Thursday, 5 February 2026

A very fine Marble Relif by William Collins

 

The Good Samaritan tending to a wounded man while a priest and Levite walk away.

AMarble Relief on the Monument to Jacob Bosenquet 1767.

by William Collins.

Bath Abbey.


William Collins (1721-93) was a pupil of the sculptor Henry Cheere (1702-1781). Working in marble, stone or plaster, he specialised in religious and mythological scenes. He was among the group that founded the Society of Artists in 1759, and used their exhibitions to showcase his bas-reliefs. 


He was born in 1721 but nothing is currently known of his family background. He became a pupil of Sir Henry Cheere and subsequent payments to Collins in his master’s bank account suggest that he carved work in sub-contract for Cheere’s thriving workshop.


Only seven apprentices to Henry Cheere are recorded in the London Apprentice Records, (Sir) Robert Taylor in 1732, who had set up independently by the mid 1740's, but had property next to Cheere in Spring Gardens, Charing Cross. Richard Hayward (1728 - 1800) joined him in 1742 after previously working with Christopher Horsnaile I . William Collins (1721 - 93) worked with him supplying elements for chimneypieces, William Powell and William Woodman both subcontracted to him.


In December 1751 Collins was described in the London Evening Post as ‘a figure maker at Hyde Park Corner’. The article was a puff for ‘Iron Pear-Tree Water,’ a quack medicine which was claimed to have cured, in a mere 24 hours, a sore on Collins’s leg, that had troubled him for two years. The miraculous recovery was confirmed by John Cheere and his assistants, and it is possible that Collins was at this time working for John Cheere brother of Henry which produced multiples in plaster and lead.

After leaving Cheere’s workshop in c.1760, Collins pursued an independent practice as a sculptor. 

By 1763, he had set up his own workshop on Channel-Row – also known as Canon Row – in Westminster - a few hundred metres from Cheere’s  shop on St Margaret’s Lane. 

 He was among the group that founded the Society of Artists in 1759, and used their exhibitions to showcase his bas-reliefs. 

The bulk of Collins’s exhibited reliefs appear to have been intended for chimneypieces, and J T Smith was later to describe him as ‘the most famous modeller of chimney-tablets of his day’ (Smith 1828, 2, 313). Smith, however, considered Collins’s work to be lacking in nobility: ‘his figures were mostly clothed, and exhibited pastoral scenes, which were understood by the most common observer such as, for instance, a shepherd-boy eating his dinner under an old stump of a tree, with his dog begging before him; shepherds and shepherdesses seated upon a bank surrounded by their flocks; anglers, reapers, etc’ (ibid). Several tablets with pastoral motifs have been attributed to Collins (7, 8, 19, 20) and the similarity of Smith’s description to a known design by Sir Henry Cheere in the Victoria and Albert Museum also suggests that Collins may have been the executant of many of Cheere’s chimneypiece tablets

When Henry Cheere died in 1781 he left Collins £100 in his will.


Adam commissions: Collins supplied Adam with plaster casts and bas-reliefs, which were installed in niches, over doorframes and above chimneypieces. For Kedleston House in Derbyshire, Collins supplied decorative roundels for the exterior. He also worked for Adam at Harewood House and Nostell Priory in Yorkshire. The architect James Paine praised ‘the ingenious Mr William Collins’, but relations with Adam were sometimes fraught. Adam complained of his delayed production schedule, apologising to his patron Sir Rowland Winn on the sculptor’s behalf: ‘Mr Collins promised me to have the Tablet for the Library Chimney sent to my house, end of last week, but has likewise dissappointed [sic] me as I have not yet got it from him.’


Collins’s most notable works were perhaps for Burton Constable, where he was responsible for three full-size statues including a youthful Mercury and Cupid, competitively rolling dice on a rock (1-3). A design for the plaster oval of Pan and the Graces survives at Burton Constable, marked ‘Collins’ by the owner, William Constable (37). If this work is by Collins it demonstrates not only his developed skills in draughtsmanship, but also his ability to compose original designs.


He died in 1793 at his house in Tothill Fields, Westminster, and was buried in the cemetery in King’s Road, Chelsea.


His entire estate, including properties in Bath and Weston-super-Mare, was left to his only daughter, Elizabeth. The Gentleman’s Magazine carried a notice of his death in June, adding that his ‘works as an artist have been long known and admired in this country’ (GM, June 1793, 577)


Literary References : Mortimer 1763, 8; Smith 1828, II, 313; Graves II, 1905-6, 62; Soc of Artists Papers, 1759-61, 116; Girouard 1965, 968; Gunnis 1968, 111-2; Friedman and Clifford 1974, Appendix C; Clifford 1992, 41-2; ODNB (MB); Craske 2000 (2), 100, 112 n16; Baker 2000, 77; Bilbey 2002, 68-9

Archival References: Walton and Dunn Accounts, Burton Constable, 1764; Collins/ Constable 1769

Will: Henry Cheere, PROB 11/1073/95; William Collins PROB 11/1233/303

























Wednesday, 4 February 2026

A Carved Wooden Bust of William Shenstone (1714 - 63)

 

                                                                           Sold Dreweatts 9 April 2025.


https://auctions.dreweatts.com/past-auctions/drewea1-10542/lot-details/a7e37fd0-ad3e-4683-8f13-b29800e3f817


The bust may be compared with the engraved front. to Shenstone’s Works, I, 1764; see J. Kerslake National Portrait Gallery, Early Georgian Portraits, 1977, II, pl.726. 

Shenstone had been considering a bust of himself in 1754 when he encountered a sculptor from Stratford making busts at 2 gn. each (M. Williams ed., Letters of William Shenstone, 1939, pp 409-10).



Born at The Leasowes, Halesowen, near Birmingham; contemporary of Samuel Johnson at Pembroke College, Oxford, where he studied poetry with lifelong friends Richard Graves the younger and Richard Jago; 

He published anonymously The Judgment of Hercules, 1741, and The Schoolmistress, 1742; Pastoral Ballads issued 1755, and other poems published, 1758, by Dodsley, who published the collected writings The Works in Verse and Prose of William Shenstone Esq.,1764-69; 

Shenstone had inherited The Leasowes, 1724, and devoted much care to laying out the grounds.


The poet and landscape gardener is depicted in the manner of the line engraving print to the frontispiece of "The Works of William Shenstone", set on later ebonised socle base approximately 23cm high overall 

 'A large, heavy, fat man, shy and reserved with strangers', the poet William Shenstone's first poems were published whilst he studied at Oxford, although he left without completing his degree. 

Of private means, in 1745 he inherited the farming estate of Leasowes. He retired there and continued to write poetry in a pastoral vein. Shenstone coined the term 'landscape gardener', and created one of the earliest and most influential landscape gardens, his ferme ornée. 

Diverting streams to create waterfalls he stage-managed the landscape to create views that unfolded from carefully chosen vantage points- a country estate laid out to be admired and walked through whilst retaining the sensibilities of a working farm. 

The venture impoverished him but led to acclaim among contemporaries. 

In his 1770 Observations on Modern Gardening Thomas Whately wrote of Shenstone and his work: "The ideas of pastoral poetry seem now to be the standard of that simplicity; and a place conformable to them is deemed a farm in its utmost purity. An allusion to them evidently enters into the design of the Leasowes, where they appear so lovely as to endear the memory of their author; and justify the reputation of Mr. Shenstone ... every part is rural and natural".

https://etheses.bham.ac.uk/id/eprint/7825/1/Hemingway17PhD.pdf





















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

Thomas Hull

by Unknown artist

1760s

765 mm x 616 mm

NPG 4625




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Shenstone.

Thomas Ross.

Given by Shenstone to his servant Mary Cutler in 1754 'in acknowledgement of her native genius, her magnanimity, her Tenderness, & her Fidelity'. The frame is probably original, a delicate variation on a Kent frame with projecting square corners and ornament worked in the gesso. More detailed information on this portrait is available in a National Portrait Gallery collection catalogue, John Kerslake's Early Georgian Portraits (1977),









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

The bust appears to hen taken from the engravings below










The Engraving below Pub. 1764.






The Portrait of Shenstone by Edward Alcock.

 1760.

(1508 mm x 997 mm)

National Portrait Gallery.

Shenstone was sitting to Alcock by 7 December 1759and the portrait is several times mentioned in letters as, for example, in the detailed description to Graves, 8 January 1760.  By 9 February it was 'in a manner finished' but not content to leave well alone, the artist, according to Shenstone's letter to Graves, 2 May 1761, 'By way of improving the picture I meant for Dodsley ... has made it infinitely less like, and yet it must go to London as it is, for God knows when he can be brought to alter it.' 

 A version painted by the artist for Graves himself, referred to in the same letter, may be the portrait now in the City Museum and Art Gallery, Birmingham.


Provenance

Bought, 1868, from Henry Graves & Co; with H. Rodd of Great Newport Street, 1824; bought by a Mr Street and subsequently by a Mr Cribb by whom sold to James Watt, FRS, of Aston Hall, Birmingham; Aston Hall sale, 17 April 1849, lot 44, bought Norton, and later owned by Charles Birch; intervening history not known.



Alexander Pope’s garden became a popular resort for visiting poets and writers. According to Joan Edwards, Pope told Shenstone to contact Robert Dodsley, Pope’s publisher, to publish his poem ‘The Judgement of Hercules’ in 1741.250 

If Pope advised him about his poetry, he may have also invited him to view his garden at Twickenham while Shenstone was on his several sojourns to London. Considering Pope was one of Shenstone’s favourite poets - he had his works in his library and a bust of Pope in his house at The Leasowes.


https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2014/03/lady-luxborough-and-william-shenstone.html


Henrietta St John Knight, Lady Luxborough was the half sister of Henry St John, Lord Bolingbroke, a close friend of Alexander Pope and executor of his will.

She had been banished to Barrells Hall, Wooten Wawen, near Henley in Arden, Warwickshire  in 1736 by her husband Robert Knight (created Baron Luxborough in 1745), for an indiscretion (probably with poet and clergyman John Dalton, Horace Walpole said the Rhymed till they chimed) and she never saw her husband again.

The two busts of Alexander Pope are mentioned in letters of 1748 and 1750. From these letters there is no doubt that William Shenstone owned a plaster bust of Pope. Lady Luxborough also owned a bust of Pope but she does not make clear what material it was made from -

This bust could be one of the marble busts by Roubiliac. Given the lack of headroom at Barrells Hall, this could have been the small bust or head now at Temple Newsam signed L.F.Roubiliac ad vivum 1738. Currently there is no record of this bust prior to about 1922 when a Mr ARA Hobson suggests that his father GD Hobson (of Sotheby's) acquired it.. Illustrated in a wall niche at I Bedford Square and illustrated in Country Life in February 1932, sold at Sotheby's 17 Nov 1933 - see Wimsatt


In a letter From Barrells Hall dated 28th April 1748.She mentions a head of Pope over a chimneypiece (page 22) and having Mr Outing sending Shenstone a bust of Pope made to look like marble, and mentions 4 more busts treated in the same way by Rackstrow for her brother Saint John.

 2 August 1750 she mentions Mr Moore of Warwick (plaisterer) “also to desire him to see your white bust of Pope, for I have a mind to have Lord Bolingbrokes painted the same”

 On Easter Sunday 1748, she wrote -The chimney in my study was not exactly in the middle of the room: which has occasioned my moving it 12” and consequently moving Popes bust to be in the centre. The lines wrote above it are put up again (which, you know, are out of Virgil).

 In another letter from Barrells of 13 August 1750, she mentions Mr Williams (of New Street, Birmingham) who was visiting Shenstone “I desired him not to forget to look at your bust of Pope; hoping he may be able to paint mine of my brother Bolinbroke after the same manner”. (page 215)

 

 








A Terracotta Bust of David La Touche II.

 


Bonhams Auctions  Lot 138 - 17 Febrtuary 2026.

A  terracotta bust of David la Touche II.

55cm high, 47cm wide, 22cm deep approx

Attributed to John van Nost the Younger (Flemish/British, 1713-1780). 


https://www.bonhams.com/auction/31663/lot/138/attributed-to-john-van-nost-the-younger-flemishbritish-1713-1780-a-sculpted-terracotta-bust-of-david-la-touche-ii/


John van Nost III (the Younger1713-1780),  nephew of Flemish born British sculptor John Van Nost I, was best known for his work produced in Ireland during the mid-18th century. 

His career began as an apprentice to Henry Scheemakers in 1726 with whom he stayed with for seven years, and he was likely to have worked under the helm of his father or uncle.

 Following his move to Dublin in 1749, he executed numerous portrait busts, public monuments, and equestrian statues, notably a statue of George III for Dublin City Hall.  Another significant bust he produced, depicting George III in 1767, is now housed in the Victoria and Albert Museum. 

The  terracotta bust shown here depicts the businessman David La Touche, who made his fortune as a banker in Dublin in the early 18th century. 

The marble bust of David La Touche by John van Nost is held in The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens in California, accession number 67.54:

  https://huntington.emuseum.com/objects/3098/david-la-touche-irish-huguenot-banker















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


The Marble  bust of David Digges (Digues) La Touche.

by John van Nost III.

 Sizes 66 x 52.1 x 27.9 cm.

 now at the Huntington Library.

 

 

Nost was working mostly on but sometimes off  in Ireland from 1749 - 87.

Patrick Cunningham was taken on as an apprentice by John van Nost in May 1750.

John van Nost III is first mentioned in the Royal Dublin Society's papers in 1749 when he is described as living in Jervis Street where he exhibited models in plaster.

Van Nost made a number of  return visits to London: these included one in 1753 or 1754 to hold sittings with King George II for the equestrian statue in St Stephen's Green, another in 1763, when he had a London address 'At Mr Clarke's, St Martin's-lane, opposite May's-buildings',

In 1763 he was listed in Mortimer’s Universal Director ‘at Mr Clarke’s, St Martin’s-lane, opposite May’s-buildings’ (p 28; Rate-Books 1763, Cleansing Street Rates, F6007). 

for Anthony Malone see - https://www.dib.ie/biography/malone-anthony-a5418

 

In 1779 the sculptor was residing at No. 21 Mecklenburgh Street, Dublin and in that year, on 19th October, his statue of "Hugh Lawton," Mayor of Cork, 1776, was erected in Cork.

 In the following year he returned to London, where he stayed four years on account of ill-health.

 J T Smith later recollected that Nost had lived at 104, St Martin’s Lane, in a large house, once inhabited and decorated by King George I’s sergeant painter, Sir James Thornhill.

 Returning to Dublin he there passed the remainder of his life, dying in Mecklenburgh Street in 1787.

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

 

I have written fairly extensively on the sculpture of John van Nost III but I need to return to the subject and attempt to put a proper biography together. Here are links to some of my scribblings.

 

https://english18thcenturyportraitsculpture.blogspot.com/2017/05/john-van-nost-iii-recent-research-greg.html

 https://english18thcenturyportraitsculpture.blogspot.com/2016/07/brief-biography-of-john-van-nost-younger.html

 https://english18thcenturyportraitsculpture.blogspot.com/2016/10/miniature-lead-equestrian-statue-of_15.html

 https://english18thcenturyportraitsculpture.blogspot.com/2016/07/equestrian-statue-of-george-ii-formerly.html

 https://english18thcenturyportraitsculpture.blogspot.com/2016/03/marble-bust-of-george-iii-by-agostino.html

https://english18thcenturyportraitsculpture.blogspot.com/2016/08/equestrian-statue-of-george-ii-john-van.html

https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2016/10/bust-of-lord-chesterfield-by.html

https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2016/10/marble-bust-of-samuel-madden-by-john.html

https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2017/09/busts-david-garrick-at-garrick-club.html

https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2025/06/the-monument-to-sir-arthur-acheson-in.html

https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2025/07/blog-post.html

https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2024/02/hewetson-in-rome-part-15-henry.html

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

 

 Images below courtesy Huntington Library website - I suppose I should be thankful for small mercies.

















































 

but why do museums such as this post such low resolution poor quality images?

https://emuseum.huntington.org/objects/3098/david-la-touche-irish-huguenot-banker

 

for more on the La Touche family see -

 http://latouchelegacy.com/la-touche-history/

 https://rathdown.wicklowheritage.org/people/the-la-touche-family-of-bellevue

 https://irishhistorichouses.com/tag/la-touche-david-digues-1671-1745/

 etc etc.




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Mrs Damer's Dogs at Goodwood House






Anne Seymour Damer.







 
















https://photoarchive.paul-mellon-centre.ac.uk/objects/391398/paf00051/archive


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




The Lewis Walpole Library Yale University Anne Seymour Damer Terracotta Dogs.

Originally at Strawberry Hill.

Terracotta on marble base.

21.5 x 42.7 x 34.4 cm

Inscribed Anna Damer Londinensis fecit 1782.

 

1774, Description: Additions since the Appendix…In the Little Parlour. Two sleeping dogs, the original model in terra-cotta, by the honorable Mrs. Damer, which she afterwards executed in marble for the Duke of Richmond. (149)

 1784. Description: Text as above.

 Strawberry Hill Sale Text: A model in terra cotta, by Lady Anne Damer, of two Dogs, very spirited in effect under a glass case.

  1842, Strawberry Hill Sale, day 16, lot 116, bt Earl of Derby £32.0.6 (“under a glass case”).

https://libsvcs-1.its.yale.edu/strawberryhill/oneitem.asp?i=3&id=145















Tuesday, 3 February 2026

Shock Dog by Anne Seymour Damer Redux.

 


This post prompted by an article in the Antiques Trades Gazette.

https://www.antiquestradegazette.com/news/2026/export-block-on-18th-century-shock-dog-by-female-sculptor

              £635,000 is needed to keep the sculpture in England. No hint of the buyer or underbidder.

It seems amazing to me that whilst it is a perfectly adequate - even charming piece of sculpture I fail to comprehend why two bidders deem it to be worth so much.


This sculpture by Anne Damer nee Conway (1748-1828) was auctioned at Sotheby’s Lot 352  on July 2, 2025 and an export licence subsequently was applied for.

I have written at some length on Mrs Damer her sculptures and portraits of her, see -

https://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2024/12/anne-seymour-damer-and-her-sculptures.html

It has to be said that there has always been some scepticism regarding the actual authorship of her work. Her early work was made under the tutelidge of Cerrachi.


Here is the link to Sotheby's website -

 https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2025/master-sculpture-from-four-millenia-l25264/shock-dog

Prior to the Sotheby’s sale the sculpture had remained in the artist's family following it having been bequeathed by the sculptor to her cousin and heir, Louisa Johnston (née Campbell 1776-1852).

A marble is in the Metropolitan Museum New York (see below).

https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/642422

 

The UK government, on the advice of The Reviewing Committee on the Export of Works of Art and Objects of Cultural Interest (RCEWA), temporarily blocked the sculpture from export from the country in the hope a UK institution can raise the £635,000 needed.


The images below are from Sotheby's website. It would have been useful to see the inscription.


Inscribed  ANNA. / ΣEIMOPIΣ. / ΔAMEP. EΠOIEI,  1795.

30 x 38 x 31cm.









































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


Mrs Damer and her Dogs.

 Horace Walpole said of  "She has a singular talent for catching the characters of animals. I have two dogs sleeping, by her (which she has since executed in marble for her brother, the Duke of Richmond) that are perfection".


Walpole wrote in his Anecdotes of Painting, published in 1781: ‘Her shock-dog, large as life, and only not alive, has a looseness and softness in the curls that seemed impossible in terra-cotta: it rivals the marble of Bernini in the Royal collection.’

I think he might have been slightly biased given his connections with her - he was her guardian and her fathers cousin.

 At Strawberry Hill Walpole housed what was probably the largest collection of Anne Seymour Damer’s works ever formed. It comprised  twelve sculptures, of which four were wax medallions – in the style of the feted wax modeller, Isaac Gosset – along with four heads and four sculpted animals.

 Her sculptures were mainly located in the Strawberry Hill private rooms, in which Walpole lived.




Anne Conway married John Damer, the eldest son of Lord Milton in 1767, but their unhappy marriage ended with her debt-ridden husband’s suicide in 1776. Following his death, Damer embarked on the highly unusual path of becoming a sculptor, then unheard of as a profession for women, even less those of aristocratic standing. 

With strong support from Walpole, Damer received lessons in modelling from Giuseppe Ceracchi (whose statue of Anne Seymour Damer as the Muse of Sculpture is in the British Museum) and from John Bacon, as well as embarking on various study visits to Italy.

Italian sculptor, trained Rome settled in London 1773, where taught Mrs Damer. In 1779 left for Vienna, Amsterdam and Rome. To America in 1790-2 and again 1794-5, making busts of Republican leaders. Then in 1799 settled in France, where guillotined after joining a plot against Napoleon (plot of the Rue Saint-Nicaise).


Although Percy Noble in Anne Seymour Damer, Woman of Art and Fashion, London, pub 1908 pieced together a relatively complete inventory of Damer's works in 1908, her dying wish to destroy all her personal documents has resulted in an academic void regarding the artist's life.

 Of the six sculptures of dogs that Damer exhibited at the Royal Academy, three are known to have been terracottas, one the Goodwood group and another, a lost portrait of her whippet, Fidele.

 This leaves one tantalisingly ambiguous entry from the Royal Academy catalogue of 1800 of  "A Lap-dog".

 A second possibility lies in a reference Noble makes to another unaccounted for marble. He relates that Damer had presented Queen Charlotte with a marble dog, which, on her death passed into the collection of her eldest daughter Elizabeth. 

 After Elizabeth's death in 1840, her possessions were bequeathed to her siblings and friends in England.

 The whereabouts of that marble dog also remain unknown - Given the circumstantial evidence this is most likely the sculpture now in the Metropolitan Museum.


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


The Metropolitan Museum Marble Shock Dog.


Sizes 33.3 × 38 × 32.1 cm.

 It is Incised on oval at rear, in Greek: ΑΝΝΑ.ΣΕΙΜΟΡΙΣ.ΔΑΜΕΡ.ΕΠΟΙΕΙ. [made by Anne Seymour Damer].


Private Collection, London , Italy (until 2013; sold at 28th Biennale Dell-Antiquariato, Florence, October 5–13, 2013, to Zietz); [ Rainer Zietz Limited , London, 2013–14; sold to MMA ].