Saturday, 16 May 2026

Plaster Brackets cast by John Cheere.

 


The Thomas and Betty Cobbe Brackets at  Newbridge House, County Dublin, Ireland.

Newbridge House was built by Archbishop Cobbe between 1747 and 1752 to the design of architect James Gibbs.



Wall bracket with figure of Apollo, attributed to John Cheere, plaster, 1758, with a replica of its pair moulded from Felbrigg Hall, Cobbe (Photo by Alexey Moskvin).


In 1758, during a sojourn in London, the couple had bought quantities of porcelain, both Chinese and English Bow and Derby. Exceptionally large Chinese pots decorated in rouge de fer, have Thomas’s initials fired into the inside of the lids, so were probably a special commission. On their journeys to Bath they stopped over in Worcester, visiting the newly established porcelain works and commissioning one of the largest Worcester dessert and dinner services on record, complete with matching porcelain handles fitted to Irish cutlery. Some of the many rococo carved gilt looking glasses they had made, were fitted with little platforms to display porcelain. China figures and vases were also placed on gilt wall brackets, one incorporating a figure of Apollo and a swan (doubly appropriate since the Cobbe heraldic devices are swans). This must have originally had a pair with the figure of winged Victory, since an original pair survive at Felbrigg; they are attributed to the London sculptor John Cheere, and therefore the Cobbes probably bought theirs during the 1758 visit to the capital.



https://www.igs.ie/updates/article/restrained-elegance-alec-cobbe





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The Peter Hone Apollo Bracket.

Sold at Christie's South Ken. October 2016.

Height 55 cms.