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Lot 2104

Pulteney Bridge & Weir, Bath A Pencil Drawing Reproduction of this World Heritage View by Griffin Dated '72 - Framed.

Lot 2208

An Egyptian Highly Detailed Hand Coloured Pen & Ink Drawing on Papyrus Depicting a Musical Trio of Ladies Playing Flute, Mandolin & Harp - Framed.

Lot 681

Joan Warburton (1920-1996) - Study of a seated woman, pencil and wash drawing, signed, framed, 42cm x 29.5cm also one other drawing by the same hand (2)

Lot 842

Claire Spencer, RBSA (b.1937) - 'The Secret Bluebells', pastel drawing, signed, framed, 72cm x 53cm

Lot 843

Claire Spencer, RBSA (b.1937) - 'Pathway Dreams', pastel drawing, signed, framed, 74cm x 53cm

Lot 287

Albert Wainwright (1898-1943) - Female nude model in artist's studio, pen and ink drawing, 21.5cm x 15cm also one other female nude study, framed as one

Lot 375

Sir Robert Vere "Robin" Darwin KCB CBE RA RSA PRWA NEAC (1910-1974) - A wooded knoll, ink and wash drawing, signed and dated '32, framed, 25cm x 34.5cm

Lot 1313

A vintage Draughtsman's Drawing Set by J.A. Reynolds, boxed and one other in a wooden box marked '1851 Great Exhibition'.

Lot 1462

Three boxes of Victorian or earlier drawing instruments

Lot 15

Cased drawing instruments together with a brass inkwell

Lot 836

A coloured pencil and watercolour drawing of a Kestrel - 51cm x 60cm

Lot 339

Comical Pencil Drawing of Lloyd George together with a Copper Relief Plaque of Lloyd George and Two related Postcards

Lot 548

Box of vintage drawing instruments

Lot 8

KLAUS VOORMAN DRAWING H 8", L 5.75" "JOHNS HAIR STYLING LESSON AT THE KAISER-KELLER"Klaus Voormann [German, B. 1938]. A pencil drawing depicting John Lennon having his hair styled. Titled "Johns Hair Styling Lesson NR1 At The Kaiser-Keller". Kaiserkeller is a music club in the St. Pauli quarter of Hamburg, Germany, near the Reeperbahn. It was opened by Bruno Koschmider on October 14, 1959. The Beatles had a contract with Kaiserkeller to play there in 1960. Signed lower center. Unframed.Good condition. DuMouchelle does not authenticate merchandise and the bidder should view the item before placing a bid. JMF- For High Resolution Photos visit Dumouchelles website.

Lot 2154

RAFAEL CORONEL (MEXICAN B.1932), PASTEL & PENCIL DRAWING ON PAPER, 1968, H 23", W 17", "FIGURE #1"Signed lower and dated lower right. Framed. Forsythe Gallery, Ann Arbor, MI label on verso.Frame is nicked and pulling apart, artwork appears to be in good condition as viewed in the unopened frame. Rf- For High Resolution Photos visit Dumouchelles website.

Lot 699

A Peter Scott artist's proof print, duck's settling, signed, with a drawing of two ducks to the margin with inscription and dated August 1953 See illustration

Lot 836

A Warner Brothers Animation Art pencil drawing, Porky, stamped and dated 1996, 21 x 29 cm

Lot 1264

ROYSTON DAVIES (active 1940s) - Alfa Romeo P3, Richard Shuttleworth Donington Grand Prix circa 1935, an original drawing depicting the winning car and driver at speed past the pits, pencil on paper mounted on board, signed by the artist, unframed, 14 x 10".

Lot 106

A Japanese coloured drawing and an oil on board Russian pastoral landscape

Lot 335

ENGLISH SCHOOL Church in a landscape. Pencil drawing. 4'' x 9''

Lot 9

19th Century School'Sophie Francis Hoofer, 1833'Pencil drawing Signed indistinctly lower right19cm x 16.5cm

Lot 156

John Opie (British 1761-1807) A young boy playing with a cat, oil on canvas, unframed, 76 x 64cmProvenanceColognaghi, Faulkner, 1930BiographyOpie, John (1761-1807), portrait and history painter, was born in May 1761 at Blowing House, Mithian, St Agnes, near Truro, Cornwall. When he was fourteen or fifteen, Opie was 'discovered' by Dr John Wolcot, an amateur artist and critic who was both a pupil and a friend of Richard Wilson, and who had valuable acquaintances in the artistic world (a portrait of him by Opie is in the National Portrait Gallery, London). Wolcot proved to possess something of genius as a publicist and he and Opie went into partnership in the promotion of Opie's career. Wolcot introduced Opie to Sir Joshua Reynolds, who was very much impressed and rather crushed his former pupil James Northcote, who was then trying once again to establish himself in London: 'You have no chance here', Northcote recorded Reynolds as saying to him, 'There is such a young man come out of Cornwall … Like Caravaggio, but finer' (Leslie and Taylor, 2.341-2). Northcote nevertheless became a lifelong friend of Opie, for whom he retained the highest regard, remarking to Hazlitt, 'He was a true genius' (Earland, 31), and Opie's portrait of Northcote dates from about 1799.On 4 December 1782, at St Martin-in-the-Fields, Opie married, unhappily as it turned out, Mary, daughter of Benjamin Bunn. Her father was described as 'a Jew broker to whom Opie used to sell his pictures' (Earland, 46). Alfred Bunn, the tyrannical theatre manager, was apparently a relation of his wife's with whom Opie stayed in touch.The marriage led to Opie's parting from Wolcot. Opie was earning more than Wolcot, but now had a wife to support. Wolcot, on his side, was later wont to point out that he had given up his medical practice and £300 or £400 a year in order to promote Opie. While they were in partnership Wolcot earned some money with his Peter Pindar satires, which also provided a useful vehicle for favourable publicity on Opie's behalf as, for example, with one of two portraits of the organist and composer William Jackson, exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1783. The break with Wolcot was not final at this stage: Opie and his wife together with Wolcot visited Wales in 1783 or 1784, and Wolcot and he toured the south-west in 1783-4. Opie's particular gift for child portraiture was demonstrated at this time (c.1784), with paintings of the children of the fifth duke of Argyll and his famously beautiful duchess, the former Elizabeth Gunning (priv. coll.). One of Opie's finest fancy pictures, A Peasant's Family (Tate collection) is also of children and was painted c.1783-5, while Opie further demonstrated his range in a groundbreaking genre group showing a schoolmistress and her varied pupils (priv. coll.). It was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1784 under the title A School and drew Walpole's approving note, 'Great nature, the best of his works yet' (Earland, 54). At the same time in his more original portraits, for example, Thomas Daniell and Captain Morcom, with Polperro Mine, St. Agnes, in the Background (1786; Truro, County Museum and Art Gallery; another version ex Sothebys, London, 13 July 1994, no. 66), Opie developed this same rare seam of realistic genre, of a kind which seems to reach back to John Riley's portraits in the preceding century.Opie was also attracted, however, by that chimera of the British school, history painting on a large scale. By the winter of 1786 he was signed up to create a substantial number of canvases for Alderman John Boydell's Shakspeare Gallery. This commission followed close upon Opie's dramatic success with his first large history picture, The Assassination of James I of Scotland, when it was exhibited at the Royal Academy that year. Caravaggio, not only in the lighting but also in the gestures, although contemporary reference was more often made to the influence of Lo Spagnoletto (Jusepe Ribera).One can only speculate about how these influences came to bear upon Opie, since the tracks of his artistic education were so carefully covered by Wolcot, but prints after Caravaggio were certainly in circulation in eighteenth-century Britain. At the time, however, Opie was even more widely talked of as an 'English Rembrandt' and Caravaggio's influence would have been mediated through the many works of Rembrandt which Opie could have come across in English collections. The success of Opie's history pictures assisted his election as associate of the Royal Academy in 1786 and as Royal Academician in 1787.Like many another English artist, Opie was frustrated by having to paint portraits for a living rather than grander history paintings, and his income was also augmented by a few pupils: Henry Thomson RA; Theophilus Clarke ARA; Thomas William Stewardson; Jane Beetham; William Chamberlain; John Cawse; and the amateurs Elizabeth Mary Booth and the Revd John Owen (both referred to above) and Katherine St Aubyn. However, despite his yearning for fancy pictures and histories, and his skill at them, Opie exhibited his last historical painting at the academy in 1804, a scene from Gil Blas, and thereafter painted only portraits. The focus and freshness of his vision in portraiture gave way in his last years to imitative eclecticism, picking up a hint of Gainsborough here or a touch of Hoppner there.Opie's further ambition to become professor of painting at the Royal Academy began unpromisingly with a course of lectures at the British Institution in 1804-5 which he failed to finish. Nevertheless, when, on his becoming keeper, Henry Fuseli resigned the professorship at the academy in 1805, Opie was elected to the post, and the four lectures he managed to deliver in February and March 1807 were both better written and better presented than his earlier series. They were published as Lectures on Painting (1809). The last lecture was given on 9 March and, after a visit to Henry Tresham a few days later, Opie caught cold and subsequently a fever. He died in London on Thursday 9 April 1807. Opie enjoyed a remarkable reputation in his lifetime, although his own high estimation of his achievement has not lasted. He had genuine, if often sarcastic, wit and real talent and produced a handful of striking and original images. He struck a distinctive note among his contemporaries which can still be recognized. Technical shortcomings in drawing and in creating coherent figures, of a kind not unknown among his peers, made him inconsistent as a portraitist, but his fancy pictures and portraits of children can be better than those of almost any British artist of his time. He was not congenial and was liked and disliked in almost equal measure, not always for the right reasons in either case. It was noticeable at the time, for instance, that he was reluctant to stay long with his second wife's relations on visits to Norwich, and it may be that they did not heartily approve of him. A story told of Amelia's cousin Robert Alderson after the funeral on 20 April (a lavish affair at St Paul's Cathedral, where Opie was interred in the same vault as Reynolds) suggests this family mistrust, and also Opie's idiosyncratic character. The undertaker apologized to Alderson for putting the coffin the wrong way round (with Opie's feet towards the west rather than the east). 'Shall we change it?' he asked. 'Oh, Lord, no!' replied Alderson. 'Leave him alone! If I meet him in the next world walking about on his head, I shall know him' (Earland, 234).

Lot 231

Whimsical Mid-Century Ink Drawing. Signed lower right (illegible) and dated '62. Light toning and stains. Measures 9-1/2" x 19-5/8".Shipping $55.00 (estimate $200-$300)

Lot 224

Early 20th Century Roman School Charcoal and White Pastel Two Sided Drawing. "Portrait Of A Lady and Young Boy". Bears signature, "Roma" and date 1901 lower left. Watermark. Good condition. Measures 11-1/2" x 9". Shipping $38.00 (estimate $200-$400)

Lot 196

Walter Cullen,pencil drawing, monkey, signed, 9" x 8", framed.

Lot 201

Ernest Borough Johnson (1867-1949),brown crayon drawing, scene in Kensington Gardens, inscribed, 13.5" x 9.5", framed.

Lot 203

Ernest Borough Johnson (1867-1949),pencil drawing, street scene in Jodhpoor, dated 1900, 9" x 12", mounted.

Lot 234

Sir Francis Legatt Chantrey RA (1781-1842),pencil drawing, street scene in Newton Abbott, inscribed and dated 1821, 8" x 6.5", framed.

Lot 281

19th century English School,charcoal/chalk drawing, boats off the coast, unsigned, original label verso, 4" x 6.5", framed.

Lot 287

Tobey,crayon drawing, abstract, signed and dated '61, 12.5" x 9", framed.

Lot 295

19th century crayon/pencil drawing, A Mutiny, unsigned, 12" x 9.5", framed.

Lot 301

Mid 20th century crayon drawing, Oriental puppets, indistinctly signed, 16" x 23", framed.

Lot 49

Bill Sienkiewicz (Marvel comics artist),pencil drawing, Conan, signed and dated '79, 16" x 9.5", framed.

Lot 89

Football, Aston Villa, a set of 12 beer mats each with a caricature drawing of a player by Norman Edwards, produced by the Evening Despatch, circa 1963 (gd)

Lot 170

CLAUDE KITTO (1913 - 1996) 'Scrubbing Down, Polperro', signed and dated '90, watercolour, 33 x 49cm; and two further watercolours to include: 'Tapia Mattinno - San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice', 23 x 49cm; and a country view with cottage, sepia wash drawing attributed to George Barrett (snr), 13 x 21cm (3)

Lot 171

CYRIL LAVENSTEIN (1891 - 1986) 'Men and Boats', signed and dated 1926, pencil drawing, 18 x 24cm Prov: With the Ruskin Galleries, Birmingham (bears label verso) The Barry Keen Gallery

Lot 175

MISS A P WALFORD Head and shoulders portrait of a young lady, signed with initials and dated 1913, pencil drawing, 29 x 24.5cm; and six further similar portraits by the same hand, one unsigned, all mounted but unframed (7)

Lot 190

BERNARD PICART (1673 - 1733) Classical figures and cherubs adorning a monument, signed and dated 1724, pen, ink and grey wash drawing, 12.5 x 8cm

Lot 191

BERNARD PICART (1673 - 1733) Design for a cartouche, signed and dated 1718, pen, ink and grey wash drawing, 6 x 15cm

Lot 234

LAWRENCE MYNOTT (b. 1954) Sir John Gieulgud, signed and dated 1981, pencil drawing, 31 x 22cm

Lot 237

HERCULES BRABAZON BRABAZON (1821-1906) A wooded clearing with sunlight reflecting on water, signed with initials, pencil and coloured crayons, 8 x 11cm; and a drawing of Carracura by the same hand, 9 x 15cm (2) Prov: Christie's South Kensington, Sale Thursday 15th October 1992 Lot 14

Lot 245

ATTRIBUTED TO HERCULES BRABAZON BRABAZON (1821-1906) A harbour scene, watercolour, 19 x 24cm; and a pastel drawing by a different hand - Roadside with trees, 19 x 14cm (2)

Lot 256

AFTER JEAN-BAPTISTE GREUZE A child with an apple, grey wash drawing, 27 x 27cm

Lot 325

W * OLDFIELD Windsor Castle, watercolour, 10 x 16cm, with Thomas Agnew & Sons Ltd label verso; and two further watercolours to include: A view near Redhill attributed to W.E. Bates; and 'Troutbeck' Oct 8 1814, pencil and grey wash drawing attributed to Harriet Lister, 12 x 17cm (3)

Lot 412

WILLIAM MONK (1863-1937) The Amersham Show, inscribed 'Amersham' and dated 'Aug 1904', w/c, 18 x 27 cm; and four further works to include: Frank Lewis Emmanuel - 'Whitby Abbey'; C. T. Herford - London's Embankment in the Rain; an early C19th pen & sepia wash drawing of a river bridge; and Fiennes-Foster. 'Bluebells and Rapeseed at Poling' (5).

Lot 420

A COLLECTION OF APPROXIMATELY twenty-five 19th century children's colouring and drawing exercises, in a variety of media, to include a study of an eagle, dated 1810; view of Shenstone's School; animal studies; hunting scenes etc., all unframed.

Lot 437

AFTER THOMAS HICKEY Portrait of Dr John Heath, charcoal and colour wash drawing, 29.5 x 19cm; and one further after Hoppner, 29 x 19cm (2)

Lot 454

JOSEPH FARINGTON (1747-1821) Part of the ruins at Kenilworth Castle, Warwickshire, titled verso and dated 1791, sepia pen and grey wash drawing, 16 x 23 cm. Prov: Christie's 29th April 1986 Lot 47 Similar drawings can be found in the Ashmolean dated August 1791

Lot 23

The Monte Cassino casualty group of four medals to Brigadier Ivan Victor Russell Smith R.A.: 1939-45 Star, Africa Star with 1st Army Clasp, Italy Star, Defence Medal, 1939-45 War Medal with oak leaf, in box of issue with posthumous Army Council transmission slip, medals almost as struck; together with a portrait of the recipient by Ronald Gray, watercolour drawing, dated 1947 (painted from a photograph after the recipient's death). Twice mentioned in depatches. Royal Artillery and Commands and Staff. [Killed in action] 26th March 1944. Age 47. Son of Kenneth R. Smith and Helen Smith; husband of Laura Georgina Smith of Wilton Wiltshire. (CWGC)

Lot 231

Chinese pen and ink drawing of Sun Wukong, the monkey faced warrior holding a long sword on paper, 23.2 x 14cm

Lot 742

William Russell Flint - New model inspecting drawing of her predecessor, coloured lithograph, signed in pencil, published by Frost & Reed Ltd, 58 x 37cm approx

Lot 792

DRAWING SETS. Two boxed drawing sets including ivory handled examples

Lot 179

Olympus zoom AF 35mm camera in pouch case together with instruction booklet etc., a Midland Bank Ltd. drum shaped money box, a cased set of drawing instruments and a miner's aluminium hive shaped tea can.

Lot 238

BUCKLEY CECIL W.: (1830-1872) British Royal Navy Captain, Victoria Cross winner for his actions on board HMS Miranda in the Crimea on 29th May 1855. Buckley was the first winner of the Victoria Cross to be actually gazetted. Rare illustrated A.L.S., Cecil Buckley, three pages, 4to, HMS Cormorant, Bolivia, 7th October 1850, to 'My dear Aunt'. Buckley writes a lengthy, informative letter that opens with his frustration with the slave trade 'We have just run up here to see what is doing in the slave trade, and find it flourishing at a great rate… Slaves have been landed in pitch dark nights almost within hail of us in the very ports we have been watching.' Buckley continues to report that he has visited his father's grave, at the head of the second page rendering a fine ink drawing of the headstone in his hand, further adding that the inscription reads, 'Here resteth the remains of Joseph Buckley who departed this life 6th October 1834 aged 36 years. Rejoicing in the hope of salvation.' Buckley also informs his aunt that 'I shall most likely find a letter from you waiting me in Rio as it is sometime since I heard unless you have as I suspect directed to the “Daedalus” in which case I must hope for the best.' In buoyant mood he also remarks 'One of the Lieutenants of the “Southampton” called Day professes to be well acquainted with an Exeter family of our name, doubtless the same to which these two handsome young ladies belong, who were once introduced to me at my house (very unwillingly on my part) as my cousins.' Buckley continues in a jovial way yet laments the possibility of his next posting to the Pacific in that 'Everything is so comfortable, and all things agreeable in the “Cormorant” that I quite dread the idea of leaving her' and concludes with a touch of light-hearted self-indulgence, 'Can I venture to be remembered at the next door after this lapse of time, or has London been too gay this season, and added memories to the usual list of tales, operas and fetes. If so break the news gently to me.' With integral address leaf in Buckley's hand and with various postmarks including a blue Falmouth Ship Letter cancellation. Some tears to the final page and with an area of paper loss (caused by the breaking of the seal), just affecting the address and running close to, but not affecting, the signature. Some light mottling, G

Lot 31

TOM BROWN (b. 1933) PASTEL DRAWING 'Bexley Square Salford' Signed lower right 11" x 15 1/4" (28 x 39cm)

Lot 32

TOM BROWN (b. 1933) WATERCOLOUR DRAWING Salford street scene with figure leaving a corner shop Signed, titled 'Salford' and dated 1971, lower right and with photograph of the shop, verso 8" x 10 1/2" (20.25 x 27cm)

Lot 139

•BOB RICHARDSON (1938) PASTEL DRAWING French street cafe scene Signed lower right 14 3/4" x 19 1/2" (37.5 x 49.5cm)

Lot 33

TOM BROWN (b. 1933) PASTEL DRAWING 'Archie Street, Ordsall', (the model for Granada's 'Coronation Street') Signed lower right 11 1/2" x 14 1/4" (29.25 x 36cm) (with paper cutting showing the street before and after redevelopment)

Lot 89

C D HOLLAND (modern) GOUACHE DRAWING 'Speeding through Harringay - B1 with north bound express' Signed & dated 1986, inscribed verso 5¾" x 9" (14.5 x 26 cm)

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