1907 items found
Page 152 of 159
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London City Suburbs, original half-tone prints published 1893
£55 eachLondon City Suburbs, original half-tone prints published 1893
Evocative prints based on the work of painter and illustrator William Luker which were engraved in Paris by Ch. Guillaume & Cie. for the Leadenhall Press publication “London City Suburbs” This prints are probably the only illustrations that show the London suburbs just before the 20th century. ‘View from Furze Hill, Sydenham’.£55 each -
View of St. James’s Palace,
£195 -
Lives of the Queens of England from the Norman conquest,
£195Lives of the Queens of England from the Norman conquest,
Six volumes. Covered in marbled paper with tan leather spines and corners, in fair but clean condition with rubbing to edges.£195 -
Nineteenth century bronze of the Heroic Putti,
£350Nineteenth century bronze of the Heroic Putti,
modelled holding shield and sword aloft on circular Aswan marble plinth base, possibly German, after the originals from the Mariensäule column in Munich by Ferdinand Murmann.£350 -
Little Boy Blue pantomime poster
£1,850 -
Crossing the Moor,
£220 -
Gilt-bronze model of Ceres,
£475Gilt-bronze model of Ceres,
modelled seated holding torch aloft in one hand and with a sheaf of wheat in the other, on plinth base. Italian, nineteenth century.£475 -
Polish gooseneck table lamp,
£90 -
William Nicholson, London Types,
£245William Nicholson, London Types,
From a set of framed original woodblock prints, c1898. With original mounted poem relating to the image on reverse. “When William Nicholson designed his stylish ‘London Types’ in 1898 – that together with his ‘Almanac of Twelve Sports’ and ‘An Illustrated Alphabet’ were to make his reputation as a printmaker – his son Ben, who was to eclipse him entirely in the history of British Art through his Modernist works, was only five years old. While working within the culture of the British popular print, William Nickerson deliberately chose to use the coarse-grained side of the wood block in his wood cuts, in a style that owed more to Toulouse Lautrec and Japanese precedents than to native visual traditions – which give these prints an innovative quality, even as they might seem to be celebrating unchanging roles in British society. Although not strictly ‘Cries of London,’ some of these characters are familiar from earlier series of prints stretching back over the previous centrury and, recognising this, Nicholson portrays them as quaint curiosities from another age. In each case, the ironic doggerel by W.E. Henley that accompanied them poked fun at the anachronistic nature of these social stereotypes, through outlining the ambivalent existence of the individual subjects – whether the street hawker displaced in Kensington far from his East End home, or the aristocratic lady at Rotten Row challenged by her suburban counterparts, or the drunken Sandwich-man displaying moral texts, or the fifteenth generation Bluecoat boy at Charterhouse School in Smithfield now moved out to Horsham.” – The Gentle Author.£245 -
Royal College of Surgeons sapele pilasters,
£1,200 a pairRoyal College of Surgeons sapele pilasters,
Roman Doric order, with fluted shafts. One pair available.£1,200 a pair -
Regency style wall mirror,
£250Regency style wall mirror,
the frame with rope-twist, ball and reeded decoration, surrounding bevelled plate.£250 -
Nineteenth century French wall mounted lantern,
£400Nineteenth century French wall mounted lantern,
with gilt finial above glazed and tapered body , the single light fitting on s-shaped brass bracket, with copper reflector to the rear. Re-wired.£400