Tuesday, 4 March 2025

Part 11. Samson slaying the Philistine by Giambologna in The V and A.


Part 11.


 The Victoria and Albert Musem Marble Group of Samson slaying the Philistine.

by Giambologna.

1562.



Created around 1562 by Giambologna, the earliest of his marble groups which was originally commissioned by Francesco de' Medici Duke of Tuscany for a fountain in Florence, it was later gifted to Spain's Duke of Lerma and displayed in the gardens of the Palacio de la Ribera, Valladolid. Perhaps symbolizing the political power of the Medici through a dramatic biblical scene.

Giambologna’s Samson Group was gifted to the Prince of Wales, later King Charles I in 1623.

Samson Slaying a Philistine had served twice as a diplomatic gift. In 1601 it was sent to Spain as a present from the Medici to the Duke of Lerma, Philip III’s chief-minister, and then, in 1623, given by Philip IV to the Prince of Wales (later Charles I) who was visiting Spain in prospect of marriage.

As a contemporary Spanish account published in England in translation soon after puts it: “hee was much delighted with…the Alabaster Fountaine, which the Illustrious great Duke of Tuscan gave to my Lord Cardinall, the Duke of Lerma; he was served [presented] with it: It is the portraiture of Cain and Abel.”

 Thus it is clear that the statue still at this time formed the centrepiece of a fountain, and not an item to be viewed in isolation. Moreover, from this we know it had already become identified with the wrong Old Testament story. It cost the Privy Purse £40 to have the statue – less the fountain base which remained in Spain and is now in Aranjuez – carted to Santander.

Charles, in turn, gave the statue to his favourite George Villiers, the Duke of Buckingham, who had accompanied him in Spain and who subsequently installed it at York House, London, by June the following year.

In June 1624 Sir Thomas Wentworth, the future Lord Strafford, described it in a letter: “a goodly Statue of Stone set up in the Garden before the new Building, bigger than the Life, of a Sampson with a Philistine betwixt his Legs, knocking his Brains out with the Jaw-Bone of an Ass.”  Wentworth was perceptive enough to recognise the true subject of the statue.

By 1714 Villiers had the group moved to Buckingham House which was acquired by George III in 1762, and was finally given as a gift by the Hanoverian king to his Surveyor-General, Thomas Worsley (1710-78) of Hovingham Hall. It remained in Yorkshire until 1954, when it was purchased by the V&A.

In 1883 it was still at Hovingham Hall, Yorks, the Country seat Sir William Worseley to whose grandfather it had been presented by George III (info from Historical Handbook of Italian Sculpture by Charles Callahan Perkins – pub 1883) - Page 339.

 The marble is mentioned again in English Leadwork by Lawrence Weaver pub 1909 (page 166) –

Available online at –

https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc2.ark:/13960/t7fr05c48&seq=11

or https://archive.org/details/b3136665x

Weaver goes on to mention lead versions of Samson slaying the Philistine at Chiswick (this is the Osgood version subsequently moved to Chatsworth), Harrowden Hall, Wimpole Hall and Drayton House, but he erroneously suggests that the Drayton group was modelled by Peter Scheemakers. As far as I am aware Scheemakers did not work in lead except for providing the Equestrian statue at Hull which would have been probably made in collaboration.

https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O14761/samson-slaying-a-philistine-figure-group-bologna-giovanni/





























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Drawing of the Samson Slaying the Philistine attributed to Giambologna in the Prado, Madrid.

The original concept.

https://www.museodelprado.es/en/the-collection/art-work/fountain-with-hercules-striking-cacus-with-his/20edcee4-b6f1-407f-95b0-dca21f218a37?searchid=e78ec251-55a3-0e4e-0aa2-221d4a2b4961







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Pietro Francavilla (1548 - 1612).

The 3 Drawings at the V and A.


https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O38982/record-drawings-of-giambolognas-terracotta-drawing-francavilla-pietro/














10. Samson slaying the Philistine at Queluz.


Part 10.

 The Lead Group of Samson slaying the Philistine / Cain and Abel. 

at the Royal Palace, Queluz, Portugal.

John Cheere.

One of 90 Groups, Figures and Urns supplied in two tranches in 1755 - 57.

Photographs taken by the author.

I will in due course post photographs and details of all the Cheere statues at Queluz.


Information on the Cheere statuary at Queluz (below) culled from -  John Cheere's lead garden statues.... by Maria Joaon Neto and Fernando Grilo. Sculpture Journal Vol. 15.1, 2006.

 

The Gardens of the National Palace of Queluz, Ana Duarte Rodrigues, Denise Pereira da Silva and Gerald Luckhurst, pub. 2011.

 

For a not very satisfactory introduction to the works of John Cheere - see John Cheere, the Eminent Statuary ..... Moira Fulton, Sculpture Journal, Volume X, 2003.

 

 

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Details of the purchases are contained in Correspondence between the Portuguese Ambassador in London Don Louis da Cnha Manuel and the Foreign Secretary in Lisbon Sebasteao Jose de Carvalho e Melo (future Marquis of Pombal).

 A stipulation by Dom Pedro was that the statues not be embarrassingly naked and an assurance from the sculptor that they were "girdled".






 

The sculptures exported from England to Queluz consisted in total of 9 Sculptural Groups, 57 individual figures and 72 lead vases.

 

 The first Collection sent in May? 1755 in 36 crates on board the ship Camberwell consisted of -

 Meleager and Atalanta (as Diana and Endymion at Wrest Park).

Vertumnus and Pomona.

23 statues of Mythological figures -

Neptune, Meleager, Mercury, Fame, Apollo, Diana, Bacchus, Venus, Ceres and Flora.

A Gladiator and 4 Seasons,

4 Commedia dell' Arte figures, - (Pierrot, Harlequin, Scaramouche and Columbine)

4 Picturesque figures - Shepherd and Shepherdess a man with a flute and drum and a woman with a rake.

24 Vases.

 

Cost £290.5s. 2d including shipping - £340.18s. 6d.


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The second lot of sculptures were sent in 58 crates on the ship Nossa Senhora do Socorro in September 1755.

The speed with which these sculptures were ordered suggests that John Cheere already had these objects in stock at his premises at Hyde Park Corner..


7 Sculptural Groups -
Rape of Proserpine.
Aeneas Carrying his father Anchises.
Rape of the Sabine Women (another at Wrest Park).
David and Goliath
Cain and Abel actually Samson Slaying the Philistine from the Giambologa original then at Buckingham House (another lead version at Harrowden Hall, Northants).
Venus and Adonis (another at Wrest Park),
Bacchus and Ariadne.

and 6 individual figures -
Hercules.
Meleager.
Atalanta.
Justice.
Mars.
and Minerva.

and 16 animals -
4 Monkeys.
4 Lions.
4 Tigers.
2 Foxes a Harpy and an Eagle.

4 Groups with holes for the large tanks and water spouts?
8 Boys to decorate the waterfalls.
48 Painted Bronze and gold vases.


Cost with 10% discount £853.14s.1d.




















































































Links.




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This links to the first page of the Sculpture Journal piece, John Cheere's lead garden statues.... by Maria Joaon Neto and Fernando Grilo on the Cheere lead sculpture at Queluz and offers the rest of the article for the bargain price of £25. 
Contact me if anyone is interested in the contents of this article. I will, in due course, be publishing my own photographs (samples above) and a more up to date look at the works of John Cheere which were supplied to Queluz.

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Two invaluable general works on the subject of Lead Statuary are English Leadwork, ..... by Lawrence Weaver, pub. 1909 and available on line at -

https://archive.org/stream/englishleadworki00weav#page/n9/mode/2up

and Antique Garden Ornament by John Davies, pub Antique Collectors Club, 1999.

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The website of Rupert Harris

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Part 9. The Southill Park lead group of Samson and the Philistine.

 

Part 9.

Samson and the Philistine/Cain and Abel. 

at Southill Park, Bedfordshire.

John Cheere.


One of a collection of lead statuary by John Cheere, bought in 1812 by Samuel Whitbread II. 

It lacks the incised decoration on the strap across his back seen on the Queluz Portugal version of 1755 / 57. 

The others included Ceres, Minerva, the Farnese Flora, two of priests, Winter (after Girardon ) A Priestess of  Isis, Apollino, the Rape of Proserpine, Diana and four more for a total of £975.


The image below from the Paul Mellon Photograph archive.


https://photoarchive.paul-mellon-centre.ac.uk/objects/408353/samson-slaying-the-philistine




I have contacted Southill Park  and hope to obtain further photographs in due course.



8. The Yale Centre for British Art Samson and the Philistine/Cain and Abel.



Part  8. 

The Yale Centre for British Art Samson and the Philistine/Cain and Abel. 

Attributed to John Cheere.

Height 203 cms.



The Statue was sold to YCBA by Messrs Tomasso of Leeds and London.


























































































7. The John Cheere lead statue of Samson and the Philistine /Cain and Abel at Seaton Delaval.

 

 

Part 7.


The Seaton Delaval Samson and the Philistine Cain and Abel.


Attributed to John Cheere on The National Trust website - there is a lead group of David and Goliath also attributed to John Cheere in the same garden.


The gardens which surround the Hall were layed out between 1718 and 1728.

The Cheere attribution is probably incorrect if the gardens were laid 1718 - 28. 4 statues originally sat on bastions in the garden. An attribution to Carpentiere (d.1737) would seem more likely.

Cheere was not in production until 1737

A Cain and Abel was proposed for Castle Howard in 1723 - Height 6' at £20 (Citation needed -Check this).

Unfortunately there was a fire in 1822 and much documentation was consumed by the flames.

It is impossible to make comparisons without better photographs.

https://www.nationaltrustcollections.org.uk/object/1276673



































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