Monday, 20 January 2014

Locating the Marble Busts of Pope in the Eighteenth Century.


Locating the Roubiliac Marble Busts of Alexander Pope in the Eighteenth Century.


There are ten marble busts of Pope extant that can be fairly safely ascribed to Roubiliac. None has a proven provenance that can be directly linked to the Roubiliac studio.
There were two marble busts of Pope sold on the fourth day of the disposal of Roubiliac's goods at his dwelling house in St Martins Laneby Langfords 15 May 1762. Lot 75 a marble bust and lot 76 described as a head of ditto. (only copy of the sale catalogue in the Finberg Collection British Museum and not annotated)
Two others busts of Pope possibly by Roubiliac are noted in the eighteenth century, but not yet certainly identified, they are the Madame Boccage bust of Pope in Paris 1751 and the Lord Bruce bust at Tottenham Park in 1744.


The following list is an attempt to identify and locate each of the busts after leaving the Roubiliac Studio.



1. The Bust now at Temple Newsam, Signed and dated 1738 - No history until 1927. Most likely to be one of three busts or heads at Popes Grotto, Twickenham. See notes on Pope grotto.




Photograph taken at Temple Newsam, 12 March 2001.
The Vandewall / Seward bust in the background.

2. The Milton /Fitzwilliam Bust signed and dated 1740 – a description of this bust noted with Lord Mansfield at Kenwood by 1783. There is no positive proof, but all evidence points to this being the Mansfield bust. See the 1783 portrait by Copley Singleton of Mansfield showing the bust of Pope with cut away back on a doorcase. N.P.G. It shares the inscription Uni aequus vertuti Atque Ejus Amicis with a bust of Mansfield by Rysbrack which is inscribed Uni Aquus Vertuti.




The Milton / Mansfield bust of Alexander Pope.


3. The Garrick / Shipley bust. Signed and dated 1741 - In the Collection of David Garrick. First noted in an inventory of 1777. Probably bought by Garrick from Roubiliac early 1740’s. Garrick sat to Roubiliac and ordered the Shakespeare now in B.M.




Garrick / Shipley Bust of Pope by Roubiliac


4. Yale / Rosebery Bust. Signed and dated 1744. History unknown until 1791 – by repute made for Bollingbroke. Joseph Browne of Shepton Mallet. In the possession of Bindley by 1791. (Malone). Most likely Lord Bruce’s bust of Pope from Tottenham Park in the 1744 inventory.





Photograph of the Yale and Vandewall / Seward busts together at Yale, 2004.




5. The V&A. Neave, Essex. Unsigned No History before 1947. 

Bought from Bert Crowther and donated to V&A. 
(Perhaps the Madame Boccage bust or one of the three described by Jenkins as an excellent bust of Pope, at Popes Grotto 1777).


The V7A Neave bust of Pope unsigned

6. The Windsor Castle. Not recorded before 1828 when it was moved from Carlton House to Windsor in 1828.


Note See - For The Kings Pleasure. Hugh Roberts. N.599. Jutsham III, Deliveries pp.179-87. Perhaps this bust entered the Royal Collection in the mid eighteenth century and was originally supplied to Queen Carolines Library. There is a design by William Kent in the Soane Museum Vol. 147 / 198 with this bust and seven others, circa 1735/6.

Note - Bull? Boyle, Spencer Pope, Virgil Shakespeare, Locke. Info from Stephen Astley, Soane Museum, October 2002.





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7. The Saltwood Bust - 

No History. (Perhaps the Madame Boccage bust or excellent bust in Popes Grotto in 1777).


                                                 Saltwood Castle bust of Alexander Pope.
Photograph taken in the library at Saltwood in 2002.


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8. The Poullet Bust, almost certainly one of the pair of busts of  Alexander Pope and of Isaac Newton. at Wiltshire’s Assembly Rooms at Bath, 1741.

There are no records of other pairs of these busts.  Now back together with Lord Rothschild, London.






9. The Vandewall / Seward Bust. Roubiliac Sale, 

perhaps purchased by the portrait painter Thomas Hudson at the Roubiliac sale in May 1762, 
In the possession of William Seward by 1787.




10. The Roger Warner Bust of Alexander Pope.


It has no history before 1961. Probably in the Roubiliac Sale and possibly purchased by Hudson at the Roubiliac sale and thence to William Stanhope at Popes villa and grotto, and after his death to Welbore Ellis at Popes Grotto, Cross Deep, Twickenham until 1802.







If one accepts this hypothesis then this would almost account for all 10 existing marble busts once they had left the Roubiliac studio or at least place them in the mid 18th century.

Some notes on Popes Grotto at his Villa at Cross Deep Twickenham, Middlesex.



In 1777 there were three Marble busts at Popes Grotto in Welbore Ellis, Lord Mendip's garden at Cross Deep, Twickenham. See the following notes at the end of this page - Jenkins Journal 1777, and other refs from 1770’s and 1780’s. One is described as a bust, another as a marble bust of Pope, and the third as an excellent bust of Pope. Also noted in the grotto a marble bust of Lord Chesterfield also probably by Roubiliac.


William Stanhope brother of Lord Chesterfield bought Popes villa and adjoining properties in 1744. Stanhope died in 1772. The property was inherited by his son in law Welbore Ellis, later Baron Mendip who died in1802.

It was probably at this time that the statuary was removed.
House and land then inherited by Philip Stanhope, Lord Chesterfield and sold.
The land was cleared and the house demolished by Baroness Howe 1807.

The three busts at Popes Grotto in the 1770’s can be deduced as the Warner Bust, perhaps bought by Hudson at the posthumous Roubiliac sale, The Temple Newsam Bust, and either the Saltwood bust or the V&A bust bought from the Roubiliac studio along with the bust of Lord Chesterfield



Further research is needed into the Stanhope / Welbore Ellis connection. There was also a bust of Lord Chesterfield at Popes grotto noted by Jenkins, perhaps again by Roubiliac. Stanhope as brother to Lord Chesterfield, who sat to Roubiliac would obviously have been acquainted with Roubiliac and the St Martins Lane Academy fraternity. The Lord Bruce connection might also be worth following up.

Some notes on the busts of Pope at his Villa Grotto at Twickenham:

Information from Journal of Garden History Vol. 26, No.1. Alexander Popes Grotto in Twickenham.
By Anthony Beckles Willson.

1775. In the journal of exiled American loyalist Samuel Curwen of Salem, Massachusetts, entry for 25 August 1775: At Welbore Ellis’s seat late Mr Popes we alighted and..... entered the gardens and grotto; the latter being arches under the middle of the house, about mans height, admitting a prospect into the largest shady contemplative walk in the garden from the river. It is almost 5 foot in width, faced with small flint stones, crystal and some other kinds stuck into mortar, with the angles out...... 2 or 3 niches filled with the busts of Pope and I forget who else...... Wimsatt Supplement 57-61.13.

See - The Journal of Samuel Curwen, Loyalist. ed. Andrew Oliver 2 vols. Cambridge Mass. Harvard University Press 1972.

The World (12 October 1789) ‘ the grotto has little to boast, beyond the purpose of a passage that avoids cross accidents & joins two gardens, which the road otherwise had put asunder. Popes decorations of the grotto are a little bust of himself & a pretty mirror - you see his mind too, in the inscription over it.

The Topographer, 1789 - reprinted in S.Felton. Gleanings on Gardens 1897. An abbreviated version of the full description is in the seventh, 1794 edition, of a Guide called The Ambulator. Both publications mention statues of Ceres and Bacchus and a bust of Pope in the Grotto. There was also a white marble bust of Pope over the entrance to Stanhopes Grotto.
The Journal of James Jenkins. 1777. Friends Library.
I discovered in 2002 an unremarked, and intriguing reference to three busts of Pope at the villa of Alexander Pope at Cross Deep, in Records and Recollections of James Jenkins. written in 1777 page 110 &111, which was found in the Library of the Society of Friends at Euston Road, London

Next morning with uncommon pleasure, and anxious curiosity, I bent my way to the muses seat at Twickenham having been for many years an admirer of the writings of Pope I viewed with downright enthusiasm the last place of his abode, on the banks of his native Thames, Popes house at this time was inhabited by Wellbore Ellis Esq. Afterwards Lord Mendip ( note.-Wellbore Ellis, Lord Mendip, 1713 - 1802, was a useful member of many ministries, holding numerous offices including privy councillor, Secretary of War, Treasurer of the Navy and Secretary of State for America.) I saw but little of it -- the gardens and shrubbery I viewed leisurely -- they are much larger than in Popes time - Sir William Stanhope ( note - d.1772 brother to the Earl of Chesterfield) having purchased the whole premises added two wings to the house, and made considerable alterations in the garden at the termination of the old and commencement of what has been added, was a vaulted passage of thirty feet long, and seven feet high, and on the front wall is a marble bust of Pope, with the following lines written by Lord Nugent, ... (who served as Lord of the treasury and President of the Board of Trade).
The humble roof, the garden’s scanty line,
Ill suits the genius of a bard devine;
But, fancy now displays a fairer scope,
And Stanhope’s plans, unfold the Soul of Pope.
In the passage on the right hand was a bust of Sir William, another of Pope, and a third of the then late Earl of Chesterfield, the celebrated Phillip Dormer Stanhope (1694 - 1773). (noted as being marble in the Topographer in 1789. Which also notes a bust of the daughter of William Stanhope.) I next viewed the far famed Grotto, and cannot describe the feelings with which I was affected, upon the recollection of the following lines,
Thou who shalt stop where Thames translucent wave
Shines a broad mirror thro, the shaddowy cave
Where lin’ring drops from mineral roofs distill,
And pointed crystals break the sparkling rill
Unpolished gems no ray or pride bestow
And latent metals innocently glow;
Approach . Great nature studiously behold!
And eye the mine without a wish for gold
Approach: but awful! Lo! Th’ Aegerian grot
Where nobely pensive St John sate, and thought
Where British sighs from dying Wyndam stole,
And bright flame was shot thro’ Marchmonts soul.

The last two lines I purposely omit quoting -- if I dare I would call them poetical nonsense -- every man “dares” to love his country, but no man “dares to be poor”. I suppose this grotto is now no more, great dilapidations had then been made; many pieces of spars, gems ores and other minerals and even the common flint pebbles had been picked out and carried away, and thus it is as Shenstone sings,

The pilgrims that journey all day
To visit some far distant shrine
If he bears but a relique away
Is happy, nor heard to repine"

In two adjoining apertures of the rock; were placed a Ceres, a Bacchus, an excellent bust of Pope, and some others.....”

From the Ambulator or The Strangers Companion in a Tor Round.... 1794.


Scans taken from the Ambulator. 1794.



Coade Stone Relief of Alexander Pope

      

The Coade Stone Rondel of a Relief of Alexander Pope.





Coade Stone Rondel of Alexander Pope c.1790 -. in a private collection Jan. 2014.
15 inches diameter.

Perhaps by John Bacon 

There is another at Saltram in Devon. A cast of this will be available.

See Mrs Coade's Stone. Alison Kelly. 1990.

Loosley based on the Dassier medal (see Wimsatt) but perhaps modelled by John Bacon - The Chief modeller at Coade's Lambeth manufactury.

Medallion by Jacques Antoine Dassier
bronze medal, 1741
2 1/8 in. (54 mm) diameter
Given by Jacob Simon, 1993
NPG 6236
 For Comparison - The marble relief from the monument to Alexander Pope
in St Mary's Church,Twickenham 
by Prince Hoare of Bath
Commissioned by William Warburton



Mid 19th Century engraving showing the original appearance of the monument to Alexander Pope. 







A Matching Coade Stone Rondel of Hercules c 1790.



Two Busts of Alexander Pope mentioned in the Eighteenth Century.




The Two busts Of Alexander Pope of Unknown Material mentioned in the 18th Century possibly Marble and not yet formally identified.


1. The Madame Boccage Bust. A bust of Pope, Dryden, Milton and Shakespeare sent with three others to Paris in 1751 by Lord Chesterfield..

Esdaile makes a very good case that the four busts for Mme Boccage’s garden sent to France were Roubiliac marble busts. Mrs Thrale saw them in her drawing room in Paris in 1775.
The Saltwood Castle bust of Pope by Roubiliac is currently the best guess for this bust.

The Saltwood Castle bust of Alexander Pope by Roubiliac.

2. A bust of Pope belonging to Charles, Lord Bruce,Viscount of Tottenham, d.1747. -Tottenham Park, Wiltshire. Inventory of 14 Nov.1744. (10 poets heads on painted and gilt brackets, one ditto Mr Pope). Charles, Lord Bruce a friend of Pope, m. Lady Julianna Boyle, sister of Lord Burlington in 1720. Burlington provided plans for Tottenham Park between 1730-40. (drawings at Chatsworth).

The fact that the Pope bust is noted is instructive. Although not stated as a Roubiliac marble bust, he is the most likely candidate for its authorship.

There are two candidates for this bust - The Rosebery Bust now at Yale, Paul Mellon Centre and the Scheemakers bust of Pope also at Yale.

Lord Bruce’s Papers in the Ailesbury Collection at Wiltshire Record Office.

The Yale Rosebery Bust of Alexander Pope by Roubiliac.


The Yale bust of Alexander Pope by Scheemakers.

Sunday, 19 January 2014

Some more Busts of Alexander Pope - by Various Hands.

        


        Some more Marble and Plaster busts of Alexander Pope.



                       


 Marble Bust of Alexander Pope (Landi Type) - Probably 19th century.
                 Condition is distressed but had not been repolished - photographed April 2001.
                                           Not a masterpiece but captures the likeness.
                                                           Private collection Twickenham.






























Scan from Wimsatt

Note. Daniel Landi (c.1838-1925) married Agnes Walker in 1860 at St Philip, Bethnal Green, when he was described as a moulder, age 21, of 10 Collingwood St, with his father named as Charles Landi, also a moulder.

n censuses, Daniel Landi was listed in 1861 at 101 Leather Lane as a moulder and figure maker, age 22, with wife Agnes, a mourning flower maker, and in 1871 at 38 Charles St, Saffron Hill, as a moulder, age 32, with wife Agnes.

In 1880 Landi took over premises at 1 Leather Lane, which had been occupied by Domenico Brucciani (qv) until his death earlier the same year, raising the possibility that Landi had managed these branch premises for Brucciani. 

Landi was recorded at this address in subsequent censuses, in 1881 as a moulder and modeller, age 42, born Lucca, with mother Maria and sister Agnes, age 38, born Clerkenwell, and in 1891 and 1901 as a modeller. 

He died in 1925, age 87, in the Holborn district. In a notice concerning his estate, he was described as an architectural modeller (London Gazette 16 February 1926). Information from Peter Malone, Bath

  


Bust at Popes Villa in the Daily Graphic, 2010.
Another Plaster by Daniel Landi. 36 Charles St, Leather Lane.





Another photograph of the entrance of Popes grotto circa 1900.






Marble bust of Alexander Pope sold by auctioneers Tennants, Leyburn. Yorkshire.
This is a loose copy of the Scheemakers bust now in the Met. Museum N.Y. by a much lesser hand




Photograph of three Cheere type with Cheere type socles in a back room at Calke Abbey - Unsigned.


National Trust photograph of the Pope bust at Calke Abbey.Very similar to the Twickenham Bust (but without turban) and the Landi bust.

A Plaster bust of Pope signed JP Papern (Papera) 16 Marylebone St, Golden Square, was in the possession of Mrs Webb and mentioned in her book Michael Rysbrack, Sculptor, 1954 p. 78.
Note Bartholomew Papera  fl. 1790 d.1815.early 19th century plaster figure seller.




        


The Nollekens Busts of Alexander Pope after Roubiliac.
Metropolitan Museum, New York.














 Provenance Lord Leslie Hore-Belisha, Stafford Place, London (in 1937); bequeathed to Hilda Sloane, London.

Sotheby's, London, June 18, 1965, Lot. 81 sold to  dealer Ronald A. Lee , London.

In 1965; sold to dealer Cyril Humphris , London.

Sold to Benjamin Sonnenberg,

New York Sold Sotheby Parke Bernet, New York, June 6, 1979, no. 392; sold to the Metropolitan Museum. New York





This bust was paired with a bust of Lawrence Sterne (see below).
This is a late 18th century copy of the Lord Mansfield bust now at Milton, Peterborough sculpted by Nollekins. 

It has been taken directly from either the original marble or a plaster.



Another pair of these busts were sold by Mealleys Auctioneers in Ireland. Lot 487. 28 March. 2000

Resold at Sotheby's London in Autumn, 2000.

The bust at the Cecil Higgins Museum is another version of the Nollekin's Pope bust with a spurious Roubiliac signature.




















Saturday, 18 January 2014

Scheemakers Marble Bust of Alexander Pope




The Peter Scheemakers bust of Alexander Pope circa 1737.


              At Yale, Paul Mellon Centre for British Art.


with London dealer Cyril Humphris in 1972. Height 24"








               Peter Gaspar Scheemakers, 1691-1781, Flemish, active in Britain from ca. 1720.






This bust is unsigned. 

Ingrid Roscoe in Scheemakers - Walpole Society Journal, 1998 / 99, suggests this was the bust in the library in the collection of Dr Richard Meade, at 49 Great Ormond St. Sold Auction Sale - 11 March 1755, Lot 63, bought by General Campbell.










It is just possible that this is one of the busts made for Queen Caroline's library designed by William Kent. It was a new building that had been added to St James's Palace shortly before her death, in 1736-37; indeed, she had the use of it for only a month.

Note See - For The Kings Pleasure. Hugh Roberts. N.599. Jutsham III, Deliveries pp.179-87.

Perhaps this bust entered the Royal Collection in the mid eighteenth century and was originally supplied to Queen Carolines Library. There is a design by William Kent in the Soane Museum Vol. 147 / 198 with this bust and seven others, circa 1735/6.

Note -  Bull? Boyle, Spencer Pope, Virgil Shakespeare, Locke. Info from Stephen Astley, Soane Museum, October 2002.

The Library has since been demolished, to be replaced by Lancaster House, but a picture of it survives:




Queen Caroline's Library, from W. H. Pyne, The History of the Royal Residences (1819).

Scheemakers first known set of library busts was for Richard Mead, who ordered heads of Shakespeare, Milton and Pope for his home in Great Ormond Street, London around 1734.

A big thanks to Yale University, Paul Mellon Centre for British art for allowing free availability of its excellent images of Pope by Scheemakers on line.
see -  http://collections.britishart.yale.edu/vufind/Record/1666375

Notes. A cast of a bust of Pope was sold in Scheemakers sale in 10 March 1756, Lot 21.

A life size stone bust is in the Temple of English Worthies at Stowe. part payment made to Scheemakers in Stowe Accounts 13 Dec. 1737 for an unspecified bust.

The Roubiliac type Lead Busts of Alexander Pope.




The Roubiliac Type Lead Busts of Alexander Pope.


1. A lead bust of Alexander Pope at now at Marble Hill House

A cast of the Shipley Bust Garrick bust but mounted on a square tapering socle.









Wimsatt was unaware of this bust.

Sold Christies 10 Dec. 1987.

See also plaster busts 3 and 4.

As Roubiliac produced works in lead - possibly the Milton for Jonathon Tyers at Vauxhall Gardens and certainly the full length figure of Sir John Cass. It is possible that he also superintended the manufacture of this bust perhaps from the workshop of John Cheere

There is also a very fine pair of lead busts in contemporary dress at the V&A. of Dr Salmon and his wife, which have been ascribed to Roubiliac.

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2. A Lead Bust of Alexander Pope.
 
Sold Christie's, Lot 104, 10 Dec. 1996.






William K Wimsatt was not aware of this bust.


The lead bust on a later marble socle appears to be from the middle of the eighteenth century with extensive remains of its original patination and is therefor a candidate for a cast of one of the plasters or a cast from one of the moulds sold at the Roubiliac Sale by Langfords in May 1762. This bust should be compared with the Seward Bust. It is not the same but there are distinct similarities.






The Seward Bust of Pope.

Included here for comparison

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                                               The Tufnell Plaster bust of Alexander Pope.


This bust is very similar to the plaster noted by Wimsatt 61.11 with John Jolliffe Tufnell, Langleys, Great Waltham. Essex. (See notes on the plaster busts).







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