A Marble Bust of George II
attributed to Michael Rysbrack
attributed to Michael Rysbrack
in Sotheby's Sale - 2 July 2019.
and some further soft paste porcelain busts of George II.
A few notes and images:
I have posted at some length already on the portrait busts of George II.
http://english18thcenturyportraitsculpture.blogspot.com/2016/07/bust-of-george-ii-by-michael-rysbrack.html
http://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2015/08/the-busts-in-queen-carolines-library.html
For the Rysbrack busts of George II in terracotta at Durham University and the Royal Collection and the marble busts in the Royal Collection and the Victoria and Albert Museum see my post.
http://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2017/10/marble-bust-of-george-ii-by-rysbrack-at.html
http://english18thcenturyportraitsculpture.blogspot.com/2016/07/busts-of-william-iii-george-i-and.html
_____________
For the lead statue of George II at Royal Square St Helier, Jersey by John Cheere (1709 - 87) see.
http://members.societe-jersiaise.org/geraint/statues/gii1999.html
________________________
The post here on the soft paste porcelain busts of George II is a series of photographs and notes collated from various websites - I do not pretend any expertise on the subject of soft paste porcelain but the work by Ross and Gael Ramsay is very good.(see notes below).
_______________
A Marble Bust George II (1638-1760).
Attributed by Sotheby's to the workshop of Michael Rysbrack (1694-1770)
Photographs and text below courtesy Sotheby's.
George II
Marble
bust: 43cm., 17in.
base: 12cm., 4¾in.
Provenance
Christie's, London, 7 July 1998, lot 98.
Sotheby's Catalogue Note:
This beautifully carved bust of George II is a reduced
version of Rysbrack's portrait, which he modelled from life in 1738. The
original terracotta is in the Royal Collection (inv. no. RCIN 1412) and is
paired with a bust of Queen Caroline (1683-1737; inv. no. RCIN 1411).
Vertu, in
his diaries from 1738, records that ‘the KING … sat to [Rysbrack] at Kensington
twice. to have his picture modelled in Clay. the likeness much approvd on – and
with a good Air. – also a Moddel of the Queen vastly like. Tho’ not done from
the life’ (as quoted in Webb, op. cit., p. 155).
Rysbrack executed marble
versions of the pair for George II, which are almost certainly the prime marble
versions and are in the Royal Collection at Kensington Palace (inv. nos. RCIN
31322 and 31317).
The fact that Rysbrack kept the terracotta models indicates
that he was given permission to execute further versions. A lifesize marble
version of the George II from the collection of Howard Hodgkin was sold in
these rooms on 24 October 2017, lot 193.
The present bust is carved with a
level of finesse worthy of Rysbrack himself, evidenced particularly in the very
fine medusa mask. However, it is a simplified version of the original (note the
absence of the lace bow at the collar) and the reduced size is unusual, which
indicates that the present marble was probably produced in the workshop.
RELATED LITERATURE
M. I. Webb, Michael Rysbrack, London, 1954; J.
Kenworthy-Browne, 'Portrait Busts by Rysbrack', National Trust Studies 1980
(1979), 67; R. Williams and K. Eustace. "Rysbrack." Grove Art Online.
Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press. Web. 11 May. 2014. ; Katharine
Eustace, ‘Rysbrack, (John) Michael (1694–1770)’, Oxford Dictionary of National
Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2009.
_______________________
George II.
___________________
Sotheby's fail to note the bust at Durham University (see below).
see my blog post:
http://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2017/10/marble-bust-of-george-ii-by-rysbrack-at.html
Whilst a competent work I personally would hesitate to suggest that it is from the Rysbrack workshop.
Comparisons with the bust in the Royal Collection and bust in Christchurch College, Oxford would suggest a rather less competent sculptor.
________________
Photographs above and catalogue description below courtesy Michaans
Marble Bust of George II (1683-1760) Finely carved depicting the king as a Roman emperor, wearing a crown of laurel, a cuirass with lionís head on the shoulders, a mask of Medusa at his collar, the Garter Star on his left breast; the George (St. George and the Dragon), suspended from a sash around his shoulders, on a circular socle and square base.
Studio of John Rysbrach (1694-1770)
Mid-18th Century {Dimensions 21 1/2 x 10 3/4 inches}
Provenance: Hilary Chelminski, London
Sold by Michaans Auctions
________________
Bust of George II
After Michael Rysbrack
Sold Michaans Lot1112, 8/9th December 2017.
Marble Bust of George II (1683-1760) Finely carved depicting the king as a Roman emperor, wearing a crown of laurel, a cuirass with lionís head on the shoulders, a mask of Medusa at his collar, the Garter Star on his left breast; the George (St. George and the Dragon), suspended from a sash around his shoulders, on a circular socle and square base.
Studio of John Rysbrach (1694-1770)
Mid-18th Century {Dimensions 21 1/2 x 10 3/4 inches}
Provenance: Hilary Chelminski, London
2751 Todd Street,
Alameda, CA 94501
United States
__________________
The Weathered and Repolished Marble Bust
of George II (1683 - 1760).
by Michael Rysbrack (1694 - 1770).
Sold at the Sotheby's Howard Hodgkin Sale.
Lot 193, Tuesday, 24 October 2017.
No established provenance.
see - http://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2017/10/marble-bust-of-george-ii-by-rysbrack-at.html
_____________________
George II
Michael Rysbrack
Christchurch College, Oxford.
_______________________
George II
Michael Rysbrack
Royal Collection Trust/ © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth
II 2014
Photographs from the Royal Collection website see -
https://www.royalcollection.org.uk/collection/31322/george-ii-1683-1760
_______________
George II.
Studio of Michael Rysbrack
unsigned
Marble Bust
Height81.8cms
Currently located in St Georges Hall Windsor Castle
Royal Collection
Presented in June 1817 to the Prince Regent by Mrs
Lloyd
Originally located on the Grand Staircase at Carlton
House
https://www.royalcollection.org.uk/copyright
_______________________
George II.
Bust, marble.
attributed to Michael Rysbrack
Height 89 cms.
The head crowned with a laurel wreath is
turned slightly to the right; the king wears fantastic armour with field
marshal's scarf, the star of the garter and, on a ribbon round his neck, the
jewel of the garter. The armour is ornamented with lion mask pauldrons and a
medusa head.
The bust is signed at the back with the initials M.R and dated
1760.
Purchased for £105 from Alfred Spero.
In the sale of
the property of the late W.J. Broderip Esq., held by Messrs Christie &
Manson, 8 King Street, St James, London, on 13 June 1859; it is not possible to
confirm if the bust is identical with the present piece.
Ambiguous notes above from the V and A website: http://collections.vam.ac.uk/item/O249019/george-ii-bust-rysbrack-john-michael/
Arundell Esdaile. The Art of Rysbrack in Terracotta.
Spink and Son. 1932. pp.41-2. pl. VIII.
cf.Longhurst, M.H. English Ivories. 1926. pl.55.
Whinney, M. Sculpture in Britain 1530 to 1830. Second
Edition. London. 1988. p.450, note. 16
Bilbey, Diane with Trusted, Marjorie. British
Sculpture 1470 to 2000. A Concise Catalogue of the Collection at the Victoria
and Albert Museum. London: V& A Publications, 2002. pp. 141. cat. no. 194
Review [1911-1938], Victoria & Albert Museum.
Review of the Principal Acquisitions during the Year, London, 1912-1939, 1932,
pp. 4-5, and pl. 4(b)
Whinney, Margaret. English Sculpture : 1720 - 1830 /
Victoria and Albert Museum, London, London : Her Majesty's Stationery Office,
1971, p. 52, cat. no. 12, illus. on p. 53
Kerslake, J., Early Georgian Portraits, I (text),
London, 1977, p. 94
Kerslake, J., Early Georgian Portraits, II (plates),
London, 1977, pl. 254
Snodin, Michael and Styles, J., Design and the
Decorative Arts: Britain 1500-1900, London, 2001, fig. 8 on p. 160
____________________
George II
Michael Rysbrack
Lacking Laurel leaves on the top
https://www.royalcollection.org.uk/copyright
_________________
George II
Michael Rysbrack
Signed and dated Mich. Rysbrack 1758.
Terracotta.
Durham University.
I think it is safe to say that this bust is the bust
included in the Rysbrack sale of 20th April 1765.
"Lot 46. Ditto of his late majesty",
given that the pair
of terracotta busts of the King and Queen were probably those sold at the
Rysbrack sale of 14th January 1767 - Lot 57.
I am very grateful for the photograph above which
was provided by Gemma Lewis, Deputy Curator (Castle and Archeology),
University Library Durham.
Reproduced by
permission of Durham University
For a more detailed essay and further photographs see -
http://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2017/10/marble-bust-of-george-ii-by-rysbrack-at.html
_____________
George II
Attrib. Gaspar van der Hagen
after Rysbrack
For much more on van der Hagen see my blog post:
http://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2015/11/the-rysbrack-statuettes-of-rubens-van_55.html
and
http://english18thcenturyportraitsculpture.blogspot.com/2017/10/bust-of-grotius-by-rysbrack.html
_____________
Ivory Bust of George II.
after Michael Rysbrack by van der Hagen.
Royal Ontario Museum. Canada.
___________________
Attrib. Gaspar van der Hagen
after Rysbrack
For much more on van der Hagen see my blog post:
http://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2015/11/the-rysbrack-statuettes-of-rubens-van_55.html
and
http://english18thcenturyportraitsculpture.blogspot.com/2017/10/bust-of-grotius-by-rysbrack.html
___________________
The Mid 18th Century, Soft Paste, Porcelain Busts of George II.
Ascribed at various times to Chaffers of Liverpool, Bow and Vauxhall.
see below.
The argument rages on!
These busts have been described as after a bust by John Cheere - mostly on the very slim evidence of the style of the porcelain bracket at the V and A which is only vaguely similar to a plaster bracket known to have been cast by Cheere.
I remain unconvinced - so far no record of a bust of George II has appeared.
To my eye the features on this bust are closer to the bust in the Royal Collection by Roubiliac (below) particularly in the eyes.
see my posts
http://bathartandarchitecture.blogspot.com/2017/10/busts-of-george-ii-and-john-first-earl.html
George II
Roubiliac
Royal Collection
Roubiliac
Royal Collection
_________
George II.
Porcelain (soft-paste) bust
43.3 cms
Factory of Richard Chaffers & Co
Shaw's Brow Liverpool,
1755-1760 (circa)
Bust of King George II on socle; soft-paste steatitic
porcelain; press-moulded with two flanges in interior and wooden screw fitment
which attaches it to waisted socle; top of head pierced by circular hole; wears
ribbon and star, probably of Order of the Garter; cold-painted and gilded;
cuirass black, embellished with gilding, star black, red, buff, grey-brown and
gold, red-brown mantle trimmed in buff with black and grey-brown splashes;
traces of red below buff areas; unmarked.
In set with 1938,0314.76 Dawson 1987
This bust, and the pedestal (reg. no. 1938,0314.76)
which may have been made to support it (see B. Watney, 'A Hare, A Ram, Two
Putti and Associated Figures', Transactions of the English Ceramic Circle, vol.
8, part 2 (1972), pl. 177a, and pp. 224-5) have been the subject of
considerable controversy. At one time attributed to the Chelsea factory, and
subsequently to Plymouth, they are now thought to have been made in Liverpool.
As Mr. Synge-Hutchinson remarked in 'Some rare white English porcelain in the
Dudley Delevingne Collection', Connoisseur, vol. 175, no. 700, June 1970, pp.
99-100, 'expert opinion has, at one time or another, assigned them to
practically every eighteenth-century English porcelain factory.'
The bust is an unusual attempt on the part of an English
porcelain factory to produce portrait sculpture. Although fourteen examples
were traced by Mr. Delevingne, this appears to be the only decorated one.
Literature: D. Delevingne, 'The Bust of George II',
Transactions of the English Ceramic Circle, vol. 5, part 4 (1963), pp. 236-48;
B. Watney, 'The King, the Nun, and Other Figures', Transactions of the English
Ceramic Circle, vol. 7, part 1 (1968), p. 51 (analysis).
Text and images above from the British Museum website:
https://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx?assetId=396871001&objectId=30154&partId=1
______________________________
George II, (1727-60)
Cheere, John, born 1709 - died 1787 (sculptor)
Richard Chaffers Factory (manufacturer)
Vauxhall porcelain factory
Soft-paste porcelain
Height: 39 cm, Width: 29.8 cm
Images and notes adapted from the V and A website see -
Purchased by Lady Charlotte Schreiber from Butti,
Edinburgh, for £5 in October 1869. In her Journals (vol. I, p. 57) she
recorded: 'Lady Hopetown took us into Edinburgh to the shop of one Butti in
Queen Street. The first thing that met the gaze of the delighted C.S. was a
Plymouth bust (with pedestal) of King George II. exactly the same as that which
belonged to the late Dr. Cookworthy of Plymouth, which came to him from the
manufacturers and which he has left as an heirloom in the family. Butti
(knowing nothing of its extreme value) sold it to us for £5.'
Acquired as Chelsea porcelain.
Bust in white soft-paste porcelain of King George II
on a pedestal with a bowed front with a moulded panel, sculpted by John Cheere,
probably Vauxhall porcelain factory, previously attributed to Richard Chaffers
factory, Liverpool, ca. 1757-1760.
Bibliographic References (Citation, Note/Abstract, NAL
no)
Daniels, Pat. The Origin and Development of Bow
Porcelain 1730-1747, Resurgat Publishers, Oxon, 2012. See pp 271-278 for an
alternative attribution to the Bow porcelain factory for this bust and its
bracket, another in the National Museum of Ireland, Dublin and a further
bracket in the British Museum.
Daniels, Pat, Ramsay, Ross and Gael. The George II
Busts and Historic Wall Brackets, The motivation, symbolism and technology by
which the models can be dated to 1745-6 and attributed to the first Bow Factory
in Middlesex. 2013, Resurgat Publishers, Oxon.
Mallet, J.V.G.. Some Baroque sources of English
ornamental porcelains A paper read at the weekend seminar Fire and Form – The
Baroque and its influence on English Ceramics, c. 1660-1760, 26th-27th March
2011, published English Ceramics Circle, 2013, pp123-146, illustrates the version
at Leeds City Art Galleries, fig. 34, and favours an attribution to the
Vauxhall porcelain factory.
For this bust, and the group to which it belongs, see
also Roderick Jellicoe, 'Liverpool Porcelain: Fact or Fiction?', Northern
Ceramic Society Journal, Vpl. 28 (2012), pp. 175-190.
Hillis, Maurice. Liverpool Porcelain, 1756-1804. 2011,
pl. 5.185, where it is suggested that an attribution to Vauxhall seems more
likely than to the Chaffers factory.
_____________________
George II
Soft Paste Porcelaine
They say probably Vauxhall!
7 1/16 × 12 5/8 × 6 7/8 in. (17.9 × 32.1 × 17.5 cm).
Provenance:
Arthur Hurst (until 1940; his sale, Sotheby's, London,
November 28, 1940, lot 41); Irwin Untermyer (by 1957–64; to MMA)
Metropolitan Museum, New York.
see - https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/203305?&searchField=All&sortBy=Relevance&ft=George+II&offset=0&rpp=80&pos=8
_________________________
The Fitzwilliam Museum
Soft Paste Porcelain bust of George II
Bust of George II (ruled 1727-60)
Richard Chaffers & Co., factory, perhaps, England,
Lancashire, Liverpool, Shaw's Brow, perhaps Shaw's Brow
height, whole, 44.5, cm height, bust, 34.8, cm. width, bust, 30.5, cm
Images and text below adapted from the Fitzwilliam Museum Website
see:https://webapps.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/explorer/index.php?qu=John%20Everett%20%20Millais%20The%20Twins,%20Kate%20and%20Grace%20Hoare&oid=39296
The evidence points to Chafers but other factories suggested are Bow Porcelain Manufactory, England,
Middlesex and the Vauxhall Porcelain Factory.
Notes:
Nineteen examples of this bust of George II
(1683-1760) have been recorded. The Fitzwilliam's bust lacks both the socle
found with some examples, and the rococo style wall bracket to support it,
which is more rare. Their attribution is contentious. Since the 19th century
they been variously attributed to Chelsea, Plymouth. Bow, Worcester, Chaffers
Liverpool, and most recently Vauxhall.
On accession this bust was attributed to
Chelsea, although its glaze is unlike Chelsea porcelain. It was reattributed to
Richard Chaffers' Factory, Liverpool, by Dr Bernard Watney in 1968. This
reattribution rested on spectrographic analysis of two examples respectively in
the British Museum and in Dr Watney's collection. These showed that the body
contained soapstone (steatite), which suggested Liverpool as a possible place
of manufacture.
Worcester porcelain is also steatitic, but as that factory made
very few figures the bust is unlikely to have been made there.
More recently
the Vauxhall factory which also made steatitic soft-paste, has been adopted as
an alternative. Accepting any of these three attributions would place the
busts' date of manufacture in the late 1740s or 1750s, as it seems unlikely
that they were made after the King's death.
Analysis of early products of the
Bow factory have indicated that some of them contained steatite, and that
therefore this bust might equally have been made by the Bow factory before its
establishment in the New Canton factory in Essex. This would place its date in
the mid 1740s when the King was popular after his participation in the Battle
of Dettingen in 1743 and the defeat of the Stuart Rebellion of 1745-6.
The two
most recent publications on the busts, Bimson, 2011, and Daniels and Ramsay,
2013 weigh these possibilities, and give the current locations of the recorded
examples.
Chaffer's factory operated between 1745/5 and 1765.
The date refers to the porcelain only.
Soft-paste porcelain bust of George II, bewigged, and
wearing armour, the Garter Star, and a cloak draped about his shoulders and
fastened with an oval cabochon brooch, supported on an associated black marble
socle
Soft-paste porcelain bust of George II, press-moulded,
and coated inside and outside with very pale greyish-blue lead-glaze. The glaze
has many brown speckles. The back of the bust below the shoulders is open, and
the marks of paring away of the clay to make the wall thinner are visible. The
narrow base has a large circular hole to facilitate its attachment to a socle.
A small shallow fragment from another object has adhered to the underside of
the right shoulder. The King faces front with his head turned three-quarters to
his left. He has a long curling wig, and wears a shirt and neckcloth under
armour, the breastplate of which is ornamented with scrolls and foliage. Over
his left shoulder plate is the Star of the Order of the Garter, partly
concealed by a cloak which is drawn in folds around his shoulders, and is held
together above the Order by an oval cabochon brooch. The circular black marble
socle is associated.
Technique(s):
press-moulding; whole; with many tool marks on the
interior
glazing (coating); whole
soft-paste porcelain; whole; probably steatitic lead-glaze; whole; presumed lead, appearing pale
greyish-blue especially inside
Technique
Description:
Soft-paste porcelain (probably steatitic),
press-moulded, and coated inside and outside with very pale greyish-blue
lead-glaze, which has bubbled, particularly on the shoulders, and, here and
there, where these have burst, small craters. The glaze also has many brown
speckles. The back of the bust below the shoulders is open, and the narrow base
has a large circular hole to facilitate its attachment to a socle. A small
shallow glazed fragment, presumably from another object or prop has adhered to
the underside of the right shoulder.
Dimension(s):
height, whole, 44.5, cm
height, bust, 34.8, cm
width, bust, 30.5, cm
Acquisition:
bequeathed; 1951; Lambe, Roger Francis
Provenance:
Uncertain before Roger Francis Lambe (1872-1951),
London
Acquisition Credit:
Bequeathed by R.F. Lambe
Inscription:
factory mark; on base; incised; 8; possibly number in
series made
Exhibition(s):
Plagiarism Personified? European Pottery and Porcelain
Figures. 1986-07-15 - 1986-08-31
Organiser: The Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge (Cambs.),
UK
Venue: The Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge (Cambs.)
Notes: see Documentation
Catalogue number: B6
Documentation:
Poole, Julia E.. 1986. Plagiarism Personified?
European Pottery and Porcelain Figures.Cambridge (Cambs.): The Fitzwilliam
Museump. 18
Publ. p. 18, B6
_________________________
George II porcelain bust and socle, height 17 3/4 ins
with incised 3 on the socle.
Image
courtesy of C. Daniels.
From the Bow Porcelain Website of Ross and Gael Ramsay.
see:
https://www.bowporcelain.net/apps/photos/photo?photoid=186665319
Dudley Delevingne Collection. This bust is
regarded by us as part of a post-Culloden commission of 12 busts, possibly by
Sir Henry Fox or the Duke of Richmond, and dates to mid 1746. Seven busts of
this commission have been located suggesting an attrition rate of some 40%. The
bust was initially analysed by Reginald Milton in 1962 and has been reanalysed
by Daniels, Ramsay and Ramsay (2013). Our analysis demonstrates that this bust
is of the Mg-Pb type comprising crushed silica, soapstone, a lead frit, and
possibly a small component of lime-alkali bottle glass. Our analysis in no way
conforms with that provided by Reginald Milton for Dudley Delevingne. Image
courtesy of C. Daniels.
________________
George II
Soft Paste Porcelain
No size given.
Imager and extract below from
From the Bow Porcelain Website of Ross and Gael Ramsay.
https://www.bowporcelain.net/apps/photos/photo?photoid=186665321
George II resurrected waster bust with a bespoke
cast-iron stand, c. early 1745. Compositionally this bust is of the unusual
Mg-P-Pb type comprising soapstone, crushed silica, bone ash, lead frit, and a
small addition of lime-alkali bottle glass. This waster bust is regarded by us
as the first to have emerged from the kiln largely intact and consequently
belongs to the pre-Culloden group of busts that we recognise. Daniels, Ramsay,
and Ramsay (2013) propose that this bust was 'rescued' by John Brittain at the
Bow site in early 1745 and by descent through his daughter, Miss Brittain, was
acquired by William Edkins and in turn on being auction by Sotheby's on
21st-23rd April, 1874 (Lot 470) was bought by Henry Willett and now resides in
the Brighton Museum and Art Gallery. Image courtesy of C. Daniels
___________
I have taken the liberty to also copy this extract below from the very excellent Bow Porcelain Website
of Ross and Gael Ramsay - please visit if you are interested in the subject
https://www.bowporcelain.net/apps/blog/show/33516267-the-ceramic-busts-of-george-ii
From the time of their manufacture these splendid
porcelain busts of King George II have been a source of continual controversy.
One of the most significant achievements of early English porcelain, they have
been the subject of discussions as to the ceramic recipe of the paste and
glaze; the motivation behind their manufacture; the age of the King as depicted
and also the time, origin and place of production.
In order to decipher the original intention behind
their manufacture it has been necessary to correct both the discrepancies that
exist within primary sources and the inconsistencies and prejudices that have
been perpetrated through the literature since William Burt’s first mention of
the busts in 1816. What we have discerned from this information is the presence
of substantial bias within the research. As a result of this confusion, over
time the busts have been attributed to almost every early English porcelain
factory regardless of whether it produced a hard paste, glassy, steatitic or
phosphatic body.
Initially
these busts were thought to be hard paste and made at Plymouth, then following
Rackham they, for many years, were assigned to Chelsea. With a publication by
Watney (1968) they then were attributed to Chaffers Liverpool and there they
remained till Daniels (2007) questioned this attribution. Subsequently these
busts have been reassigned yet again, this time to Vauxhall, yet the reasons
for Vauxhall are even more threadbare than those published to support a
Liverpool connection.
Until
recently the most scholarly contribution to these busts was by Dudley
Delevingne in 1963. More recently Daniels has extended our understanding of
these George II busts and associated brackets by arguing that one cannot hope
to date and attribute this ceramic group unless one understands the symbolism
to be found associated with both. Although of late, a host of writers have
argued for a Vauxhall attribution, based presumably on the notion that the
bracket refers to the Seven Year's War, these contributors have pointedly
refused to recognise that the iconography of the busts refers to Dettingen
(1743) and that of the associated brackets reflects both the preservation of
the Protestant succession and the trampling underfoot of rebellion as argued by
Daniels (2007). That rebellion of course was the Jacobite rebellion of
1745-1746 with its associated Roman Catholic overtones.
A new
contribution to this ceramic debate by Pat Daniels and Ross and Gael Ramsay is
to be published in early October, 2013. This monograph runs to some 85 pages,
70+ figures, and 6 tables of chemical analyses. The inescapable conclusion that
these three authors have reached is that there is an urgent need for a major
reconsideration of the previous understanding of the early development of the
English porcelain industry. Copies of this monograph may be had from:-
Reference Works (P&D) Ltd,
9 Commercial Road,
Swanage, Dorset, England, BH19 1DF
Phone: + 44 (0)1929 424423
Email: Sales@referenceworks.co.uk
_____________
ReplyDeleteI have to agree with the above comment... you write very informative posts. Your blog has everything I like:
discovery of something new accurate and research-based information, and thorough and careful explanations.
Vig Stand
By Chance I came across this site dealing with the George II busts and historical wall brackets.
ReplyDeleteThese busts are highly significant in our understanding of the development of 18th C English ceramics.
Unfortunately to date both dating and attributions of these busts have been more akin to pin-the-tail-on-the-donkey.
A summary of these various attempts will be posted on our web site at by mid-late April.
W R H Ramsay
https://baoduongbmw.com/ | https://suachuabmw.com/
ReplyDeletehttps://baoduongbmw.com/ | https://baoduonglexus.com/
https://maytinhtrananh.vn/sua-may-tinh-may-in/dich-vu-cai-win-tai-nha-chat-luong.html
ReplyDelete