His success no doubt hinged on his glamorous background as an Italian, trained by Rusconi, championed by Burlington, the great arbiter of English taste, and lucky enough to work to designs by the two leading architects of the day. In 1720 there was a shortage of able sculptors in this country, but by the early 1730s the situation had changed and patrons no longer needed to rely on a man of difficult temperament, whose skills could be now matched by other immigrant sculptors who had settled in London.
IR
Literary References: Vertue III, 51,73-4; Faulkner 1845, 412; Anecdotes 1876, 3, 40; Esdaile 1948 (2), 317-21; Webb 1955 (1), 139-45; Gunnis 1968, 183; Physick 1969, 69; Friedman 1984, 102; Whinney 1988, 155-61; Penny 1992, 96; RG/JP, 4, 629-33; Bailey 1996, 54; Ingamells 1997, 780-1; Grove 13, 1996, 582-3 (Eustace) ; Giometti 1999, 26-43; Giometti 2000, 79-95; Balderston 2008, 83-88
Archival References: Westmorland Papers, misc vol 1, fol 94, 26 March 1731, fol 95, 16 April 1731
Wills: PROB 11/692 5 October 1738; Italian will proved in Rome 26 February 1736; William Kent, PROB 11/761

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The Monuments by Guelphi.

James Craggs Monument, Westminster Abbey, above.


1730. Earl of Warwick and Holland, St Mary Abbots, Kensington. - Ref. Charlotte, Lady Warwick, Tradesmen’s and other Accounts, 1703/4-1732 BL, MS, Eg.1,973; Whinney 1988, 161; Grove 13, 782




















1725 - 30. -Thomas Watson Wentworth, Lord Malton and his wife, York Minster. (images above).

1731. - Richard Beaumont, Kirkeaton, Yorks (see next entry).

1731 - Thomas and Katherine Stringer, Kirkthorpe. Commissioned by Thomas Fane, 6th Earl of Westmorland, under the will of his wife Katherine Stringer. In 1708 Fane married Katherine only daughter of Thomas Stringer who inherited her fathers estate at Sharlston Yorkshire, she died with no heirs 14 February 1730 - the last of the Stringers to perpetuate the memory of her family she stipulated the erection of monuments to her parents at Kirkthorpe her first husband Richard Beaumont at Kirkheaton and her distant cousin Colonel Thomas Stringer at Enfield. 

(Info Ref .Cristiano Giometti in The Lustrous Trade)

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1731 - Thomas Stringer Enfield, Middex. 

again commissioned by Thomas Fane, Earl of Westmorland (see above).

















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 Anne Duchess of Richmond, bust only monument designed by William Kent made by John Bosun. 

Terracotta in the Victoria and Albert Museum .

by 1734 -














by 1734 - Anne Duchess of Richmond, bust only monument designed by William Kent made by John Bosun. Terracotta in the Victoria and Albert Museum (above).






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Henrietta  Louisa  Fermor.


Dowager  Countess  of  Pomfret.


My humble opinion is that they are far too good to be by Guelfi.

It is my guess that they were done in France or Italy - the coloured marble socles are distinctly non English although of course they could be replacements.

I will publish much better photographs in a future post.

 Ashmolean Museum.


They say.............

This bust and the bust of her husband have until now been tentatively ascribed to Guelfi - probably because of his work for the family, butchering their antiquities at Easton Neston in the early 1720's.

The monument the Countess of Pomfret is at St Mary, Oxford and is by John Townsend IV ( Biog. Dictionary of Sculptors Roscoe et al).


Current thinking (until now) is Guelfi may have been responsible for the busts of the Earl and Countess of Pomfret (marble; Oxford, Ashmolean); if so, they are his finest works! 

Guelfi's known work is distinguished by its design, perhaps owing to his association with such architects as James Gibbs and William Kent, but dull in execution.


 He carved a number of funerary monuments, among which that to James Craggs (terracotta model, 1724, London, Soane Mus.; marble, erected 1727, London, Westminster Abbey), designed by Gibbs, was very influential; the cross-legged stance of the standing effigy of the deceased, which leans on an urn, was adapted by other sculptors in 18th-century England, most notably by Michael Rysbrack. Guelfi himself used the composition again for his monument to Thomas Watson Wentworth (Gestorben: 1723) (marble, c. 1731; York Minster), having already employed a variant of it in 1730 for that to Edward Greville, 7th Earl of Warwick (Gestorben: 1727) (marble; London, St Mary Abbots, Kensington). He also produced portrait busts for smaller monuments, including that to Anne, Duchess of Richmond (marble, 1734; Deene Park, Northants), also designed by Kent. The terracotta model (London, V&A) for this bust has the elongated form, blandly modelled features and vacuous expression common to all Guelfis portraits.


Saturday, 1 August 2015

Queen Caroline's Hermitage at Richmond and the 5 Marble Busts by Giovanni Battista Guelphi (1690 - 1736)


Queen Caroline's Hermitage at Richmond.







Drawing of Queen Caroline's Hermitage at Richmond by its designer William Kent.
Soane Museum. London.







Queen Caroline's Hermitage -














Detail of above engraving.

Frontispiece drawn by Gravelot and engraved by du Bosc, 1735.

The mezzotint engravings of the five busts below -

Royal Collection Trust / © HM Queen Elizabeth II, 2015.









An engraving of Richmond Gardens by John Roque c.1738, pub. by John Bowles at the Black Horse Cornhill. When Queen Caroline received Richmond Lodge as a dower house in 1727, she immediately engaged in the creation of one of the earliest English landscape gardens. This map provides us with a detailed layout of the estates of Richmond and Kew (owned by Frederick, Prince of Wales) and elevations of buildings and follies, such as Queen Caroline's Hermitage and Merlin's Cave, most of which were lost in the remodelling of the garden by 'Capability' Brown shortly after 1771 when he drew up the plans. see map The Royal Gardens of Richmond and Kew part of the Royal Manor of Richmond. Taken under the Direction of Peter Burrell Esqr his Majesty's Surveyor General, by Thos Richardson 1771.    
  
Size - 58.1 x 91.1 cm (sheet of paper).   

 Royal Collection Trust / © HM Queen Elizabeth II, 2015.









Detail of the Map above showing elevation and plan of Queen Caroline's Hermitage at Richmond.









Drawing of Queen Carolines Hermitage in Richmond Gardens
by Bernard Lens III (1682 - 1740) c.1735.

Royal Collection Trust / © HM Queen Elizabeth II, 2015.








A low resolution image of an as yet unidentified engraving.

It shows a bust of Queen Caroline flanked by two busts (Locke on the left) in an interior decorated with shells with an elevation of the Hermitage at Richmond beneath her bust with putti on the right holding a drawing of a plan and section of the Hermitage.










Crop from Image above.


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Interior of Queen Caroline's Hermitage Engraved by John Vardy
From - Some Designs of Mr Inigo Jones and Mr William Kent, 1745.










The Hermitage at Stowe designed by William Kent.



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The Busts by Guelfi in Queen Caroline's Hermitage - Mezzotints by John Faber Jnr. c 1736.



























Above - Engravings of the Marble busts by Giovanni Battista Guelphi
in Queen Caroline's Hermitage at Richmond engraved by John Faber. C.1736. 

Printed for Thomas Bowles in St Paul's Churchyard and John Bowles at The Black Horse in Cornhill.


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Marble Bust of William Wollaston (1659 -1724) by Giovanni Battista Guelphi (1690 - 1736).

Royal Collection Trust / © HM Queen Elizabeth II, 2015.

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Marble Bust of John Locke (1632 - 1704) by Giovanni Battista Guelphi (1690 - 1736).

Royal Collection Trust / © HM Queen Elizabeth II, 2015.






Marble Bust of Isaac Newton (1643 - 1727) by Giovanni Battista Guelphi (1690 - 1736).

Royal Collection Trust / © HM Queen Elizabeth II, 2015.


Marble bust of Samuel Clarke, DD, (1675 - 1729) by Giovanni Battista Guelphi (1690 - 1736).

Royal Collection Trust / © HM Queen Elizabeth II, 2015.

Marble Bust of Robert Boyle (1627 - 1691) by Giovanni Battista Guelphi (1690 - 1736).

Royal Collection Trust / © HM Queen Elizabeth II, 2015.



Guelphi - An Italian sculptor, he spent a long period in England where he enjoyed the protection of Lord Burlington, the ‘architect earl’ for about 14 years.



Guelphi worked in Rome in the workshop of Camillo Rusconi (1658  -1728), lived in Rome with his brother Carlo from 1714 until 1720 (at the Casa della Monache di Milano from 1716). 

John Bridges (notes for History of Northamptonshire in the Bodleian Library) met Guelphi at Easton Neston on 18 July 1721 and describes him in his notes as from Bergamo, Lombardy.
info - Giometti - The Sculpture Journal  (see below).

George Vertue’s short account of the sculptor in 1734, which suggests an irritation with the Italian’s imperious manners, provides the best insights into the English phase of his career.

'Signor Guelphi. Statuary. Sometime wrought under Cavalier Rusconi. Statuary of great reputation at Rome, from thence Lord Burlington encouraged. or brought him to England. he was sometime at Ld Pomfrets Eston Northampt imployed. repairing the Antique Statues. Arundel Collect. Afterwards Guelphi was much employed for many years. by Lord Burlington. in his house in London. & made many statues for his villa at Chiswick. being much continually almost employed bty him for several years. also several busts. he much commended him to the Nobility for an excellent sculptor. procured him many works to that of the Monument of Sec Craggs Westmint Abbey. he left England in 1734. after residing near 20 years. went to Bologna. a man of slow speech much opinionated. and as an Italian thought nobody could be equal to himself. in skill in this Country. yet all his works seem to the judicious very often defective. wanting spirit and grace. its thought that Ld Burlington parted him very willingly'. (my italics).


By the 4th August 1732 these busts had been placed inside the hermitage and suitable inscriptions were being sought as the Gentleman's Magazine had reported -

'Her Majesty having built a fine grotto at Richmond and adorned it with bustos Mr Locke, Sr Isaac Newton, Mr Woolaston an Dr Clark: it has been recommended to all the fine genii of two universities, and the schools of Eton and Winchester, and all the learned to compose a proper Latin inscription'.

The London Journal 26 August 1732 reports -
' The grotto or hermitage which her Majesty hath made at Richmond or, rather the bustoe's with which she has adorned that little rural temple, sacred to learning and virtue doth not reflect more honour on the memories of the deeds than glory on herself: for Locke, Newton, Clarke and Woolaston, were the glory of their country: they stampt a dignity on human nature: they were all well skilld in those arts which naturally tend to improve and exalt the mind, mend the heart or reform the life.

27th January 1733 The Weekly Miscellany published
'With inward grace more polite
The vaulted dome attracts the sight
Where as in disputation stand
For worthies from the sculptors hand
....
The chisel has such justice done
They reason and confute in stone'.

In February 1743 the bust of Boyle was set up in the place of honour, on a pedestal designed by William Kent in front of a golden sun, in the exedra in the Hermitage.

Sylvanus Urban pen name of Edward Cave (1691 - 1754) editor of the Gentleman's Magazine, April 1733, wrote,

'The 4 busts so often mentioned stand in niches at each quarter in the walls of the vaulted dome... but the bust of Mr Boyle stands higher than these on a pedestal, in the inmost and as it were the most sacred recess of the place; behind his head a large golden sun, darting his wide spreading beams all about and towards the others, to whom his aspect is directed. To the dome is an iron door by which you enter, on each side of it an apartment to which are iron rails; and each of these compartments is capable of receiving more busts'.

Edward Curll in The Rareties of Richmond: being exact description of the Royal Hermitage  and Merlins Cave...... 2nd edition 1736, describes entering the Hermitage -

' The entrance to this pile is adorned with a range of iron palisades finely gilt. A person attends to open the gate to all comers Upon entering you behold elevated on high, a very curious busto of the Honourable, and justly celebrated Robert Boyle Esq; incompassed with rays of gold And on each side of him below are Sir Isaac Newton, Mr Locke, Dr Clarke and Mr Woolaston....'

It was believed for a long time that the busts were by Rysbrack but Balderstone finally puts the argument to rest .

George Virtue had quoted in his manuscripts a statement to that effect by William Arnall who had published it in the Free Briton - it is firmly refuted in the Grub Street Journal Thursday 6th September 1733.

' an indigested heap of fly blown tautologies... there are several historical mistakes, and one egregious blunder which overturns his whole panegyric, and entirely destroys the reputation of his judgement in the art of statuary. For, in order to do honour to Mr Rysbrack, he has attributed to him
the bustos in her majesty's grotto; which unfortunately happen to be the work of another, and as some think a much inferior hand', (my italics).

So that clears that up!

Jonathan Swift Wrote on the Hermitage -

A place there  is, t'was purchased cheap
Thanks, Ormond, thy undoing
And there  they  build a mind heap
For all they build is Ruin!
Three holes there  are, thro which you see
Three seats  to set your Arse on
And idols four-, of wizards three
And one unchristian parson
in praise of Clarke (observe  the  joke!  )
writes ev'ry bard and gown
And Locke's the theme of courtly folk
who loved nor court nor crown.

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Stone Bust of Isaac Newton by Guelphi at Scone Castle.




This bust of Isaac Newton was bequeathed to William Murray, Lord Mansfield by Alexander Pope and is currently at Scone Castle.
Guelfi had a real problem with necks

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Bust of Boyle at the Royal Society of Chemistry. 













Bust of Robert Boyle now with the Royal Society of Chemistry.

Formerly with the Chelminski Gallery, Kings Rd, London.

Sold in 2002 or shortly after.


This bust has no provenance, although the gallery believed it to have come originally from Chiswick House, the Palladian villa of Richard Boyle, Third Earl of Burlington, I can find no references to it.

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The four terracotta busts by Guelfi in the Will of William Kent.



Will 17th October 1743 -

 I give and bequeath unto my friends hereafter named as follows....unto Lady Catherine Pelham the head of Edward Vi a busto.... My Lord Lovell (Thomas Coke) Inigo Jones and Palladio busts with wooden Terms .... unto Mr Brian Fairfax the two bustos of Shakespeare and Butler ..... to Lady Isabella Finch four heads bustos  Newton Clarke Lock and Woolaston to Mr Thomas Brian - Milton and Dryden Bustos with wooden terms to Mr Alexander Pope, Raphael head busto and the wooden term and the alabaster vase. To Mr Thomas Ripley the busto of Michael Angelos with wooden term.

Codicil, 10 April 1748 ....

I give and bequeath unto the right honourable Earl of Burlington my two Sienna Marble Vases enriched with vine leaves and grapes ... also the model of a sitting girl (by Mr Rusconi (Guelfi's master)... I also bequeath unto the right honourable the lady Isabella Finch my veined alabaster vas with brass ornaments .... gilt with vine leaves & together with my four models of Newton Locke Wollaston and Dr Clark.... unto his grace the Duke of Devonshire my statuary marble boar....unto his grace the Duke of Grafton the model of his late majesty (George I).

This codicil was written four days before his death.

Kent was at that time building the house at 44 Berkeley Square for Lady Isabella Finch.

As far as I know these 4 busts are still missing.

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The notes on this page build on the excellent research of Gordon Balderston, published in Vol 17.1 (2008) in the Sculpture Journal p. 83 - 'Giovanni Battista Guelfi: five busts for Queen Caroline's Hermitage in Richmond'.

For more on Guelphi and his early life and his restoration of some of the Arundel Marbles collected by Thomas Howard 2nd Earl of Arundel (1585 - 1646), these marbles had been aquired by Ist Lord Fermor from the Duke of Norfolk in 1691Guelphi was employed by Thomas Fermor, Lord Leominster at Easton Neston by July 1721 see -

Giovanni Battista Guelphi: New Discoveries. The Sculpture Journal Vol.3, 1999.

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Samuel Clarke by Jean Dassier. 1733.






Medallion of Samuel Clark
Bronze 43 mm
By Jean Dassier.  1733.
Rev: A student ascending a rocky path to the top of a mountain toward Truth pointing toward the radiated name of Jehovah, in Hebrew - QUO VERITAS VOCAT. (Where Truth Calls)

Notes - Dr. Samuel Clarke (1675-1729) was a theologian, mathematician and philosopher. He was educated at Caius college, Cambridge, where the philosophy of Descartes was the reigning system. Clarke, however, mastered the new system of Isaac Newton, whose views he helped spread. He chose to ground his opinions upon the result of his own researches, and, entering deeply into the study of religion and natural philosophy, to proceed in the path in which, he thought, the Truth called him to walk. In a lecture, published as A Demonstration of the Being and Attributes of God, Clarke attempted to prove the existence of God by a method "as near to mathematical as the nature of such a discourse would allow". In another on A Discourse Concerning the Unchangeable Obligation of Natural Religion, he argued that the principles of morality are as certain as the propositions of mathematics and thus can be known by reason unassisted by faith. These and similar views spurred vehement controversy among his fellow theologians. (Eisler)

Images and notes courtesy the excellent website of Ben Weiss.

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Samuel Clarke (1675-1729)  
Charles Jervas (c. 1675-1739)
c.1729 / 30.
Oil on canvas | 128.2 x 103.0 cm


Dr Samuel Clarke is known today as a footnote to Alexander Pope’s line ‘Nor in a hermitage set Dr. Clark’ (‘Epistle to Lord Burlington’, l 78), which criticised Queen Caroline for including Clarke in the company of Newton and others in her Hermitage at Richmond. In fact Clarke was a distinguished theologian, scholar, philosopher and natural scientist, who studied with Newton and corresponded with Leibniz. In his theological works he attempted to defend Anglican doctrine in a rationalist manner, making him an influential enlightenment thinker. Queen Anne made Clarke one of her chaplains in Ordinary and in 1709 he was made rector of St James’s Piccadilly. Queen Caroline’s admiration for him is demonstrated by the Hermitage and by this painting, with its eulogistic inscription written by Benjamin Hoadley (1676-1761), which was hung at Kensington Palace. Clarke is shown with a bust of Newton, below which are arranged four books: Bacon’s ‘Essays’, Boyle’s ‘Lectures’, Newton’s ‘Principia’ and ‘Optica’ (presumably Clarke’s Latin translation of his ‘Opticks’).

NB. A bust of Isaac Newton in the right background.

Notes and photograph from the Royal Collection Website -