Sunday, 24 November 2024

Lady Katherine Bertie Monument, Oxnead, Norfolk.

 


The Monument to Lady Katherine Bertie of Lindsey (Paston).

1636. 

Church of St Michael, Oxnead, Norfolk.

Nicholas Stone (1586 - 1647) of Long Acre, Covent Garden.

 

Commissioned by her husband Sir William Paston (created 1st Baronet Paston of Oxnead in 1641).

 Stone had begun work at Oxnead Hall for Sir William in 1631. Restored by the Pilgrim’s Trust, under the supervision of Stanley Wearing, 1956-57.

The shape of the socle support used here is interesting - this type was later developed and used frequently albeit on a smaller scale by Henry Cheere in the 18th century - the use of different styles of socles used both on church monuments and secular portrait busts is a subject that has not been broached previously and would reward study - I have in my posts looked at the use of signature socles on the busts by Roubiliac, John Cheere, Joseph Nollekens and Joseph Wilton in the 18th century.

For much more on Stone see the article by Adam White - https://georgiangroup.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/GGS_1986_Symposium_04_White_0001.pdf


https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2018/11/john-vandestein-at-queens-college.html

https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2018/11/william-peyto-peto-by-nicholas-stone.html

http://english18thcenturyportraitsculpture.blogspot.com/2017/09/hendrick-de-keyser-and-his.html

http://english18thcenturyportraitsculpture.blogspot.com/2020/06/the-three-busts-of-sir-thomas-bodley-at.html

http://english18thcenturyportraitsculpture.blogspot.com/2017/10/bust-of-sir-thomas-bodley-some.html


The Sculptor Nicholas Stone (1586 - 1647). 

 Nicholas Stone at what is now 17 Longacre, Covent Garden.

Some notes - not exhaustive.

 

Nicholas Stone (d. 1647) Sculptor had his residence and workshop on the west corner of Rose Street where it meets Long Acre -

The most important years of his career are exceptionally well-documented due to the existence of his note- and account-books for the period 1631-42, which list over 80 monuments and numerous other commissions

 Nicholas Stone, sculptor, architect and mason. His house—rented from the Crown at £10 a year—must have been a large one, as Vertue mentions that John Stone, the author of Enchiridion, was hidden in it for "above a twelvemonth, without the knowledge of his father."6 Another son, Henry, best known as "Old Stone," was described on his monument in St. Martin's Church as "of Long Acre.

 Caius Gabriel Cibber (1630–1700), sculptor, the son of a cabinet-maker to Frederick III, the Danish king. He arrived in England around 1655, and became journeyman and then foreman to John Stone, John Stone, son of the late master mason to Charles I.

 When Stone suffered a seizure in 1660, Cibber ran his workshop in Long Acre. He became sculptor to Charles II on 20 June 1667. With his wife Jane Colley (c.1646–1697) of Glaston in Rutland, Cibber had three children: poet laureate and playwright Colley Cibber (1671–1757), Veronica, and Lewis.

 Among other works, Cibber is known for his figures of Melancholy Madness and Raving Madness (1680) which adorned the gateway in front of Bethlehem Hospital.

 The house was inherited by his eldest son the painter Henry Stone who died on 24 August 1653.

 A Mr Stone was still at this address in 1673 ( Lacys Map - 1673).

 Later part of the Stone's property became the Bird in Hand.

 https://www.british-history.ac.uk/survey-london/vol36/pp266-270

 

 

In 1635 and 1636 the fourth Earl of Bedford granted in fee farm several sites between Long Acre and Hart Street  later renamed Floral Street (so far as can be judged, excluding those on which building had taken place recently) and thus abrogated control over their subsequent development.

 One such development attracted the attention of the Privy Council in 1638 and was referred to Inigo Jones. The property concerned was the 'handsomely plainted' garden between Long Acre and New Street (now New Row).

 After being granted in fee farm in 1635 it had changed hands and been parcelled out. Several persons were concerned (including Richard Harris, a Covent Garden chapelwarden, and Nicholas Stone, master mason of the King's Works) but John Ward, citizen and girdler, was singled out by the Privy Council. According to Inigo Jones, Ward had designed to make a communication from Long Acre towards Covent Garden by means of an alley about 9 feet wide extending south (to be called White Rose Street), which was to open into a second alley extending east, about 18 feet wide (to be called Red Rose Street), and, if possible, to continue the second alley southwards over ground which did not belong to him.

 Jones thought that Ward would not be able to buy the land which he needed, and complained about 'the pestering of such places with Allyes of meane houses having but one way into them, and no other to goe out', and the Privy Council, 'disliking the desine', ordered Ward 'to disist'. (fn. 26) However, the northern and east-west arms of what is now Rose Street had already been built, and were allowed to remain.

 The scheme was finally completed in 1640, by Richard Harris, who had bought the land he needed from Ward in the previous year. Harris's development required the collusion of the Earl of Bedford, who 'did condiscend' that Harris should build the southern arm of Rose Street to connect with the recently opened New Street. It evidently proved an ill speculation for Harris, who in 1647 was complaining that he had entered into it 'most unfortunately … with two Thousand pounds Losse, to the utter ruyne and undoeing of [him], his wife and Children'. (fn. 29) The contorted remains of Rose Street still survive as a monument to speculators' folly, and the ineptness of Charles I's Privy Council.

 Nicholas Stone the sculptor occupied a piece of land on the east of White Rose Street on which stood a two-storey brick house, one timber and one brick 'workhouse'. In 1636 he obtained a grant of this property in fee farm. Three years later he contracted with Richard Harris for a piece of ground between his house and the alley called White Rose Street where he agreed to build a house over the passage entrance with a 'faire and lardge stone Arche of Twelve foote in height and Eleaven foote in widenes'.

 

 It appears that he did build it, for his descendant, John Stone, described as a stone-cutter, was in possession of a messuage called 'the Arch house' in 'Whitecrosse' (i.e., White Rose) Street in 1661.

 Other masons who occupied houses in Long Acre in c. 1624 were Baernert Janson (Barnard Johnson) and James White, tombmakers, and John Medhurst.












































Friday, 22 November 2024

The Roubiliac Sale Catalogue - with a list of Missing Roubiliac Portrait Busts.

 




The Roubiliac and the Missing Busts - The Posthumous Sale Catalogue.

on 12 May 1762 and the following 3 days.

The Sale held by Abraham Langford of the Piazza Covent Garden.

At the premises of Louis Francois Roubiliac at the top  end of St Martin's Lane.

 Westminster on the East side.














































..........................
 
The Missing Portrait Busts.

 

Day 1.

Lot 13. Mr Wildey. Plaster Bust.

Lot 16.  A Gentleman. Plaster Bust.

Lot 44. Mrs Nightingale. Mould in plaster.

 

Described and listed as Heads

Lot 77. Lord Shannon. Terracotta Head. Possibly related to the monument at Walton on Thames.

Lot 78. Lady Shannon. Terracotta Head. Ditto see my post - 

http://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2020/08/richard-boyle-viscount-shannon-monument.html

 Lot 79. Mrs Lyon. Terracotta Head.

 ........................................

 

Day 2.

Lot 7. Dr Bradbury. Plaster Bust.

 Lot 12. Mr Carter Statuary. Plaster Bust.

 Lot 15, Captain McKenzies son. Plaster Bust.

 Lot 17. Mr Floyd. Plaster Bust.

 Lot 18. Mr Floyd. Plaster Bust.

 Lot 20. Mr Capel Plaster Bust or perhaps a relief. (Edward Capell {1713-81} known from engravings by Bartalozzi and at the BM).

 

Lot 76. A Gentleman. Terracotta Bust.

 Lot 81. A Gentleman Terracotta Bust.

 Lot 77. ---- Capel. Terracotta, Bust  (known from engravings by Bartalozzi and Anker Smith at the BM).

 Lot 85. Mr Nightingale and his Lady, Terracotta Busts.

A Peter Nightingale (d, 1763) was a lead merchant! of Lea and Ashover Derbyshire. 

Could these be the models for the pair of lead busts traditionally believed to be Mr and Mrs Salmon in the V and A?

Given that there were 6 of these busts in the sale it is odd that none have come to light 

 

 Day 3.

 Lot 19, Councillor Floyd. Plaster Bust.

 Lot 4. Britannia - Plaster.

 Lot 6. Mr Floyde - Plaster.

 Lot 28. Two Plaster busts of Mr Nightingale and his Lady. (The Mould for Mrs Nightingale was Lot 44, Day 1). See my suggestion for Lot 85 on the previous day.

 Lot 29. Ditto.

The identity of these Nightingales remains to be discovered, perhaps those on Roubiliac's Nightingale monument in Westminster Abbey although the "Salmon busts do not resemble the Nightingales on the monument.

 

Lot 73. A Lady. Marble bust.


.........................................





The Nightingale Monument.


In St Michael's chapel, off the north transept of Westminster Abbey, is the commemorating Lady Elizabeth Nightingale and her husband. She was born in 1704, the eldest of three daughters of Washington Shirley, Earl Ferrers and Viscount Tamworth (d.1729) and his wife Mary. 

Her sisters were Selina, Countess of Huntingdon (d.1791 aged 83) and Mary, Viscountess Kilmorey (died 1784).

 

On 24th June 1725 Elizabeth married Joseph Gascoigne (1695-1752), son of the Reverend Joseph Gascoigne, Vicar of Enfield in Middlesex. He assumed the surname of Nightingale on becoming heir to his kinsman Sir Robert Nightingale. Of their three sons, Washington, Joseph and Robert, only Washington survived his father but then only by two years. Elizabeth died on 17th August 1731 following a premature birth caused by the shock of a violent flash of lightning. This child, also called Elizabeth, survived and later married Wilmot Vaughan, 1st Earl of Lisburne and died (also in childbirth) in 1755.

...............................

Vie et ouvrages de L. F. Roubillac, sculpteur lyonnais 1685-1762 / Le Roy de Sainte-Croix


https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k6572528r/f2.item.r=%22St%20Martin's%20Lane%22.zoom


Tuesday, 19 November 2024

Sculpture at Wilton House Two Terracottas after Bernini.



Anima Dannata.

The Self-portrait of Bernini Screaming like a Condemned Man to Hell.


Anima Beata.

After the marbles of c. 1619.




 













........................................

Anima Beata.

After the marble? of 1619.


Joshua Reynolds he stated that the sculpture "has all the perfect sweetness and happiness, manifest in its expression, that can be imagined.







...........................


The Bernini Marbles.

It has been established that both sculptures were commissioned by Cardinal Montoya. The original location was in the sacristy of the church of San Giacomo degli Spagnuoli, also known as Church of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart; at the end of the 19th century they were then transferred to the Spanish Embassy in Rome.

.........................

The Massimiliano Soldani Benzi Bronze Bust of Anima Dannata. 


https://www.liechtensteincollections.at/en/collections-online/bust-of-anima-dannata

.....................

The Marble Bust of  Anima Dannata attributed to Joseph Wilton.


https://www.christies.com/en/lot/lot-6458288

Saturday, 16 November 2024

Thomas Winnington - the Roubiliac Bust at Stanford on Teme.







The Marble bust of Thomas Winnington (1696 - 1746).

Louis Francois Roubiliac.

On the Monument in St Mary's Church at Stanford on Teme, Worcestershire.

All photographs here taken by the author under difficult circumstances.

The light was very low and the bust is high up on the monument.

The Monument is attributed to the Westminster workshop of John Cheere, and the bust carved by Roubiliac.


The  Bust of Thomas Winnington has the same drapery as that on Roubiliac's busts of Sir Andrew Fountaine, and the bust on the monument to John Bamber at Barking. The busts of Andrew Fountaine the Terracotta now in Norwich castle Museum, the Marble on the monument at Narford church, Norfolk another marble at Wilton House, a plaster bust at Yale Centre for British Art, and another plaster in a private collection in Cambridge are by Roubiliac and it can be convincingly argued that the remarkably realistic bust of John Bamber as an elderly man is also by him.

 

Malcolm Baker has suggested that the monument possibly by Benjamin Palmer, but this is contradicted by the letter below.

see Church Monuments Society Journal, Vol X, 1995.

Malcolm Baker also points out the similarities of the feet supporting the sarcophagus to those on the monument to John Merrick in Norwood Church - it should also be pointed out that they are also very close to those on the very fine monument of John Bamber in St Margaret's Church, Barking (see photograph below) on which is the excellent bust of Dr John Bamber which can be convincingly ascribed to Roubiliac, given the use of the same drapery as that on the several busts of Andrew Fountaine and Thomas Winnington at Stanford on Teme.

Again this suggests a possible close collaboration between Henry Cheere and Roubiliac.

 

and see my later post  - http://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2019_04_05_archive.html


..................................


A Letter from Henry Fox to Charles Hanbury Williams.

 

A letter of the 22 February 1749/50 in the Lewis Walpole Library which was discovered by Todd Longstaff Gowan, from Henry Fox to Charles Hanbury Williams who had the monument erected.

 This letter requests that Hanbury Williams retainer Richard Evans should:

 ...."write a line to Mr Eckar (John Giles Eccardt - see image below) to deliver your picture of Mr Winnington done by Vanlo to my order. from that and Goussets (Isaac Gossett) Bas Relive of him Rouvilliac is to make a bust which may be plac'd upon a monument something like that set up to the primate Boulter (by Henry Cheere) in Westminster Abbey. You please to write in verse or prose or both shall be there inscribed, and I beg you will intend to do it now whilst You are at Colbrook".

This confirms that Roubiliac sculpted this bust using the portrait and a wax relief by Isaac Gosset.

This wax relief appears to have remained with Roubiliac and was put up for auction (Mr Winnington in Wax) at the posthumous sale of Roubiliac First day, Lot 68.

 

Although by no means clear this suggests that there was a definite link between Henry Cheere and Roubiliac as contractor and sub contractor.

 

Information above from the Roubiliac and Cheere in the 1730's and 40's Collaboration and subcontracting in 18th Century English Sculptors' Workshops by Malcolm Baker in the Church Monuments Society Journal Vol X. 1995.



Thomas Winnington.

 by John Giles Eccardt (1720 -79).

 after the original by van Loo.

 70 x 60 cms.

Oil on canvas.

 On loan to the National Trust at Lyme Park, Cheshire from Mr N Hanbury - Williams.

 Image here courtesy Art UK website.

https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/thomas-winnington-16961746-132574






"Stanford – a parish in the hundred of Doddingtree, upper division, 8 ½ miles W.S.W. from Stourport, and 122 from London. The church, which was erected in the year 1768, is a handsome Gothic structure, with an elegant tower built of stone dug out of a quarry close by, which was discovered just as the foundation of the church had been laid; the interior is neatly fitted up, and contains several monuments of the Winnington family, one of which is ornamented with a bust of the Right Hon. Thomas Winnington, formerly M.P. for Winchester, Lord of the Admiralty, and paymaster-general of the forces, &c. He died in 1746".

 

The living is a rectory, in the diocese of Hereford and archdeaconry of Salop; Rev. Edward Winnington Ingram, incumbent; instituted 1807; patron, Sir Thomas Winnington, Bart. Population, 1801, 140 – 1811, 122 – 1821, 194.

 

From - Worcestershire Delineated by C. and J. Greenwood pub.1822.






















 
















































































......................


The Paw on the Bamber Monument, Barking, Essex for comparison.

For many more detailed photographs etc of the Bamber Monument see -





...........................


The Marble Bust of Dr John Bamber (1667 - 1753).

Louis Francois Roubiliac.

The body of the monument perhaps from the workshop of Henry Cheere

On the  Monument in the North Aisle in St Margaret of Antioch Church, Barking, Essex.

A sadly neglected masterpiece of sculpture which deserves to be much better known.
.
It shows the mastery of Roubiliac and his sensitive honest portrayal of an old man.


John Bamber, M.D., was a native of Kent, practised as a surgeon. When of mature age, he withdrew from that department of practice, devoted himself to physic, and, having produced letters dismissory from the company of Barbers and Surgeons, dated 16th July, 1724, disfranchising him from that company, he was admitted a Licentiate of the College of Physicians 5th October, 1724.


 On the 12th April, 1725, he was created doctor of medicine at Cambridge, per literas Regias, as a member of Emmanuel college; and coming again before the Censors for examination, was admitted a Candidate 18th October, 1725; and a Fellow 30th September, 1726.































...................................


The Portrait Busts of Sir Andrew Fountaine.

Louis Francois Roubiliac.

A brief Survey.

For a more in depth look at the subject see my recent post on the portrait sculpture at Wilton House.



..................

The Original Roubiliac Terracotta of Sir Andrew Fountaine.

Formerly at Narford Hall, Norfolk.

Purchased by the National Art Fund. 1993.

The Bust is now at Norwich Castle Museum.











.............................................




The Yale Centre for British Art Plaster Bust of Andrew Fountaine.







..............................



The Wilton House bust of Andrew Fountaine.

dated 1747.




.....................

Marble bust of Sir Andrew Fountaine.

The Narford Church  Norfolk Monument.



















..............................


Monument to John Merick of Norcutt.

Anonymous.

1749.

Church of  St Mary the Virgin. Tentelow Lane. Norwood Green.

Middlesex.

Attributed to Benjamin Palmer by Malcolm Baker in the Church Monument Society Journal vol. X 1995.








Drawing of the Merick Monument attrib. Daniel Lysons c. 1797 - 1808.

Yale Centre for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection

 http://collections.britishart.yale.edu/vufind/Record/3653784