Sunday, 3 May 2015

Sculptured Portraits of the Duke of Cumberland


           Duke of Cumberland, A Terracotta by Micheal Rysbrack.

                                      Signed and dated on the back Mich: Rysbrack / 1754.



 
Acquired from Spink & Son, Ltd., London, 1936, "on behalf of the Rt. Hon. Lord Hatherton, Stafford"
At the Musee des Beaux Arts, Brussels, Belgium.
 
 
 A Model -‘The late Duke of Cumberland, after the Life 1754’,
Rysbrack sale 14 Feb 1767, lot 59; 18 April 1767, lot 39. 
 
This terracotta,  sold at Spinks, 1932, once with Sir Edward Littleton.
(info - NPG -http://www.npg.org.uk/collections/explore/by-publication/kerslake/early-georgian-portraits-catalogue-cumberland.php
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
A marble bust of the Duke of Cumberland by 'Rysbrach' is described in Londiniana by Edward Wedlake Brayley in the home of Henry Richard Vassel Fox at Holland House in 1828
 
The description of this marble bust of the Duke of Cumberland is again repeated as by Rysbrach 1754 is mentioned as being at Holland House, West London in The History and Antiquities of London and Westminster .... By Thomas Allen, 1837.
  Described in Early Georgian Portraits, Kerslake 1977, as in the collection of Teresa Countess of Galway.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
Lead Bust of the Duke of Cumberland, bought from Henry Cheere, by Viscount Tyrconnel of Belton to celebrate the victory at the battle of Culluden of Cumberland over t Bonnie Prince Charlie.
650 mm x 510mm
 
Belton House, National Trust.
 
Fact not yet checked.
 
-------------------------------------------

 
Lead Bust of the Duke of Cumberland.
Height: 66 cm including socle.
 
Inscribed on the squat marble socle - 'REPUBLICA SERVATA MDCCXLVI'
 
Victoria and Albert Museum.
 

Previously at Lowther Castle, near Penrith, Cumberland from an unrecorded date until its purchase by Cooper & Adams, 41 James Street, London, from the Castle sale in 1947. Purchased by the Museum from Cooper & Adams in 1947 for £50.
 
The V and A again suggest the authorship of Henry Cheere.
 
Much has been written about the victor of Culloden, "Sweet William" or "Stinking Billie" depending on your politics, but I like the following assessment -
 
Lord Waldegrave had written in 1758, that he had ''strong parts, great military abilities, undoubted courage,'' but that his judgment was ''too much guided by his passions, which are often violent and ungovernable. His notions of honour and generosity are worthy of a prince.''
 
 
 Mezzotint of the Duke of Cumberland.
 
                     ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                     A Lead Statuette of Duke of Cumberland.
                          Probably by John Cheere, circa 1770.
 
                                                         National Army Museum.
 
Purchased with assistance from National Heritage Memorial Fund and the National Art Collections Fund. Provenance - Private collection ; Sotheby's 1990; Joanna Barnes Fine Art.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 "This statuette was probably made for a friend or admirer of the Duke of Cumberland in the period following his victory at the Battle of Culloden (1746).
 
They also say that the sculptor was  Henry Cheere, also designed a full size version of the statue, which was erected in Cavendish Square, London, 4 Nov 1770 (Gentleman's Mag). It was melted down in 1868 by the Duke of Portland.
 
The base was inscribed 'William Duke of Cumberland, born April 15, 1721; died 31st October 1766. This equestrian statue was erected  by Lieutenant General William Strode, in gratitude for his private kindness, in honour to his public virtues, Nov. 5, Anno Domini 1770.
 
The Lady's Magazine or Entertaining Companion for the Fair Sex, Vol. 1 - 1770 page 187 - reported that it was made by John Cheere of Hyde Park Corner.
 
 
 
      Another Lead Statuette of William Duke of Cumberland.
 
                           Royal Collection - Acquired by Queen Elizabeth II in 1969,
 
 
Presumed to be another version of the statuette shown above.
 
Size - 50.8 x 42.0 x 16.0 cm (whole object)
47.5 x 42.0 x 16.0 cm (excluding base/stand)
 
 
A view of a horses arse from Critical Observations of the Buildings and Improvements of London
by John Stewart, pub. Dodsley 1771.
A copy at the Warburg Institute see-
 
Showing the Equestrian Statue of the Duke of Cumberland erected in Cavendish Square, London.
 
 
_________________________________________________________
 
 
Portrait Medallion Of William Duke of Cumberland
by Richard Yeo, 1746.
51mm
Commemorating the Battle of Culloden
Hercules Trampling Discord whilst raising Britannia.
 
Sold Baldwin's Auctions lot 3064, 13 May 2013.
 
 
________________________________________________________
 
 
 
Engraving of William, Duke of Cumberland,
Bernard Baron after John Wooten 1747
58.3 x 43.0 cms
 
________________________________________________
 
 
                     William, Duke of Cumberland.
                      A Wax Portrait by Isaac Gosset, circa 1752.
 
                                            Size -10 x 7.8 cm. (3.9 x 3.1 in.)
Isaac Gosset (1715-1799) was the sixth and posthumous son of Jean Gosset, a Huguenot refugee from Normandy, who emigrated to Jersey with his father, also Jean, and married Susanne d'Allain. 
As his father was buried in the Town Churchyard six weeks before Isaac was born, his birth on 2 May 1713 probably took place in St Helier, though later his mother lived at Grouville, where the boy was brought up.

His uncle, Matthew Gosset, had acquired some fame in London by modelling portraits in wax. Isaac joined him, and learnt this art, and soon excelled his uncle.

The Royal Family and many famous men of the time sat for him. The National Portrait Gallery contains medallions by him of General Conway, Governor of Jersey, and Charles Townshend, Chancellor of the Exchequer. Eight of his portraits hang in the library at Windsor Castle, and others are in the South Kensington Museum.

Part of his success was due to his discovery of a secret process, by which he tinted his wax to look like old ivory. In 1760 he was elected a member of the Incorporated Society of Artists. He died at Kensington on 28 November 1799, and was buried in the old Marylebone Cemetery. His portrait was painted by Gainsborough. The Gentleman's Magazine in its obituary rather quaintly described him as "one of those ingenious men rarely to be met with, who are at the same time equally amiable and inoffensive".

 Isaac Gosset also made picture frames for artists such as Gainsborough, Allan Ramsay, and William Hoare; his clients, or those of his brothers, included Lord Digby of Sherborne Castle, Lord Egremont at Petworth, the 4th Duke of Bedford, and the Royal family. He was appointed the King’s framemaker (under the title Joiner of the Privy Chamber) in 1774, at the age of 61, continuing unofficially in this post for three years after its abolition in 1782.


He married in 1737 Francoise Buisset and had five children, Jeanne Madelain (1745- ), Elizabeth Ann (1744- ), Isaac (1745-1812), Abraham (1749- ) and Francoise (1749- ).


 
Miniature Ivory Relief of The Duke of Cumberland c. 1746.
Height 10.5 cms.
British Museum

__________________________________________________________





Engraving from the British Museum, A satire on the Duke of Cumberland by George Bickham (1706 -71). Dated December 1746.

Cumberland became known as the "Butcher" following the violent repression of the Scottish Highlands after the battle of Culloden in April 1746. According to W A Speck (ODNB, accessed 17 November 2012): "A newspaper printed before the end of May a report that when he returned to London he was to be made a freeman of the Butchers' Company. On 1 August Horace Walpole retailed a more celebrated version of the story in a letter, claiming that when 'it was lately proposed in the City to present him with the freedom of some company, one of the aldermen said aloud, "Then let it be of the Butchers"!' (Walpole, Corr., 19.288). Within weeks of the action at Culloden, Cumberland had been dubbed with the title by which he was for ever to be known, 'the Butcher'."

At this time George Bickham was at May's Buildings, a court off St Martins Lane, Westminster opposite Old Slaughters Coffee House and the entrance to Peter's Court, the home of the St Martins Lane Academy and studio of Roubiliac.

From British Museum Website

 
 
Another satire by George Bickham of 1749 - on the 9 June 1749 order from His Royal Highness the Duke of Cumberland to have the uniforms of three regiments of footguards shortened some three inches for sake of convenience on marches. The group of guards are shown protesting (most with speech bubbles above their heads) in an open space with the Banqueting House, Whitehall, and Holbein’s Gate, Westminster forming the perimeter. (Cumberland is the tubby character centre right).
 
 
_______________________________________
 
 
 
 
The Highlanders Medley.... 1746.
 Yale University Library
 
_________________________________________
 
Below from the National Library of Scotland.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Above are a series of engraving from the website of the National Library of Scotland.
 
All images are zoomable on their excellent website.
 
 
_______________________________________________________
 
The following images of the Duke of Cumberland from the British Museum.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Duke of Cumberland after Arthur Pond, 1747.
Engraved by Simon Francois Ravenet.
 
 
 
 
Mezzotint of William Duke of Cumberland by Gerhard Bockman 1746.
 
 
Duke of Cumberland after Nixon engraved W Proud 1746.
 
 
 
 
 
After Thomas Hudson engraved by J Faber c 1746.
 
 
 
After Thomas Hudson engraved Jeffrys, 1746. Magazine Illustration.
 
 
Engraved by Francois Morellon de la Cave c. 1746.
 
 

Mezzotint after Morrier engraved by J Faber 1753.
 
The plate heading added to in 1765.
 
 
 
 
Equestrian statuette of the Duke of Cumberland.
Ralph Wood (1748 -95) after John Bacon Senior.
Burslem, Staffordshire, Lead Glaze Earthenware.
14 ins tall
Metropolitan Museum. New York.
 
 
 
 _________________________________________________________
 

 
Mezzotint by Jams McArdell, c. 1746.
 
_______________________________
 
 
 
 
William Duke of Cumberland
Joshua Reynolds
______________________________________
 
 
A Jacobite Elegy
 
 
 
 
 
 

Bust of Jemima Dutton by Rysbrack


             Jemima Dutton by Michael Rysbrack (d.1767). 
1745.




  •                    Signed and dated on the left shoulder : M :l Rysbrack / Fecit 1745.
  •                                      Dimensions : (85,5 x) 60 x 47,8 x 30,5
  •                             Acquired from de Mr Léon Gauchez, Paris, 1895.


  •                            Musee Royaux des Beaux Arts de Belgique. Brussels, Belgium.


    From Gloucestershire Archives -

    Letters received by Dutton from his brother, the 4th Baron Sherborne etc. 1909 -12
    From Lord Sherborne, Sherborne House, Northleach R.S.O, about Jemima Dutton, 'a genuine Dutton of the old Norman stock', her bust by Rysbrack sold by the 'butler's son' when he sold Shipton Court [in 1868 Sir John Chandos Reade, 7th Bart, a distant cousin, whose children were dead without issue, bar one living daughter, an imbecile, left his estates to Joseph Wakefield, his servant, who assumed the name of Reade], etc.; 4 October 1912.

    Jemima Dutton was the daughter of James Lenox Dutton (1713 -76) of Sherborne, Gloucestershire and Jane Bond.

    James was originally named James Lenox Naper, son of James Naper,  by 2nd wife Elizabeth daughter of Richard 2nd Baron Barry of Santry and Elizabeth Jenery,  but changed his surname to Dutton on inheriting the property of his uncle Sir John Dutton d. 1743

    Jemima Dutton died unmarried 6 Feb 1762 - Will proved 8 Feb. 1762.

    For Sherborne Park and the Dutton family, Art and Architecture, in particular their involvement with William Kent see -

    http://www.thefreelibrary.com/One+family's+'heroic+age'%3A+the+forgotten+treasures+of+Dutton...-a0371687079

    Friday, 1 May 2015

    Elizabeth Murray by Rysbrack


                          Elizabeth Murray nee Finch, Lady Mansfield
                                     by Micheal Rysbrack.








    A bust of Arabella Aufrere by Roubiliac

             


         A Bust of Arabella Aufrere by Louis Francois Roubiliac, 1747.


















    Marble bust of Arabella Aufrere nee Bate by Louis Francois Roubiliac, 1747.

    Inscribed ARABELLA AUFRERE MDCCXLVII L.F.

    690mm without socle.

    Unfortunately no up to date photographs are currently available.
    Believed to be with the Earl of Yarborough of Brocklesby Park, near Grimsby, Lincolnshire.




    Portrait of an anonymous lady believed to be Arabella Aufrere by William Hogarth.


    
     Arabella Aufrere nee Bate baptised 13 November 1720, daughter of William Bate 'a gentleman of fashion and estate' (d. 1735) of Foston Hall, Derbyshire and Arabella Chambers (1701 - 27), married George Rene Aufrere (1715 -1801), at Burghly in November 1747.

    The three Bates brothers were very wealthy and had made a fortune from slavery and sugar plantations in Barbados. Their grandfather Colonel William Bate, a Royalist had fled to Barbados after the civil war and had taken up sugar planting by 1661.

    Arabella Bate was orphaned at the age of 15 and brought up by aunt Hannah Sophia Chambers, the 8th Countess of Exeter at Burghly. The Countess of Exeter had commissioned the monument to her parents, Thomas and Margaret Chambers at one time believed to be from Louis Francois Roubiliac which was erected in All Saints, Derby in 1737.

    George Rene Aufrere was the 2nd son of Israel Aufrere (1677 - 1758), Chaplain to William III,  at the Chapel Royal at St James Palace, London minister of the French Church of the Savoy in London. The family were Huguenots.

    Their marriage portraits by William Hoare of Bath are still at Brocklesby Hall.

    George Aufrere worked initially as Steward to Lord Exeter at Burghley, and it is possible that Roubiliac received the early commission for the two portrait busts to Lady Exeter's parents, Thomas and Mrs. Chambers, on their monument in All Saints, Derby.

    see - Edith E. Elwes, family Traditions, typescript in the possession of the Earl of Yarborough. Charles Poyntz Stewart, History of the Aufreres, Proceedings of the Huguenot Societ of Londot Vol. IX, 1909-11, pp.55-lI6; pp. 1 1+516O; ibid., Vol.XI, pp.255-262.

     

    From Huguenot Artists, Designers and Craftsmen in Great Britain and Ireland - Thesis -Tessa Murdoch


    He was Member of Parliament for Stamford 1765 -74.

    His house and business premises were in 38 Mincing Lane City of London (Kent's Directory 1754).

    In 1759 he purchased the lease of  Ranalagh House, later Walpole House, the former residence of Prime Minister, Sir Robert Walpole, by Chelsea Hospital.

    In 1792 he purchased at at the sale of Sir Joshua Reynolds Collection Bernini's statue of Neptune (now in the Victoria and Albert Museum) which had been bought by Joshua Reynolds for £700 on his grand tour from Thomas Jenkins, who had acquired it from the Villa Negroni in Rome  and installed it in the octagonal garden room at Chelsea - it was later removed to Brocklesby Park
    See - Survey of London


    Aufrère was a very successful linen draper and merchant, trading between England, Africa and the Americas, at first in partnership with Sir William Smith, linen draper in Cornhill; in 1743 with Smith and Peregrine Cust; and in 1754 with John Sargent. Before he entered Parliament he was a considerable subscriber to Government loans, but by 1765 his business activities had diminished a good deal and about 1770 he retired.
    Amongst offices he held were Commissioner for sale of French prizes 1756 -64, director of London Assurance 1761 - 77, Commissioner for Liverpool on Committee of the Africa Company 1764/5.





     George Aufrere, dated 1777.

    by Joseph Nollekins. 

    at Brocklesby Hall.


    The Aufreres had one daughter, Sophie, who married at the age of 17, Charles Anderson - Pelham (1749 - 1823), - of Brocklesby Hall Lincolnshire,  who later became First Earl of Yarborough. They had met in Rome on their grand tour in 1769 /70. 

    Her father provided a dress of Point d'Angleterre lace representing Spring which he bought in Brussels on the way back from Italy - Sophia was painted in this dress by Sir Joshua Reynolds.

    In 1778 Pirenesi included two objects from Aufreres collection in his publication Vasi, Candelabri, Cippi....



    Brockelsby Hall and Park, - is a 1000 acre park and woodlands and were laid out in the 1770's by Capability Brown, the planting of the woodland was initiated by the First Baron Yarborough and the estate is currently owned by the Eighth Earl Yarborough.

    The garden temple at Brocklesby of circa 1787, possibly by James Wyatt above the inner door is the following inscription  'Dedicated by veneration and affection to the memory of Arabella Aufrere, with a grateful sense of the many virtuous sentiments imbibed often on this spot from her highly
    cultivated mind.'

    The Mausoleum at Brocklesby was built between 1786 and 1794 by Charles Anderson Pelham, who subsequently became the First Baron Yarborough, as a memorial to his wife Sophia who died at the early age of 33 years. The Architect was James Wyatt and his classical design is based on the Temples of Vesta, Rome and Tivoli Pevsner considered it Wyatt's masterpiece - in it is a statue of Sophia Anderson by Joseph Nollekens.




    George Aufrere died a very wealthy man 7 Jan. 1801, at her death in October 1804, Yarbourough inherited George Aufreres pictures -The Monthly Magazine noted  "one of the finest collections of paintings in the country", valued at £200,000. 

    For a brief history of the George Aufrere his business and family see - Citizens of the World: London Merchants an the Integration by David Hancock.







    Two views of Ranalagh House, Chelsea, London, home of the Aufrere family from 1759.









    Thursday, 30 April 2015

           Marble bust of Princess Amelia Sophia Eleanor (1711 - 86), 
       2nd daughter of George II. by Louis Francois Roubiliac. c.1740.

                           Signed below her left shoulder L.F.Roubiliac Scit, ad vivum.


     
     
     
     
     
     
     

                                                 In the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge.


    The former owner told Mrs K. Esdaile (Louis Francois Roubiliac - pub Oxford 1928) that the bust had been given by William Waldegrave, 1st Baron Radstock, to his sister Lady Caroline Waldegrave, daughter of the 3rd Earl Waldegrave. Her mother had been a Lady of the Bedchamber to the Princesses Amelia and Caroline, and the latter had been left £4,000 in the Princess's will.

    Height: (bust): 58.0 cm, Height: (socle): 14.8 cm. Width: (whole): 48.5 cm.

    Malcolm Baker in Figured in Marble, pub.V and A Studies, 2000. notes the inclusion in the sale of William Smith, lot 82 - 25 Feb, 1800, - two sculptural figures in marble, laughing and crying boys. These are followed immediately by a bust of Princess Amelia. This could be the bust above or possibly a terracotta study.


     
    Princess Amelia by Jean Baptiste - van Loo c.1738.
    Private Collection.
     
     
     
    After Hans Hysing, engraved by John Faber the Younger, pub John and Thomas Bowles. c.1730.
     
     
     
    After the Original by Philip Mercier, printed and published by John Simon c.1730.
     
     
    After Hans Hysing, engraved by John Faber c.1730.
     
     
     
    Published by Elizabeth Bakewell c. 1760.
     
    All engraved images from British Museum.
     
     
    Princess Amelia, Princess Anne and Princess Caroline by Phillipe Mercier 1728
     
    At Hertford Magistrates Court, Hertford, Hertfordshire U.K.
     
     
    Detail of Princess Amelia. 
     
     

     
     
     

    Wednesday, 29 April 2015

         Jan de Bisschop, Amsterdam, Netherlands. 1628 - 1671.

                                  Paradigmata graphices variorum artificum.
    Engraved by Jan de Bisschop, Amsterdam, Netherlands (1628 - 1671), The Hague, Netherlands) and Gérard de Lairesse, ( 1641 - 1711). Published Nicolaes Visscher , Amsterdam 1618 - Amsterdam 1679.


     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     

    A bust Elizabeth Finch by Roubiliac

            
               Marble bust of Elizabeth Finch, Countess of Mansfield.
                          By Louis Francois Roubiliac, circa 1740.

                                     At Kenwood House, Hampstead, London, English Heritage.





    Currently the best images available. This bust could be as early as 1738 made to celebrate the marriage of Elizabeth Finch to William Murray later to become Lord Mansfied.
    She was a cousin of Hugh Hume - Campbell, third earl of Marchmont, whose plaster bust of Alexander Pope is mentioned in his account book for 18 January 1738 /39 - "Monsr Rouillac Statuary for Mr Popes busto 2.2.- a slightly later entry for 10th February that year records another payment for Pope's bust and that of their mutual friend Lord Bolingbroke.


    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    Marble bust probably of Elizabeth Finch by Henrietta Finch.

                                                      Victoria and Albert Museum.















    This marble bust is inscribed Henrietta Finch and dated 1741 is a variant of one thought to be of Lady Elizabeth Finch by Louis Francois Roubiliac at Kenwood, London, formerly dated to c.1745. Because the present marble is a lesser copy of the Kenwood sculpture, it is likely that the Roubiliac at Kenwood in fact dates from slightly earlier than previously thought, probably around 1740.

    The present bust was formerly thought to be a portrait of Lady Henrietta Finch, Lady Elizabeth's sister, hence the inscription on the back of the integral socle. However it is possible that it was in fact executed by Henrietta, who is shown apparently with a bust on a modelling table in a family portrait of the early 1730s now at the Yale Center for British Art, as if she herself was a practising sculptor. This would mean that the inscription was a signature, rather than one identifying the sitter. As such, it is an extraordinary instance of a marble sculpture by an eighteenth-century woman sculptor in Britain. It is also an interesting example of a copy, and reflects the idea of multiples in sculpture, which was prevalent in the 18th and 19th centuries. The acquisition of this bust by the V&A means that it joins other busts of members of the Finch family already in the collection.

    Height: 70 cm - Bust and socle, Height: 55 cm - Bust alone, Width: 43 cm.

    Information and photographs lifted from the V&A website, see -





    The Watson - Wentworth and Finch Families, circa 1740,
    by Charles Philips (1708 - 47).

    39 1/2 x 49 inches (100.3 x 124.5 cm). Signed, lower left: "C Philip[?] Pinxit"





           The Bust of  Elizabeth Finch when sold by Sotheby's.

    Sold Sotheby's London Lot 258, 27th September 2012, after Louis-François Roubiliac (1702-1762)
    Inscribed: Henrietta Finch 1741, white marble on a possibly associated white marble base
    69.5cm., 27 3/8 in.

    The condition report stated "Overall the condition of the marble is good with dirt and wear to the surface consistent with age. The nose is reattached or restored. There are possible further restorations to the proper right cheek and to the mouth. There is some minor veining consistent with the material, including underneath the proper right eye. There are also a few small naturally occurring inclusions, including in the hair and brow. As noted in the cataloguing, the base may be associated, and there are chips and abrasions to the edges. There is some red paint to the lips and a few drips of wax. The marble would benefit from a professional cleaning".


    Lady Elizabeth and Lady Henrietta Finch, of circa 1730 - 31.
    by Charles Jervas (1675 -1739).

    Collection of English Heritage at Kenwood House.

    Oil on canvas, 183 x 142 cm. Purchased at P. & D. Colnaghi, 1983.

    Daughters of Daniel Finch, second Earl of Nottingham. Finch's second marriage, on 29 December 1685, was to Anne Hatton (1668-1743), daughter of Christopher Hatton, Viscount Hatton. Lady Nottingham was appointed a Lady of the Bedchamber to Queen Mary II in 1691. She had over twenty pregnancies

    Elizabeth Finch (1723 – 10 April 1784). She married William Murray, 1st Earl of Mansfield in 1738.
    No known descendants.

    Lady Henrietta Finch (d. 14 April 1742). She married William Fitzroy, 3rd Duke of Cleveland, a son of Charles Fitzroy, 2nd Duke of Cleveland and Anne Poultney. No known descendants.



    The extract below lifted from Kenwood, Paintings in the Iveagh Bequest by Julius Bryant,
    Yale University Press.