A Plaster Bust of Isaac Newton
After Michael Rysbrack
Approximately Three Quarter Life Size.
Arniston House
Midlothian, Scotland.
I am
very grateful to Henrietta Dundas for allowing me the opportunity to visit
Arniston in June 2015 and to photograph the sixteen busts and two statuettes in the upper library.
It is my
intention to publish further on this blog the 16 plaster busts and plaster statuettes of
Hercules and Shakespeare at Arniston in due course.
This
bust of Isaac Newton is one of a collection of plaster casts in the Skied Library at
Arniston House which was designed by William Adam, father of the Adam
brothers in 1725, for the first Robert Dundas (1685-1753), Lord
President of the Court of Session.
William
Adam designed the first phase of the building at Arniston the East wing and
central portions which was constructed between 1726 and the 1740's, the
west wing was constructed to the specifications of John Adam in the
1750's.
_________________________________________
Most of
the 16 busts are now believed to have been collected in Italy by
the second Robert Dundas II,(1713 - 87) also a Lord Presidents
of the Court of Session, whilst on his grand tour in the 1730's when he was
studying at Utrecht University, but the figure of Shakespeare after
Scheemakers monument and the accompanying statuette of Hercules after the
Rysbrack Hercules at Stourhead and the bust of Newton are later casts perhaps
by John Cheere but given the subjects could be by Harris of the Strand or
Robert Shout of Holborn.
Aristotle
Lucretia
Nero/supposed
Zeno
Jeron
Antinous
Vestal
Virgin
Solon
Homer
Socrates
Cuero
Euripides
Info from
Architectural Heritage, vol 12, 2001. Pat Wigston
All the
plaster casts in the library have been painted a uniform orange brown to give
the appearance of terracotta. This is probably the earliest collection of
reproduction of classical plaster busts in England still in their original
setting.
Both
Lord Presidents studied law at Utrecht as part of the well-known temporary
migration of Scottish legal scholars between the 1680s and 1750s.
It has
been assumed in the past that the busts were from the workshop of John Cheere -
but they are too early if they were collected in the 1730's given that Cheere did not
start in business until 1739, a close inspection reveals that the
majority which have turned socles have a thin surface layer of
approximately 5mm thick of a variegated coloured yellow and dark brown
plaster giving them a Sienna marble like appearance, which I have
never encountered before.
For
Arniston House see - http://www.arniston-house.co.uk/
I now don't think this Newton is not by Cheere but a less sophisticated hand
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