Monday, 8 October 2018

Bust of James Lawes, Kingston Jamaica by John Cheere



The Hon. James Lawes. 
John Cheere
Marble Bust.

St Andrew Parish Church.
Halfway Tree, Kingston, Jamaica.








The St Nicholas Chapel (western wall) boasts an elaborate memorial to the Hon. James Lawes, son
of Sir Nicholas Lawes, a former Governor of Jamaica and benefactor who donated the intricate brass
candelabrum to the church. The Hon. James Lawes was only thirty-six years old when he died in 1733, and his widow, Elizabeth née Gibbons contracted John Cheere to provide the monument to him.

Previously Cheere had provided the monument to her mother Deborah Gibbons

One of the treasures of the church is the brass candelabrum by the west door which was donated in 1706 by Sir Nicholas Lawes. Sir Nicholas was later to become governor of Jamaica (1718-1722).

Elizabeth Lawes later Home, Countess of Home (née Gibbons; 1703/04 – 15 January 1784) was a Jamaican-English heiress. She was born in Jamaica in 1703 or 1704  She was the only child and heir of William Gibbons and his wife Deborah. William Gibbons was a West Indies merchant and one of the island's original English planters. Little otherwise is known of him. 

Her mother Deborah Favell was the daughter of John Favell, a member of Jamaica's Council and Assembly.

In 1720 Elizabeth, then approximately sixteen years old, was married to the twenty-three-year-old James Lawes, son of Sir Nicholas Lawes, the island's governor. Nicholas Lawes was also a wealthy planter who had introduced the island's first printing press as well as the planting of coffee from about 1718. 

James Lawes was perhaps the most eligible bachelor in Jamaica. He was often in dispute with the island's governor Henry Bentinck, 1st Duke of Portland (his father's successor to the post) and would not allow his wife to pay her respects. 

The Lawes eventually moved to London, where he received the post of lieutenant governor for the island. However, Lawes died in 1734, several months before he could officially begin the position. They had no children.


Elizabeth inherited a great fortune upon James' death, possessing a jointure of £7,000 and 5,287 acres. She also owned many prosperous Jamaican estates from her father.[10] She commissioned English sculptor John Cheere to construct a bust in her husband's honour. The resulting monument, the largest yet to be shipped to the West Indies, was placed in Lawes' home parish of Saint Andrew.

Already rich from her merchant father, she married James Lawes, the eligible son of Jamaica's governor, in 1720. They moved to London, and his death in 1734 left her a wealthy widow. Elizabeth married the spendthrift William Home, 8th Earl of Home in late 1742. He abandoned her soon after and she spent her next years living an extravagant lifestyle; Elizabeth earned the nickname "Queen of Hell" for her "irascible behaviour and lavish parties.


see - The Burlington Magazine Vol. 109, No. 773 (Aug., 1967), pp. 443-451+453

For Monuments in the Colonies see - Persuasion and Propaganda: Monuments and the Eighteenth-Century British Empire by Joan Coutu pub Mc Gill Queens University Press. 2006.



Thursday, 4 October 2018

Myddleton Monuments by Thomas Bushnell in St Mary's Church, Chirk



The Myddleton  Monuments at Chirk.
Monument to Thomas and Mary Myddleton
Elizabeth Myddleton
Sir Richard Myddleton


Extract from Tours in Wales by Thomas Pennant, 1810.



"The church of Chirk is dedicated to St. Mary; and was formerly an impropriation belonging to the abby of Valle Crucis. Within is a profusion of marble, cut into human forms, memorial of the later lords of the place, or their ladies. The best bust of Sir Thomas Middleton, with a peaked beard, long hair; armed: and by him is another of his lady, a Napier of Luton. Sir Thomas was a successful and active commander on the side of the parlement during the civil wars. Towards the end of his life, he found that he had undesignedly established a more intolerable tyranny than that which he had formerly opposed. In 1659, he took arms, in conjunction with Sir George Booth, in order to restore the antient constitution. Sir George was defeated by the vigilant Lambert; and Sir Thomas forced to take refuge in his castle, where, after two or three days shew of defence, he was constrained to surrender on such conditions as the conqueror was pleased to dictate. The family pedigree says that the castle was commanded by his son (afterwards Sir Thomas) when Lambert came before it.

THE other monuments are composed of large and very ill-executed figures of lady Middleton, wife to Sir Thomas Middleton baronet, son of the former. She was daughter of Sir Thomas Wilbraham of Woodhey; and died at the early age of twenty-two, in the year 1675.


SIR RICHARD MIDDLETON, and his lady, Frances daughter of Sir Thomas Whitmore of Buildas. He died in 1716; she in 1694. At their feet lies their son Sir William, the last baronet, who survived his father only two years, dying at the age of twenty-four.

On a small mural monument, is an elegant epitaph on Doctor Walter Balcanqual, a Scotch divine of distinguished character. In 1617, he was appointed master of the Savoy hospital, which he soon resigned in favour of the able but desultory Marc Antonio di Dominis, Archbishop of Spalatro, in reward for his conversion to Protestantism. In 1618, he was sent to represent his country in the famous synod of Dort. He was promoted to the deanery of Rochester; and, in 1639, to that of Durham; by his great loyalty, having rendered himself hated by his countrymen, he was, in 1645, obliged to take refuge in Chirk castle; but, sinking under the fatigue of journey, and severity of the weather, he died on Christmas-day. The epitaph was composed by Dr. Pearson bishop of Chester, at the request of Sir Thomas Middleton, by whom the monument was erected".


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Monument of  Thomas Myddleton and his second wife Mary
by John Bushnell 1677 (Chirk Castle Accounts).

St Mary's Church
Chirk


















Sir Thomas Myddleton (1586 - 1666).
Of Chirk Castle, County of Denbigh, Wales.





Sir Thomas Myddleton (1586 - 1666).
Robert Walker (1599 - 1658) (style of).
125.5 x 102 cms
Oil on canvas
Chirk Castle
Image courtesy Art UK.


https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/sir-thomas-myddelton-ii-15861666-99482





Sir Thomas Myddelton
 after Unknown engraver
pen and ink, (1647)
(283 mm x 222 mm).

© National Portrait Gallery, London


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Sir Thomas Myddelton 1666 and second wife Mary d. 1674 daughter of Sir Robert Napier of Luton Hoo, Beds

Sir Thomas was the oldest surviving son of Thomas Middleton (1560 - 1631 Lord Mayor of London and Stansted Mountfitchet, Essex (who bought Chirk Castle in 1595) by first wife Hester daughter of Sir Richard Saltonstall of London and South Ockenden and Suzanna Poyntz.

Sir Thomas m. 1 In 1612 Margaret daughter of George Savile of Wakefield who died in childbirth in 1613,

He matriculated at Queen's College, Oxford, on 22 February 1605, and became a student at Gray's Inn in 1607. He was knighted on 10 February 1617, and was Member of Parliament for Weymouth and Melcombe Regis, 1624–25, and for the County of Denbigh in 1625 and 1640–1648.

Elected Member of Parliament for Weymouth & Melcombe Regis in 1624-25 and for Denbighshire in1625 and 1640-48.  Thomas was the Parliamentarian counterpart of Lord Capel as regional Lieutenant-General to govern and direct military operations in North Wales and the Northern Marches.  However, his appointment was in name only because the region was entirely under Royalist control. Even Middleton’s estate at Chirk Castle in Denbighshire was in enemy hands after its capture in a Royalist raid in mid-January 1643.

 When Major General Myddleton arrived in the region to take up his appointment in August 1643 with troops and artillery from London, he went to Nantwich in Cheshire to join forces with Sir William Brereton, the Parliamentarian commander of Cheshire, Shropshire, Lancashire and Staffordshire, to threaten the Royalists on the northern Marches. They besieged Eccleshall Castle in Staffordshire, which Lord Capel had garrisoned at the beginning of the war, and captured it on 29th August. Brereton and Middleton were then joined by Colonel Thomas Mytton with a regiment of foot from London and marched unopposed into Wem on 11 September, proceeding to garrison and fortify the town. 

In mid-October, Lord Capel took to the field at the head of a force of around 4,000 men and six cannon. With most of Brereton's forces concentrated around Wem in Shropshire, Capel advanced from Shrewsbury on the Parliamentarian headquarters at Nantwich in Cheshire. However, the advance faltered when the Royalists were attacked by troops from the Nantwich garrison at nearby Acton. On learning of the Royalist advance, Brereton and Middleton hurried back towards Nantwich with the bulk of their forces, leaving Colonel Mytton with a garrison of 300 foot at Wem. They missed Capel since he fell back to Whitchurch, then made a bold dash on Wem with the intention of overwhelming the garrison. After several skirmishes, Middleton also relieved the siege of Oswestry in July 1644. On 9th December 1644, he was obliged to resign his commission as a result of the Self-Denying Ordinance and was replaced by Thomas Mytton.  

Thomas opposed the King’s execution and was excluded from Parliament in 1649.  He then changed sides and joined the Cheshire Rising in 1659.  The uprising was defeated and Middleton forced to go into exile.  He returned to England after the Restoration and died in 1666.

. Despite the expense and privations of the civil wars, Thomas was on his death one of the richest men in the kingdom. He had doubled the size of his estate he inherited, buying Ruthin Castle and profited from rents, cattle dealing, coal and iron mining.

See - www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1660-1690/member...(middleton)-sir-thomas-1586-1666

Children of Sir Thomas and Mary Napier

1. Thomas 1st Bart 1663 m Mary Cholmondley

2. Robert

3. Richard m Elizabeth daughter of Sir William Ryder

4. John

5. Joseph

6. Charles m Jane Needham

7. Timothy m Ann Cook

8. Elizabeth 1649 m (1st wife) George Warburton of Aveley who m2 Diana daughter of Sir Edward Bishop of Parham Sussex by Mary daughter of Nicholas Lufton, Earl of Thanet. (parents of Cecil Warburton of Chester flic.kr/p/crmKMW )

9. Miriam m Sir John Whitwrongle of Stauntonbury

10. Anne m Edward Lord Herbert of Chirbury,

11. Christiana m1 Roger Grosvenor of Eaton (killed 1661 in a duel) m2 John Edisbury of Erthig,

12 Sarah m Sir Richard Wynne of Gwydir (parents of Mary m Robert Bertie, 1st Duke of Ancaster of Edenham

13 Margaret died young


"Thomas Myddelton knight son of Thomas Lord Mayor of London, proprietor of the Castle of Chirk in the County of Denbigh and of the adjacent territory who great in prosperity showed himself greater in adversity, so grat a lover of piety that he could be declared by falsehood, but could not be overcome by upright means blessed in an error which was expiated by a penitence stronger than any innocence by a manifesto nobler than any success. The offer of a reward for his labours he despised in the same spirit as that in which he performed them. Upon his mind this fact weighed more than any that the resources of his family could not restore to his afflicted Prince the whole of his power. After that he had seen (chiefly owing to his labour) the King restored to his rule, the kingdom to its laws, the church to its ancient piety, content with his measure of life and glory, he laid aside this earthly frame in the year 1666 of the christian era, at the age of 80.

By the side of her excellent husband lies buried Marie Myddelton of the noble family of the Napiers from Luton in Buckinghamshire which she made still more illustrious by her virtue. A soman with but few equals renowned for her singular piety towards God, her obedience to her husband, her zeal to her children, her loyalty to her friends, her aid to the needy, her benevolence towards all men; when she had fulfilled the last behests of her dying husband in educating her children after the best and most just method, that is by her own example having borne with weariness the delay of the long separation, gave up her soul to heaven in the year of the christian era 1674 aged 76"

Cartouche - "This illustrious couple brought up a numerous offspring; their first born Sir Thomas Myddelton honoured with the title of baronet by Charles ll on his return from fighting on the side of the King; born 1624, died 1663 having by Mary Cholmondley the following children; Thomas, Robert , Richard, Mary. And by Jane Trevor a second Thomas secondly Robert next Richard the father of Robert (the present owner of this estate and the Clwyd Valley).

John, Mary, Priscilla and Anne by Elizabeth Rider; fourthly John, fifthly Joseph, sixthly Charles to whom by Jane Needham there were given Jane and Altharnia , seventhly Timothy who by Ann Cook begot Anne and daughters who married into distinguished families - Elizabeth to George Warburton of Aveley, Miriam to Sir John Whitwrongle of Stauntonbury, Anne to the most noble Edward Lord Herbert of Chirbury, Christiana to Roger Grosvenor of Eaton and afterwards to John Edisbury of Erthig, Sarah to Sir Richard Wynne of Wydir, Margaret while still a virgin they gave to God. Engraved to their memory 1722"

1677. Monument by John Bushnell made in London and sent by water to Chester and thence by cart - carved aided by portraits sent from Chirk Castle (see portrait above).









An image from a set of 8 extra-illustrated volumes of A tour in Wales by Thomas Pennant (1726-1798) that chronicle the three journeys he made through Wales between 1773 and 1776. These volumes are unique because they were compiled for Pennant's own library at Downing. This edition was produced in 1781.

The volumes include a number of original drawings by Moses Griffiths, Ingleby and other well known artists of the period.

Image Courtesy National Library of Wales.

For a useful biog see - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Myddelton_(younger).

______________________




Elizabeth Myddelton (Wilbraham).
Monument
St Mary's Church.
Chirk.

First wife of Sir Thomas Myddelton 
John Bushnell (Chirk Castle Accounts)
1676.

















____________________________________

Sir Richard and Lady Myddleton (1721).

Robert Wynn of Ruthin (d. 1731)














































Monument to Sir Richard Myddleton, his wife (who died early at the age of 28), and between their two standing figures an urn with a relief of their infant daughter. 

In front semi-reclines their son William who died aged 25 and the inscription suggests he only survived his father for a very short time. All is of c1718-22 and erected by the only surviving sibling Mary. At the top of the monument can be seen the "red hand" which forms part of the Myddleton coat of arms.



All photographs by the author - apologies for the poor quality.

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Trade card of William Wynn - mid 18th century - of former apprentice to Benjamin Rackstrow.

There is very little information available for Robert Wynn of Ruthin d. (1731), but it it seems a coincidence that there is another statuary called Wynn.

The Wynn and Myddleton  Monuments suggest that the sculptor had a city training 

Robert Wynne was born in Llanbedr about 1655. He was apprenticed to Peter Roberts, a member of the Worshipful Company of Masons of London. He returned to Ruthin by 1707 where he had a sculptor's workshop, the 'Elabatory', as it was called, in Well Street. He died a pauper and is buried at Overton in Maelor.



see - http://www.stmarysruabon.org.uk/history5.html






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Wynn Monument 
Henry Wynn d.1671 Jane Wynn d.1675 and John Wynn d.1718.
Ruabon Church.
by Robert Wynn

Philip Yorke of Erddig writing in 1799 calls it: ' a mass and massacre of marble, ludicrous to look on'.

The Articles of Agreement dated 10 November 1719 between Watkin William Wynn of Wynnstay and Robert Wynne of Ruthin, Statuary, are for the erection, for a sum of £450, of three marble monuments.

Unfortunately the church was locked when I visited and no one answered the phone number provided. These photographs are the best available online from 

http://map.coflein.gov.uk/

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Image above from
https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/4104885

Monday, 1 October 2018

John Bushnell attributed - Sir Philip Frowde - Monument in Bath Abbey



Sir Philip Frowde (d.1674).
Marble Monument in Bath Abbey
attributed to John Bushnell.
 Bath Abbey.


Sir Philip Frowde matriculated 1628, aged 16, as son and heir of William Frowde M.P. (d.1623) of Shurland, Isle of Sheppey, Kent, decd., and became Colonel of Horse and Foot, and Governor of the Post Office.

He was a senior Royalist officer in the English Civil War, a colonel of both foot and horse who was then knighted in 10 March 1665. Frowde went on to receive many Royal offices after the Restoration of Charles II.  He was 'Secretary to the Committee for Foreign Plantations and to the Duchess of York'9the Duke was the Lord High Admiral, from 1660, 'farmer of the Post Office' and, during the Second Dutch War (1665-1667), Commissioner of Prizes during the second Dutch War.  


In 1671 he was made one of the commissioners of wine licences.  He also had sufficient funds to be a shareholder in the Royal African Company.

He married three times and had nine children, including Philip Frowde the poet (d.1738)

The poet Andrew Marvell describes Frowde as a man of slow wits and dim understanding. " as farre as I can observe the gentleman a little matter makes him much business, and he seems to me one of those who bethinke it is the greatest point of wisdom to make the most scruples"

Marvell's antipathy probably had something to do with disagreements over the construction of the Spurn Head Lighthouse

see - www.eylhs.org.uk/dl/133/a-history-of-the-spurn-lighthouses




































I generally find it dangerous to make value judgements as to the quality of any sculpture but in this case I will make an exception - this is a remarkably fine bust on a remarkably fine monument.

Saturday, 22 September 2018

Francesco Fanelli - Part 4




Francesco Fanelli -

Part 4.
The Bronze Reliefs.

Bought under the Murray bequest for £185, in 1959. The reliefs were formerly in the collection of Dr Richard Mead (Mead cabinet).

Literature -  
Webster, Mary, "Taste of an Augustan Collector. The Collection of Dr Richard Mead I", in: Country Life, Jan. 29, 1970, pp. 249-251.











Orpheus Playing to the Animals.




The reliefs were formerly in the collection of physician and collector, Dr Richard Mead (1673-1754). A variation on the Orpheus relief, together with eight of the animal plaquettes based on the same models, also appear on John Evelyn's cabinet (W.24-1977)

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Orpheus Playing to the Animals.
Francesco Fanelli.
Bronze Relief.
Height: 22.2 cm, Width: 12.4 cm

This relief was possibly in the collection of Charles Jenners, Ormond St (cf. Dodsley 1761).

Literature


Radcliffe, A and Thornton, Peter. 'John Evelyn's Cabinet', Connoisseur, CXCVII, April 1978.
Dodsley, J and R. London and its environs described, London, 1761, p. 96.
Pope-Hennessy, John. 'Some Bronze Statuettes by Francesco Fanelli', in The Burlington Magazine, XCV, May 1953 reprinted in Essays on Italian Sculpture, London, 1968, p. 166-171.

Victoria and Albert Museum
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John Evelyn Ebony Cabinet 
with bronze reliefs attributed to Francisco Fanelli
Victoria and Albert Museum


The cabinet was made in Florence. It is veneered in ebony and incorporates 19 pietra dura, or hardstone, plaques supplied by Domenico Benotti. The gilt-bronze mounts and plaques were added in England, in the workshop of Francesco Fanelli, though it is not known for certain when this took place. The gilt-bronze strawberry-leaf crest was probably made and added in about 1830-1840.

Subjects Depicted
The subjects include 'Orpheus Playing to the Beasts' and the figures of Juno, Hercules and Jupiter.

People
The cabinet was owned by John Evelyn, who travelled extensively through France and Italy during the English Civil War of 1643-1645. When in Florence, he ordered the pietra dura plaques directly from Domenico Benotti, who was then considered to be one of the 'Celebrated masters'. On arriving in England, the cabinet was most likely housed in Dover Street, London. Soon after Evelyn's death in 1706 it was moved to his country residence, Wotton House in Wotton, Surrey. In 1813, John Evelyn's diaries were discovered in a 'ebony cabinet', quite possibly this one, in Wotton House.

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Daniel in the Lions Den 
Attributed to Fanelli
Bronze 18.5 x 25.5 cms
Private Collection
Formerly with Tomasso Brother

 https://www.tomassobrothers.co.uk/artworkdetail/781240/18036/daniel-in-the-lions-den


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Holy Family and Two Saints.

Francesco Fanelli (workshop of ?).
Bronze Relief
17.8 x 13.7 cms

Sotheby's Lot 370, 10 December 2015.

The association of the present composition with Francesco Fanelli was first made by Charles Avery in his 1975 discussion of the prototype at the Royal Ontario Museum (op. cit.). The attribution to Fanelli's workshop has largely been accepted, and it has been argued that the presence of Saint George in the present version of the relief suggests an origin in the Genoese period of the artist's workshop (see Rossi, op. cit.).

Related Literature.

C. Avery and K. C. Keeble, Florentine Baroque Bronzes and Other Objects of Art, exh. cat. Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, 1975, pp. 34-35; F. Rossi, La Collezione Mario Scaglia. Placchette, Bergamo, 2011, vol. I, pp. 463-464, no. XIII.9

Info and photograph courtesey Sotheby's.

http://www.sothebys.com/en/auctions/ecatalogue/lot.370.html/2015/old-master-sculpture-art-l15233


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Holy Family and Two Saints.

attributed workshop of Fanelli.
Bronze
178 x 137 mm

Another example in gilt-bronze was sold in these rooms, 18 April 2002, lot 574. This also showed a similar reverse with multiple sprues. The saint on the right has been identified as St. George, the patron saint of Genoa and this would lend credence to an origin in that city.

Morton and Eden.  Lot 13 - 13 - 14th June 2016.

the closeness to the Sothebys version would suggest that they are perhaps one and the same - the photographs taken in different lighting conditions.
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Andromeda Shackled to the Rock

attributed to Fanelli
Bronze relief
330 x 185 mm.
Petworth House
National Trust.

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Christ carrying the Cross
Fanelli
Bronze
15.6 x 22.2 cms

Minneapolis Institute of Art




Anonymous Sale 8 July 2005



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The Holy Family and the Miraculous Cure of the Robber's Child
Fanelli
Bronze
17 x 24.5 cms.
Given by Alfred de Pass - 1933.

Previously attributed to Vincezo Danti (1530-1576) and to Ferdinando Tacca (1619-1686). The latter by Anthony Radcliffe. Fanelli was born in Florence in 1577, and was last documented in England in 1641.


Sotheby's. 1988. European Works of Art and Sculpture.London: Sotheby's p. 118
, lot 283, a comparable relief of the Holy Family in the robber's house, there attributed to Ferdinando Tacca.
Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge

Wednesday, 19 September 2018

Francesco Fanelli (Part 3)



Francesco Fanelli  (c. 1577 - d.1660's?).
"Francisco the One Eyed Italian". 
Portrait busts and other works.

Part 3.

Varie Architeture 
di Francesco Fanelli, Fiorentiono
Scultore 
del Rey della Gran Bretagne


https://archive.org/stream/variearchitetvre00fane#page/n3


Thieme-Becker states that this work first appeared in 1642, around the time Fanelli left England for Paris. There is no positive evidence, however, and the 1661 ed. (Paris : Van Merle) is more likely to be the 1st ed. (British Architectural Library early printed books 1478-1840, no. 1020). 

The copy in the Avery Architectural Library has no imprint, as is the case with the Getty copy (below), which may be an incomplete copy of the same ed. (16 leaves instead of 20). In the British Architectural Library catalog, it is suggested that the Avery copy was published after Jacques Van Merle's ed. of 1661 and before Nicolas Langlois's division of the plates into 2 publications later in the century (Fontaines et jets d'eau ; Dessins de grottes).









Fountain with the Infant Hercules Wrestling two Serpents.