Sappho, Antoninus Pius and other Plaster Statuary
by John Cheere
at Burton Constable House, Yorkshire.
The gilding is 19th century
This post under construction.
Sculpture on the East Riding Museum Database
https://www.eastriding.gov.uk/culture/museums/collections/results.php?module=objects&type=browse&id=18&term=Sculpture&page=1
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The Great Hall.
As part of the overall decorative scheme, William acquired the plaster figures of Demosthenes and Hercules with Cerebus for the niches on either side of the fireplace.
These, and the plaster busts of the Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius Antoninus and the Greek poetess Sappho on the overmantel, are amongst a number of works supplied by the sculptor John Cheere (1709-87), who had initially submitted a series of sketches. Unusually, the sketches also survive at Burton Constable.
H 67 x W 53 x D 20 cm
This item is in the Burton Constable Hall collections and is included on the East Ridings Museum Database database by kind permission of the Burton Constable Foundation. In 1765, Cheere dispatched the ‘Busto of Sappho neat finished & pollish’d’ and packed in hay and straw for the journey from London to Hull.
A Greek poetess, Sappho was celebrated for her beauty and passion. Located in the Great Hall.
This item is in the Burton Constable Hall collections and is
included on the database by kind permission of the Burton Constable
Foundation. The reign of the Emperor Antoninus Pius was famed for its peace and
orderly government and, as such, epitomised the political ideals of ancient
Rome that were so revered during the 18th century. Cheere’s source for the bust
may have been the marble bust of Antoninus Pius by Peter Scheemakers
(1691-1781) made for the Earl of Fitzwalter in 1733. Fitzwalter paid eight
guineas for his marble bust; William Constable paid a modest two guineas for
his plaster. Located in the Great Hall..
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This item is in the Burton Constable Hall collections and is included on their database by kind permission of the Burton Constable Foundation.
Cheere’s Flora is a copy of a Farnese Flora executed in marble for the Pantheon at Stourhead in Wiltshire by John Michael Rysbrack (1694-1770).
In turn, Rysbrack’s Flora derives from the colossal
Antique statue of Flora from the Farnese collection, at that time in Rome.
Located in the Staircase Hall.
Another is in the Maister House Hull on the Staircase - National Trust.
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This item is in the Burton Constable Hall collections and is included on their database by kind permission of the Burton Constable Foundation.
Cheere’s life-size statue of Livia Augusta, ‘finished in the best manner,’ cost ten guineas in 1765. Described as ‘the most powerful woman in the early Roman empire’, Livia was the wife of Augustus, the first Roman Emperor and the mother of Tiberius by her first husband, Tiberius Claudius Nero.
The statue of Livia Augusta at
Stourhead may have provided Cheere with a source for this work. Located in the
Staircase Hall.
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Sizes H 15 x W 29 x D 12 cm.
Photographs above from Art UK sculpture database website.
This item is in the Burton Constable Hall collections and is
included on their database by kind permission of the Burton Constable
Foundation. Cheere not only produced
the Lion and the Lioness as bronzed plaster figures but also marketed
full-scale lions in lead, fine examples of which can be seen at Castle Hill in
Devon. See the next record for the image of the Lioness.
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Flora
Plaster Statuette John Cheere
Signed Flora Cheere f.
H 57 x W 22 x D 16 cm.
Flora is in the Burton Constable Hall collections and is included on their database by kind permission of the Burton Constable Foundation. Flora was the goddess of flowers and spring.
Excellent photographs from the Art UK Sculpture database website:
The original bronzing plainly visible on the back.
This bronzed statuette
of the Farnese Flora seems to be a copy after Rysbrack. In July 1763, Constable
settled his account ‘To Flora as pr Mr Cheere's Bill’ for £1 13s 6d. Located in
the Staircase Hall.
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Farnese Hercules
Plaster Statuette
John Cheere
1762
no size given
This item is in the Burton Constable Hall collections and is
included on their database by kind permission of the Burton Constable
Foundation.
Ordered in 1762.
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These two photographs from Art Uk Sculpture database website.
Hercules and Cerberus.
John Cheere.
Plaster.
Located in the Great Hall.
This item is in the Burton Constable Hall collections and is included on their database by kind permission of the Burton Constable Foundation. During a bout of madness, inflicted by Juno, Hercules killed his own children and, as punishment, was forced to serve King Eurystheus of Argos and undertake twelve dangerous tasks (the Twelve Labours).
In this instance, Cheere alludes to his descent to the underworld where Hercules was forced to capture Cerberus - the monstrous, three-headed dog who guarded the entrance to Hades.
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Demosthenes by John Cheere.
This item is in the Burton Constable Hall collections and is included on this database by kind permission of the Burton Constable Foundation. John Cheere was possibly the first sculptor to popularise the art of ‘bronzing’ plaster figures in an attempt to imitate the translucent quality of bronze.
In their seminal work on John Cheere, Terry Friedman and Timothy Clifford present an account of the ‘bronzing’ technique:There are two sorts of compositions used for this purpose, the red and the yellow; the latter is made of the finest copper dust, and to the former is added a small quantity of red ochre, well pulverized. Both are applied with a varnish, and the work is dried over a chasing-dish as soon as bronzed. Located in the Great Hall.
Demosthenes
John Cheere
Plaster
Size unknown presumed three quarter life size - to be confirmed.
This item is in the Burton Constable Hall collections and is included on this database by kind permission of the Burton Constable Foundation. William Constable (1721-91) initially ordered a bronzed statuette of Demosthenes (see below) and a sketch for a life-size plaster figure. Demosthenes was an Athenian statesman who was renowned for his eloquence in public speaking and his political integrity: the statue provides a fitting affirmation of Constable’s Enlightenment values. Furthermore, with its elaborate draperies and daring reach, it is an ambitious and decorative piece. Located in the Great Hall.
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Enamelled Earthenware
48.2cms
Enoch Wood
Victoria and Albert Museum
another at the Fitzwilliam
https://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O230553/demosthenes-figure-wood-enoch/
The figure represents the Athenian orator Demosthenes
(324-322 BC). The relief on the side of the plinth shows Hermes, messenger of
the gods, who was associated with eloquence and reasoning, and this feature
therefore also alludes to Demosthenes' oratorial skill.
The attribution to Enoch Wood's factory is based on similar figure with the mark 'E WOOD' in the Fitzwilliam Museum (inventory number C.900-1928). The V&A figure differs from the Fitwilliam example in that scroll does not overhang the plinth. The figure derives from a full-size plaster statue made in the 1750s in the London workshop of John Cheere, who later sold reduced sized casts of it.
Wood could have obtained his cast from Charles Harris (died 1795), the owner of another London plaster shop.
Harris's catalogue of about 1790
lists a model of Demosthenes, as well as several other subjects manufactured by
Wood.
For the Charles Harris Catalogue see my blog post -
Titled and dated on the back :
The Bust / of / Enoch Wood / of / Burslem
aged / 62 AD 1821.
62cm., 24 3/8 in.
Enoch Wood (1759 - 1840).
Titled and
dated: The Bust / of / Enoch Wood / of / Burslem aged / 62 AD 1821 polychromed
ceramic 62cm., 24 3/8 in.