Friday, 9 February 2018

Rysbrack's John Locke



John Locke.

The Busts and Statues.

by Michael Rysbrack.

____________________


John Locke.

Michael Rysbrack.

Portland Stone.

1729.

Life Size.

Temple of British Worthies, Stowe, Buckinghamshire.

For a detailed investigation of the portrait sculpture in Temple Of Worthies at Stowe see my post -

https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.co.uk/2015/07/temple-of-british-worthies-at-stowe.html































Photographs by the author.

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John Locke.

Michael Rysbrack.

Terracotta Bust..

Height 58.80 cm.

Put up for sale, Lot 276, Christie's King Street, 9 December 2010.





 Included in the sale was a letter From Rysbrack to his Patron Lord Littleton, dated 31 July 1756, Discussing The Delivery Of The Bust. 

The sitter facing slightly to dexter and with drapery about the shoulders.

Markings:
signed to the reverse 'Mich...Rysbrack 17..5'; 

The letter is inscribed: Sir./ I am heartily Sorry to Acquaint Your Honour, that I have not been able to do anything for you this Summer, having been so Extreamly busied, and really Sir when I am in my Room, I am always Indisposed, which makes me Chuse Excercise. The bust of Lord Bacon is not burned yet but I Shall Send it with that of Mr. Locke as Soon as it can be Spared, the Statue not being yet finished; I Shall have a Great Pleasure in Seeing you before I send any of the Other Busts, that You may give your Approbation Concerning them..... When I can possibly have an Opportunity to Begin the head of Sir Walter Raleigh I will take it in hand, but it is one of the Most Difficult in your Whole list to make it do well. I am Sir London With the Greatest Respect Vere Street (3 Vere St) Your Honour's Oxford Chapel most Obedient July 31st. 1756. humble Servant Mich: Rysbrack.

Condition -
minor firing cracks, damages and old restorations; minor staining and damages to the letter


Literature -

K. Esdaile ed., The Art of John Michael Rysbrack in terracotta: illustrated catalogue, Spink and Son, London, 1932. M. I. Webb, Michael Rysbrack - Sculptor, London, 1954, pp. 117, 169, 193-197 and 220. K. Eustace, 'The politics of the past - Stowe and the development of the historical portrait bust', in Apollo, July, 1998, pp. 31-40.

Provenance-


Executed as part of a series of busts of historical figures for Rysbrack's patron Sir Edward Littleton in 1755. 

By descent until sold at Spink and Son, London, 1932. 

Purchased in the above sale by William, 6th Duke of Portland (1857-1943), and by descent.

This bust originally formed part of a series of 'worthies' created for one of Rysbrack's most loyal patrons, Sir Edward Littleton. Littleton had torn down his family seat, Pillaton Hall, and built a new one called Teddesley Hall near Stafford. 

In a series of letters written by Rysbrack to Littleton first reproduced in 1932 and subsequently published in 1954 (Webb, op. cit., pp. 194-209; one of the letters was that included in Christie's sale; the creation of this series for Teddesley is described in detail. 

In a letter dated 12 February 1756, Rysbrack says that he has completed busts of Milton, Sir Isaac Newton, Locke and Sir Francis Bacon, although they have not been sent because the Bacon '...must be Dried first, and afterwards burned which cannot be done till summer, it not Being half Dry Yet. (ibid, p. 195).' 

In July of that year the letter included in Christies sale of the Locke bust shows that the Bacon had still not been fired, but Rysbrack promised to send it along with the bust of Locke, as soon as the latter could 'be spared, the statue being not yet finished'. 

The reason he was unable to send the Locke, although finished, was that he used the bust as the model for his full length marble of Locke, commissioned for Christ Church, Oxford (in situ). 

The terracotta model for this statue is in the Victoria and Albert Museum (see below). In a letter dated 21 June 1757 Rysbrack informs his patron that 'I have according to Your Desire sent three Busts Yesterday by the Waggon namely, My Lord Bacon, Mr. Lock and Milton's, they are carefully packed up and I hope you will receive them Safe which will give me much satisfaction to hear...' (ibid, pp. 196-197).

The series of busts would eventually include Bacon, Sir Walter Raleigh, Shakespeare, Milton, Pope, Newton and Locke. These were supplemented by portraits of Sir Edward and Lady Littleton, Cromwell and the Duke of Cumberland, along with a terracotta model for Flora, and the terracotta model for the goat Rysbrack designed for Chiswick House, today in the gardens of Chatsworth, Derbyshire.


The busts, along with the letters relating to them, remained at Teddesley Hall until 1931, when Littleton's collateral descendant, Lord Hatherton, had them removed to London for cleaning. They were sold at Spink and Son after the exghibition in July 1932, at which point the bust of Locke was acquired by the Duke of Portland.

Spink's related illustrated catalogue by Mrs Arundell Esdaile ('The Art of John Michael Rysbrack in Terracotta') fully transcribes the letters and is otherwise comprehensive. She proposed that the undated one of Cromwell may have been the bust that Vertue saw in Rysbrack's workshop in 1732, which would make it the earliest. 


The National Maritime Museum, Greenwich - Caird Collection

The busts essentially comprised four pairs: Raleigh and Bacon, Shakespeare and Pope, Cromwell and Milton, and Newton and Locke. Lord Hatherton (the Littleton barony dating from 1835) consigned these -excluding Shakespeare- and other Rysbracks that his ancestor had purchased, with the related Rysbrack letters about them, to Spink's for exhibition and sale in July 1932. 



That of Shakespeare is unlocated but the V&A has one that may at least be a version. 

The National Maritime Museum's Raleigh and Bacon were conceived as a pair and the most expensive at 25 guineas each, it was not started until the Bacon had been sent off in June 1757: the others were all 16 guineas. 

These two, along with Rysbrack's Cromwell, were purchased for the Museum at Spink's by Sir James Caird.

The busts of Pope and Milton are now at the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge.
see my post - 

http://english18thcenturyportraitsculpture.blogspot.co.uk/2015/10/pope-by-rysbrack-in-fitzwilliam-museum.html

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John Locke
Michael Rysbrack
Signed Mich. Rysbrack and dated 1755.
Height 58.4 cms.

The Bozzetto/Maquette in the Victoria and Albert Museum.


In the Chapter Minutes for Christ Church College of 27 September 1754 it states "Willm Lock Esqre having intimated his intention of giving a statue of John Lock Esq., formerly a student of Christ Church and an ornament to this society, it is ordered that it shall be placed in any part of the library that Mr Lock shall think proper.

This Mr Lock claimed to be a relation of John Locke.

The maquette is dated 1755 which suggests that Rysbrack had been engaged for the project by late 1754 and is so close to the marble statue that it must be the final design.










Preparatory sketches by Michael Rysbrack for the Statue of John Locke on the staircase at Christchurch College Library, Oxford.

Image Courtesy Art Institute of Chicago.

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Possibly lot 56 ( a figure of Mr Lock for Oxford) in the second day's sale held on Rysbrack's retirement by Langford & Son, at their House in the Great Piazza, Covent Garden, London, 25 January 1766, under 'Models in Terra Cotta...A figure of Mr. Locke, for Oxford'. 

Included in the sale of Henry Farrer F.S.A. held at Christie, Manson & Woods, 8 King Street, London, 12 to 18 June 1866. Sold on the second day, 13 June 1866, lot 220, described as 'Statuette of Locke, holding a book', purchased by Mr A. Myers for 10s. 

Purchased by the Victoria and Albert Museum from Mr Myers in 1867 for £4 4s. Myers purchased the terracotta model of Shakespeare by Roubiliac from the same sale, which was also acquired by the Museum (V&A Mus. No. 32-1867).

Victoria and Albert Museum

http://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O127061/john-locke-model-rysbrack-john-michael/

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John Locke.

Michael Rysbrack

The Full Length Marble Statue.

The Public Advertiser 20 January 1757/8 states 'A fine statue of that great and learned man Mr Lock, who was educated at Christ Church, Oxon is finished by Mr Rysbrack, to be sent to that university'.

There is no record of what Mr Lock paid for the statue but there is a bill in Rysbrack's hand for the pedestal.



                                                                                                                                       Dr to
                                                                                                                        Michl Rysbrack Statuary
1759                                                                                                                                          £. s.  d.
May 21st   On an agreement for a pedestal of marble for the 
                  statue of the late learned John Locke
                  The Base and Cornice of vein'd Marble and the die
                   of Statuary Marble, for the sum of                                                                         32  0  0

                  ft.  in.
                 110  6  Superficial Christiana Deals, for Boxes for the 
                             Pedestal at 5d pr foot                                                                                      2  6  0

                 No. 38 Iron Cramps for to secure the Boxes at 4d each

                 Carriage of the 
                 Pedestal and Boxes to Oxford Weight 21 st. 3. 6                                                        3  13  6
                                                                                                                               __________________

                                                                                                                                         Total £38  12  2.






















Photographed by the Author.

This statue was very difficult to photograph given its position in the niche over the staircase.

With many grateful thanks to the Librarians at Christ Church college Library, Oxford
for making me feel so welcome.

Thursday, 8 February 2018

Bust of Locke from Queen Caroline's Hermitage by Guelfi.


The Bust of John Locke (1632 - 1704).
from Queen Caroline's Hermitage.
By
Giovanni Battista Guelfi (1691 - left England in 1734).

The Hermitage was built in 1731 and demolished in 1775.

Ordered in 1731- put in position in the hermitage shortly before August 1732 (Gentleman's Magazine).


There is no record of a specific payment to Guelfi for the first four busts for Queen Caroline's Hermitage, of Sir Isaac Newton, John Locke, Dr Samuel Clark or William Woolaston but he was paid for the bust of Boyle which completed the project and was placed in the grotto before April 1733 (Gentleman's Magazine).

 He received £68 by the Paymaster of Richmond Old Lodge "for the busto of the Honbl Robert Boyle in statuary marble with a neck of veined marble & for carriage & for repairing the antique statue of Venus"

George Vertue in his notebooks III wrote in 1731 "Four busts of stone are to be made by Snr Guelphi a sculptor for the Queens....at Richmond Sr I Newton, Lock Dr Clark and Mr Woolaston. This Sg Guelpha works under the direction of Mr Kent at the house of Lord Burlington"

Francis Walsingham wrote in the newspaper the Free Briton, no 195, 16 August, 1733, praising Queen Caroline as a patron of the arts and in particularl sculpture "her peculiar affection to this country whilst Bacon and Boyle Sir Isaac Newton and Dr Clarke, Lock and Wollaston employ the hand of Rysbrack and are placed in her majesty's grotto not even her own Liebnitz is allowed a place there"

Three weeks later the Grub Street Journal, no. 193, 6th September 1733, corrected this error pointing out that Walsingham had "made several historical mistakes and one egregious blunder which overturns his whole panegyric and entirely destroys the reputation in the art of statuary. For in order to do honour to Mr Rysbrack he has attributed to him the bustoes in her majesties grotto which unfortunately happen to be the work of another, and as some think a much inferior hand".

Unfortunately George Vertue (notebooks III p. 66) repeats the error made by the Free Briton, listing 6 busts - this has lead to the erroneous assumption that the five busts were made by Rysbrack - although a bust of Bacon was noted in the Free Briton it appears that it was never made.
There is a stone version of the Guelfi bust Newton at Scone Palace left to William Murray Lord Mansfield by Alexander Pope



Rysbrack states in the postscript of a letter of 20 January 1756 to Sir Edward Littleton" Sir I did not make the bust of Dr Clark in the Hermitage. It was done by Mr Ghuelphi an Italian who is dead"





For an in depth look at Queen Caroline's Hermitage and its sculptural program see -

https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.co.uk/2015/08/queen-carolines-hermitage-at-richmond.html

For some reason the myth that MichaelRysbrack was responsible for these four busts and the slightly later bust of Boyle has continued to be promoted despite ample evidence to the contrary; particularly in the actual carving of these busts which bears no resemblance to the very fine work of Rysbrack.

It is surprising that Guelfi managed to remain employed given the poor quality of his work .

Malcolm Baker in The Making of the Wren Library, ed. David McKitterick, Cambridge University Press 1995, repeats this 'egregious blunder'.





Bust of John Locke
John Faber the Younger
Mezzotint
345 x 250 mm
British Museum.




John Locke by Guelfi
Height 58 cms excluding the socle.
The socle is 19th Century
c. 1731 - 2.
Now in the Privy Chamber, Kensington Palace.






One of the five busts commissioned from Guelfi for Queen Caroline’s Grotto at Richmond,. 

A plaster in Trinity College, Cambridge, is described as a version of the bust of Locke formerly in the Richmond Grotto (M. Baker, ‘The Portrait Sculpture’ in D. McKetterick ed., The Making of the Wren Library, Trinity College, Cambridge, 1995, p 117n32) but this is erroneous.

He was in good company, Mrs Webb in  Michael Rysbrack, Sculptor pub. Country Life 1954, makes the same error despite publishing the letter from Rysbrack, to Sir Edward Littleton refuting his workmanship (see above).

Milo Keynes in his Iconography of Sir Isaac Newton...pub Boydell 2005 and subsequently Gordon Balderston in the Sculpture Journal of 2008, both present the evidence that the busts for Queen Caroline's Hermitage were definitely by Guelfi and not by Rysbrack.










So that there can be no mistake - this photograph illustrates that the bust from Queen Caroline's Hermitage is nothing like the plaster bust in the Wren Library.

The terracotta prototypes of the busts made for Queen Caroline's Hermitage were once owned by William Kent who bequeathed them to Lady Isabella Finch - unfortunately they have now disappeared.

____________________________________







John Locke.
Michael Rysbrack
Portland Stone.
in the Temple of Worthies Stow House, Buckinghamshire.



___________________________



John Locke
Michael Rysbrack
Terracotta bust.
c. 1755.

This is perhaps a prototype for the full length marble at Christ Church College, Oxford
(see my next post).


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John Locke
attributed to John van Nost I.
Early 18th Century.
Lead on stone socle.
Height 73.7 cms.
Yale Centre for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection

Included here to illustrate the closeness to the Rysbrack terracotta.

Some Plaster Busts of John Locke by and after John Cheere



Some Plaster Busts of John Locke 
by and after John Cheere.


This post is part of a much wider study into the portrait sculpture at Oxford University, with particular reference here to the lead Cheere type bust of John Locke at The Bodleian Library and the marble bust after Roubiliac by Edward Hodges Baily at Magdalen College, Oxford.

I am very grateful to Dana Josephson for suggesting the project and for all his assistance.

I would also like to thank Dr Nicolas Bell of the Wren Library, Sir David Clary, Lady Heather Clary and Rachel Mehtar at Magdalen College Oxford and Stephen Hebron of the Weston Library for making thse posts possible.

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 The Wren Library, Trinity College, Cambridge, Plaster bust of John Locke.

Probably by John Cheere.

Height approx 60 cms. without the socle.

This bust is one of  the set of 26 plaster busts supplied and now consisting of 12 ancient and 11 modern authors all placed on top of the bookcases in the Wren Library.

I will be posting in much more depth on this set of busts almost certainly by John Cheere in due course.

Gifted to the Library by Dr Francis Hooper.

The Wren Library plasters were probably supplied by John Cheere some time after 1753 - they are noted in a guide of 1763. Unfortunately there is no record of their purchase

There are also two painted wooden busts of Anacreon and Ben Jonson on top of the bookcases at the Wren Library, these are possibly from an earlier scheme and attributed to Grinling Gibbons; and two later plaster busts one of  Dr Francis Hooper, by an unknown sculptor and the other of Professor Richard Porson by Giovanni Domenico Gianelli, dated 1808.




















2. The Bodleian Lead bust and the Wren Library Plaster for comparison 
see my previous post.

All photographs by the author with grateful thanks to Dr Nicolas Bell of the Wren Library

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John Locke
Cheere type.
Plaster bust.
About half life size.
West Wycombe Park.

Although not visible in these photographs the socles of all these busts have a raised panel on the front.

One of a set of four busts of Milton, Pope, Newton, and Socrates.


I will post more details and photographs of these busts in the future.
Photographed by the author.

With many thanks to Sir Edward Dashwood for allowing me access and to photograph the sculpture at West Wycombe Park.


_____________________________________________



A Smaller version of the Cheere type bust of John Locke.




















Plaster bust of John Locke
Cheere type
overall height 53.3 cms

Attributed by the Museum to John Cheere.
Yale Centre for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection.

http://collections.britishart.yale.edu/vufind/Record/1666410

This type of plaster busts is very difficult to date without a firm provenance.
This could easily be one made by an Italian immigrant plaster caster from the Leather Lane area
in the mid 19th century London. In this case I think the panelled socle and open back are consistent with 18th century manufacture. It would benefit from having thee thick over painting removed.
_______________________________



A bust of Locke by Richard Parker c.1770 was at Ashburnham Place, among a set of library busts based on works by Roubiliac and Rysbrack. 

This information from - needs to be verified.



https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/personExtended/mp02773/john-locke?tab=iconography


____________________________________






Charles Harris of the Strand Catalogue of 1777.
showing a bust of Locke - 24 inches (Pouces)

For a complete copy of the catalogue see my post -

 http://english18thcenturyportraitsculpture.blogspot.co.uk/2016/01/charles-harris-catalogue.html


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Shout of Holborn Catalogue of c. 1801 - 24 showing that they supplied busts of Locke in at least two sizes.

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John Locke
Plaster
Probably 19th Century.
The Vyne Hampshire 
National Trust



From their website no size given

Images - The Vyne © National Trust / Mark Scott.

_____________________________________________





John Locke
Plaster Bust

Victoria and Albert Museum

Another of the smaller Cheere type busts

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John Locke
Plaster Bust
Cheere Type with embroidered waistcoat.
Life Size.
supplied in 1830 at a cost of £1. 10s.
Inscribed Sarti
Athenaeum Club, London.

For much more on the series of  Busts by Sarti at Athenaeum Club in a piece by John Kenworthy Brown see -

https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.co.uk/2017/05/two-mysterious-plaster-busts-probably.html


___________________________________








John Locke
Plaster Bust
Wimpole Hall, Cambridge
Inscribed Sarti
c 1830

___________________________





John Locke
Bronzed Plaster
Life Size

One of a set of four - Locke and Milton as the Wren Library Plasters, Newton after Rysbrack, Dryden after Scheemakers .


John Kenworthy Brown says that these busts are first Listed on an inventory of 1782.

Kenworthy Brown has done a very thorough job of researching the Plaster busts by Pietro Sarti at the Athenaeum Club see -

see http://www.victorianweb.org/sculpture/athenaeum/britishworthies.html

Hopefully the reference in the inventory of 1782 has not confused these busts with the smaller busts of Milton, Pope, Newton and Socrates also at West Wycombe (see above).

This reference needs to be confirmed - the socle with the eared support seen here (which is based on a classical precedent, much used by Cavaceppi and later by Joseph Nollekens, appears on the later plaster busts by Shout of Holburn and Sarti (the Atheneum Busts were supplied in 1830).

It would be useful to know when this form of socle and base started to become current in English busts and might be useful for dating plaster busts without provenance.


Notable on this bust is the missing embroidery on the waistcoat.


Awful photograph taken by the author in almost complete darkness!

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The Studely Royal Plaster busts with a bust of Locke over the doorcase.

Currently no direct evidence but this series has Cheere type busts with the early panelled square based socles

Inigo Jones
Unidentified possibly a version of Fletcher or Ben Jonson.
Locke
Alexander Pope
Palladio
Congreve
Unidentified
Shakespeare

Studeley Royal, Yorkshire, country house destroyed by fire in 1946.

Image from Country Life Images.

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John Locke
Plaster bust
Inscribed Shout of Holburn

at Sudbury Hall, Derbyshire.

Sudbury Hall © National Trust / Ian Buxton & Brian Birch

For more on the Scheemaker busts of Locke see my later post.
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The Wedgwood Busts of Locke
Just to confuse there are two distinct types




John Locke 
Cheere type
Wedgwood Black Basalt.
Mid 19th Century.





Wedgwood and Bentley List of Busts 1777.
including the bust of Locke.












___________________________




John Locke
Wedgwood and Bentley
Black Basalt
Height 242 mm.

Incised mark Locke, Wedgwood and Bentley
1775.


Information and photograph from - The Wedgwood Museum.
see -

http://www.wedgwoodmuseum.org.uk/collections/collections-online/object/library-bust-of-john-locke

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The Source for this bust appears to be an unsigned ivory attributed to David Le Marchand in the Thompson Collection in the Art Gallery of Ontario.(below).





John Locke attributed to David le Marchand.
Height 18.5 cms.

Image from -

https://ago.ca/collection/object/agoid.29493#


 For an in depth study of le Marchand see - Charles Avery - David le Marchand, 1674-1726: 'an ingenious man for carving in ivory', pub. Lund Humphries, London, 1996.




The  Ivory bust of John Locke by Le Marchand,
215 mm.

This photograph was taken when the bust was lent to the Victoria and Albert Museum for study in 1936.

The pair to Rapers bust of Newton by le Marchand.

Provenance: The Raper family, Alfred Morrison, Mrs Michael Wright, 3 Barton St London, SW1. (1936).



Now paired with the bust of Isaac Newton.
20 cms
Purchased from Alfred Speelman in 1953
Collection of Lord Thompson of Fleet.
Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, Canada.




_____________________________














John Locke
John Cheere type
Plaster
57 cms

The nose has received some surgery

Sold at Lyon and Turnbull Auction.
Lot 196 ,  31st January, 2018.

Images kindly supplied by Lyon and Turnbull.

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John Locke 
19th Century Plaster bust.
Inscribed on the back L. Bruciotti, Leather Lane, 1853.
Plaster
Height 58.5 cms

Westenholz Antiques.

Bruciotti was one of several Italian manufacturers of plaster casts of variable quality who lived in the Leather Lane area of London in the mid 19th century.

Photograph from -

https://westenholz.antiquitylive.com/items/a-19th-century-plaster-bust-of-john-locke-16321704-inscribed


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