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1770 items found

Page 86 of 148
  • A late Arrival at Mother Wood’s

    £350 Stock code: A083
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    A late Arrival at Mother Wood’s

    Hand-coloured etching by George Cruikshank, published by Mr George Humphrey. The scene depicts Caroline of Brunswick, the estranged wife of the newly ascended King George IV, saluting and addressing an adoring crowd from the balcony of Alderman Wood’s residence in South Audley Street, London. Alderman Woods was a low-born hop merchant who’s investments in a colouring agent for porter had supplied him with the means to further career in Radical politics. He achieved an almost unprecedented two-term mayoralty of the City of London where his opposition to the governments repressive domestic legislation and condemnation of the Peterloo massacre, as well as his perceived upstart vulgarity,  made him a hate-figure for Tories and Loyalists. His Whig-Radicalism continued into his term as MP for the City of London and when, in 1820 he saw the chance to embarrass the King and his adherents by the return of his absent and unloved wife, he took it boldly. Woods persuaded Caroline of Brunswick to terminate the discreet ongoing negotiations for a settlement she had been engaged in with the King and instead return, splendidly and publicly, to the capital to assert her claim to be rightful Queen of England. Alderman Woods arranged for Caroline to be conveyed in an open carriage through the heart of London to his house on South Audley Street where she became the unlikely figure-head of Radical Whiggery in the metropolis. The diarist Charles Greville noted of the procession to the house on the 6th of June 1820: “The Queen arrived in London yesterday at seven o’clock… She travelled in an open landau, Alderman Wood sitting by her side and Lady Anne Hamilton and another woman opposite. Everybody was disgusted at the vulgarity of Wood in sitting in the place of honour, while the Duke of Hamilton’s sister was sitting backwards in the carriage”. Caroline would spend the next two months at South Audley Street where the the great and the good of British radicalism paid her court amidst the crowds outside South Audley Street.
    Dimensions: 35.56cm (14″) High, 45.72cm (18″) Wide
    Stock code: A083
    £350
  • The Cobbler’s Cure for a Scolding Wife

    £395 Stock code: AD1505
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    The Cobbler’s Cure for a Scolding Wife

    A framed, hand-colored etching by Thomas Rowlandson, published by Thomas Tegg. A study in human savagery. A cobbler stands over his wife, a grimacing virago who is tied to a chair with her wrists bound. With his awl between his teeth he pulls at the thread with which he is stitching up her mouth. A buxom young woman leans delightedly over the pair, lighting the work with a small candle. Rowlandson was a chronicler of London life both low and high. Less inclined to political comment than his contemporaries Gilray and Cruikshank he chose instead to focus of the foibles, fancies and failings of common society. His drawings were always harsh and frequently grotesque, even repulsive. The figures in his work are rarely, if ever, held up for our admiration but rather in accordance with his maxim of 1802 that “Man is the only creature endowed with the power of laughter, is he not also the only one that deserves to be laughed at?” Rowlandson’s designs were usually executed in outline with the reed-pen, and delicately washed with colour. They were then etched by the artist on the copper, and afterwards aqua-tinted usually by a professional engraver, the impressions being finally coloured by hand.
    Dimensions: 46cm (18″) High, 36cm (14¼“) Wide, 1.5cm (0½“) Deep
    Stock code: AD1505
    £395
  • Awkward Squads Studying the Graces

    £395 Stock code: AD1506
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    Awkward Squads Studying the Graces

    A framed, hand-colored etching by Thomas Rowlandson after G. M. Woodward, published by Thomas Tegg. Six comic, caricatured society types are cajoled and corrected by French dancing masters into performing the steps of a fashionable new dance. By the late 18th Century the term ‘awkward squad’ had passed from military cant into common usage as a description of a group of raw recruits incapable of understanding discipline or not yet sufficiently trained or disciplined to properly carry out their duties. Here Rowlandson, in one of his favourite recurring themes, lampoons the modish aspirations of the would-be fashionable set as they are ‘drilled’ by their hired dancing masters.  
    Dimensions: 28cm (11″) High, 39.5cm (15½“) Wide, 1.5cm (0½“) Deep
    Stock code: AD1506
    £395
  • Antique French gilt overmantel mirror,

    £2,000 Stock code: 78899
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    Antique French gilt overmantel mirror,

    the frame surrounding lightly foxed original plate glass.
    Dimensions: 139cm (54¾“) High, 117cm (46”) Wide, 6cm (2¼“) Deep
    Stock code: 78899
    £2,000
  • Large 1920s cast lion’s mask

    £675 Stock code: 78888
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    Large 1920s cast lion’s mask

    copper-plated cast bronze with worn lacquer finish
    Dimensions: 22cm (8¾“) High, 20.5cm (8”) Wide, 11cm (4¼“) Deep
    Stock code: 78888
    £675
  • De Buffon, 18th Century natural history,

    £150 each Stock code: P01300 W
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    De Buffon, 18th Century natural history,

    Animal prints, based on he work of Georges-Louis Leclerc, count de Buffon, who attempted to systematically present all existing knowledge in the fields of natural history, geology, and anthropology in a single publication. Published c1740, Latin and German text. Presented in faux bamboo frames. ‘Didelphys Orientalis Pall.’
    Dimensions: 38cm (15″) High, 32cm (12½“) Wide, 2.5cm (1”) Deep
    Stock code: P01300 W
    £150 each
  • De Buffon, 18th Century natural history,

    £150 each Stock code: P01300 V
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    De Buffon, 18th Century natural history,

    Animal prints, based on he work of Georges-Louis Leclerc, count de Buffon, who attempted to systematically present all existing knowledge in the fields of natural history, geology, and anthropology in a single publication. Published c1740, Latin and German text. Presented in faux bamboo frames. ‘Viverra tigrina’.
    Dimensions: 38cm (15″) High, 32cm (12½“) Wide, 2.5cm (1”) Deep
    Stock code: P01300 V
    £150 each
  • De Buffon, 18th Century natural history,

    £150 each Stock code: P01300 U
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    De Buffon, 18th Century natural history,

    Animal prints, based on he work of Georges-Louis Leclerc, count de Buffon, who attempted to systematically present all existing knowledge in the fields of natural history, geology, and anthropology in a single publication. Published c1740, Latin and German text. Presented in faux bamboo frames. ‘Viverra Zibetha Linn’.
    Dimensions: 38cm (15″) High, 32cm (12½“) Wide, 2.5cm (1”) Deep
    Stock code: P01300 U
    £150 each
  • De Buffon, 18th Century natural history,

    £150 each Stock code: P01300 T
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    De Buffon, 18th Century natural history,

    Animal prints, based on he work of Georges-Louis Leclerc, count de Buffon, who attempted to systematically present all existing knowledge in the fields of natural history, geology, and anthropology in a single publication. Published c1740, Latin and German text. Presented in faux bamboo frames. ‘Canis Lagopus Linn.’.
    Dimensions: 38cm (15″) High, 32cm (12½“) Wide, 2.5cm (1”) Deep
    Stock code: P01300 T
    £150 each
  • De Buffon, 18th Century natural history,

    £150 each Stock code: P01300 S
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    De Buffon, 18th Century natural history,

    Animal prints, based on he work of Georges-Louis Leclerc, count de Buffon, who attempted to systematically present all existing knowledge in the fields of natural history, geology, and anthropology in a single publication. Published c1740, Latin and German text. Presented in faux bamboo frames. ‘Die Zahme Katze’.
    Dimensions: 38cm (15″) High, 32cm (12½“) Wide, 2.5cm (1”) Deep
    Stock code: P01300 S
    £150 each
  • De Buffon, 18th Century natural history,

    £150 each Stock code: P01300 R
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    De Buffon, 18th Century natural history,

    Animal prints, based on he work of Georges-Louis Leclerc, count de Buffon, who attempted to systematically present all existing knowledge in the fields of natural history, geology, and anthropology in a single publication. Published c1740, Latin and German text. Presented in faux bamboo frames. ‘Viverra Civetta Buff.’.
    Dimensions: 38cm (15″) High, 32cm (12½“) Wide, 2.5cm (1”) Deep
    Stock code: P01300 R
    £150 each
  • De Buffon, 18th Century natural history,

    £150 each Stock code: P01300 Q
    Add to Wishlist

    De Buffon, 18th Century natural history,

    Animal prints, based on he work of Georges-Louis Leclerc, count de Buffon, who attempted to systematically present all existing knowledge in the fields of natural history, geology, and anthropology in a single publication. Published c1740, Latin and German text. Presented in faux bamboo frames. ‘Mustela Lutra Linn.’.
    Dimensions: 38cm (15″) High, 32cm (12½“) Wide, 2.5cm (1”) Deep
    Stock code: P01300 Q
    £150 each