HELEN FEILER, NEWLYN. A Helen Feiler, Newlyn, unique, one-off hand made necklace with turquoise & amethyst beads & hand made silver links. Length 55cm. Please note that all items in this auction are previously owned & are offered on behalf of private vendors. If detail on condition is required on any lot(s) PLEASE ASK FOR A CONDITION REPORT BEFORE BIDDING. The absence of a condition report does not imply the lot is perfect.WE CAN SHIP THIS LOT, but NOT if part of a large, multiple lots purchase.
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HELEN FEILER, NEWLYN. A Helen Feiler, Newlyn, unique, one-off hand made turquoise & lapis lazuli necklace with silver links. Length 63cm. Please note that all items in this auction are previously owned & are offered on behalf of private vendors. If detail on condition is required on any lot(s) PLEASE ASK FOR A CONDITION REPORT BEFORE BIDDING. The absence of a condition report does not imply the lot is perfect.WE CAN SHIP THIS LOT, but NOT if part of a large, multiple lots purchase.
HELEN FEILER, NEWLYN. A Helen Feiler, Newlyn, unique, one-off hand made necklace strung on wire with lapis lazuli, turquoise & sponge coral beads. Hand made silver link fastening. Length 55cm. Please note that all items in this auction are previously owned & are offered on behalf of private vendors. If detail on condition is required on any lot(s) PLEASE ASK FOR A CONDITION REPORT BEFORE BIDDING. The absence of a condition report does not imply the lot is perfect.WE CAN SHIP THIS LOT, but NOT if part of a large, multiple lots purchase.
HELEN FEILER, NEWLYN. A Helen Feiler, Newlyn, hand made, unique, one-off necklace comprising large natural turquoise beads, with hand made silver links. Length 60cm. Please note that all items in this auction are previously owned & are offered on behalf of private vendors. If detail on condition is required on any lot(s) PLEASE ASK FOR A CONDITION REPORT BEFORE BIDDING. The absence of a condition report does not imply the lot is perfect.WE CAN SHIP THIS LOT, but NOT if part of a large, multiple lots purchase.
HELEN FEILER, NEWLYN. A pair of Helen Feiler, Newlyn, unique, one-off hand made silver earrings, hung with quartz & seashells. Length 9cm. Please note that all items in this auction are previously owned & are offered on behalf of private vendors. If detail on condition is required on any lot(s) PLEASE ASK FOR A CONDITION REPORT BEFORE BIDDING. The absence of a condition report does not imply the lot is perfect.WE CAN SHIP THIS LOT, but NOT if part of a large, multiple lots purchase.
HELEN FEILER, NEWLYN. A pair of Helen Feiler, Newlyn, unique, one-off pair of silver & agate earrings. Length 5.5cm. Please note that all items in this auction are previously owned & are offered on behalf of private vendors. If detail on condition is required on any lot(s) PLEASE ASK FOR A CONDITION REPORT BEFORE BIDDING. The absence of a condition report does not imply the lot is perfect.WE CAN SHIP THIS LOT, but NOT if part of a large, multiple lots purchase.
A Newlyn Arts and Crafts copper rectangular tray with fish decoration. Embossed with dish, waves and shells centred by a cartouche, stamped NEWLYN twice to reverse, 58cm wide Condition Report: Tray measures 58cm x 25cm. Area of repairs to the reverse. Shows general wear including scratches and rubbing consistent with age and usage. Slightly uneven rim, however generally in good condition.
H. S. Tuke, 1908, (Henry Scott Tuke), a framed, remarkably atmospheric Newlyn School Watercolour entitled "A Fair Wind" of most uncommon composition looking along the deck of a ship under full sail amidst the waves of a turquoise sea. The picture is recorded in Tuke's list of works, the ship being the Grace Harwar, which was a steel hulled full rigged vessel built in 1889. Labels verso mention the person who commissioned the painting: "E. Penton, Esq., 1, Mortimer Street, W". A second label is written in ink "A Fair Wind", H.S. Tuke, Lyndon Lodge, Hanwell". The visible painting, which is signed and dated to the lower right is 6 3/4" x 9 3/4" in size and has a little foxing and mold growth.
Five Publications Walter Langley - Pioneer of the Newlyn Art Colony. By Roger Langley. Published by Sansom and Company, 1997.Royal Academicians from Salford's Collections. Exhibition Catalogue. Published by Salford Museum and Art Gallery, 2018.A Century of Art in Cornwall 1889-1989. Exhibition Catalogue. Published by Cornwall Council, 1989.Cornwall 1945-55. Exhibition Catalogue. Published by New Art Centre, 1977.Painting at the Edge - British coastal art colonies 1880-1930. Editor Laura Newton. Published by Sansom and Company, 2005.
Albert Chevallier Tayler, RBC (British, 1862-1925)The caricature signed and dated 'A. CHEVALLIER TAYLER. 1887.' (lower left)oil on canvas53.5 x 76.5cm (21 x 30 1/8in).Footnotes:ProvenanceWith Williams & Son, London.Private collection, UK (acquired from the above the present owner, circa 1950s).'It is in their studies of interiors no less than in their open-air work that the Newlyn school prove their love of truth'1. So wrote Alice Meynell, the first serious chronicler of the painters in the west Cornwall fishing village in 1889, when addressing the work of Albert Chevallier Tayler. The artist had achieved a notable success at the Royal Academy in 1887, with Bless, Oh God, these Thy gifts to our use (sold Bonhams New York, 4 May 2016, lot 88) portraying a humble mealtime in a fisherman's cottage – a painting that was sometimes referred to as 'Grace before Meat'. Predating Frank Bramley's A Hopeless Dawn (1888, Tate) and Stanhope Forbes's A Village Philharmonic (1888, Birmingham Art Gallery), the telling details and subtilties of light and space made Tayler's work a classic for Mrs Meynell. She noted the singular beauty of the young mother and the accurate observation of the baby 'as it turns its head to sleep'. The Academy painting was immediately purchased by the dealer, Arthur Tooth, who clearly made visual connections between this work and his current stock of contemporary Venetian pictures, headed by those of Cecil van Haanen, Luigi Nono and Ettore Tito2. And while Italian comparisons were made at this time with Bramley's paintings, had Tooth delved deeper into the contents of Tayler's studio, the general affiliation would have been confirmed. In the summer of 1887, the dealer was prepared to sponsor Tayler's trip to Venice. Although, in the following exhibition season, pictures such as A Council of Three (sold in these rooms 23 January 2013, lot 96) and A Dress Rehearsal (Lady Lever Art Gallery, Port Sunlight) were sometimes thought to have been painted during his few months in Venice, the discovery of the present canvas tends to discount this3. While The Caricature shares the same setting as these two later paintings, it is likely to predate the artist's Venice expedition4. Furniture, crockery and prints differ in all three paintings; the samovar and drop-leaf table, seen in the present work, reappear in A Dress Rehearsal, while other details such as stick-back chairs, relate it more closely to earlier works – particularly Bless, Oh God, these Thy gifts to our use5. There are good reasons, therefore, for regarding the present canvas in which the eye is led into the space of the room by a seated figure on the left and debris placed on the floor, as a highly satisfactory prototype. Clearly what appealed to Tooth was Tayler's mastery of such naturalistic details. Few painters were more talented than he in orchestrating the mise-en-scène.The son of a solicitor, Tayler received a scholarship to the Slade School of Fine Art in 1879 where he met Henry Scott Tuke and Thomas Cooper Gotch. Like his classmates he spent the academic year 1881-2 in Paris at the atelier Julian and, in later expeditions to Devon and Normandy, became a summer painting companion of Tuke. In the autumn of 1884, he was one of an important group of painters who congregated in Newlyn and although he did not remain for more than a month, his subsequent arrivals and departures were logged with enthusiasm by Stanhope Forbes6. One other aspect of the present work is, however, both obvious and intriguing. Where other Newlyn maids and fishermen's wives are shown reading a letter or dressmaking, the figure on the right in the present painting is drawing a profile on the wall - perhaps that of her sailor husband, or boyfriend. In her left hand she holds a folded sheet of paper that has been removed from its envelope. The thought behind her drawing is probably contained in the primitive graphic representation on which she is engaged. She could almost be saying to her companion – 'this is what he looks like'. While one Newlyn painter, Fred Hall, was renowned for such simplified profiles of his comrades, Tayler's painting alludes directly to the impact this school of young image-makers must have had on an otherwise, unremarkable Cornish village. Yes, it supported one of the largest fleets on the south coast; yes, it had good access to markets by rail from Penzance and, yes, throughout the halcyon days of the Newlyn painters, its piers were constantly being extended and its harbour deepened to take the draught of steam trawlers, but the record of its life in the domestic sphere it owed to artists like Tayler. In this respect, the picture of an innocent unschooled draughtswoman, watched by her workmate, is both prescient and precise. 1Alice Meynell, 'Newlyn', The Art Journal, 1889, p. 102.2See for instance 'Messrs Tooth's Exhibition', The Era, 15 March 1884, p. 13; 'Mr Tooth's Gallery', The Graphic, 8 November 1884, p. 12. Tooth's interest in Tayler's work is reported by Stanhope Forbes (letter to Elizabeth Armstrong, dated 26 April 1887, Hyman Kreitman Archive, Tate).3A Council of Three and A Dress Rehearsal were shown at the New English Art Club and the Royal Academy respectively. Tayler's departure from Newlyn for his Venetian adventure and his return are reported by Stanhope Forbes (letters dated 14 June 1887 and 24 December 1887, Hyman Kreitman Archive, Tate).4It will for instance be noted that the present work contains a vase of what appear to be small narcissi – i.e. spring flowers. 5Exotic or foreign artefacts brought back by mariners were not uncommon in coastal dwellings – as are the double-page engravings from publications such as The Graphic, that are pinned to walls.6Letters written by Stanhope Forbes (dated 21 September 1884, 26 October 1884, Hyman Kreitman Archive, Tate, plus undated letters) include references to the difficulty Tayler was having in selling his work prior to 1887. It is clear from these that there was a close bond of friendship between Forbes and Tayler.We are grateful to Professor Kenneth McConkey for compiling this catalogue entry.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Dame Laura Knight, RA, RWS (British, 1877-1970)A Little Mother signed 'Laura Knight' (lower right)watercolour and bodycolour60 x 49.5cm (23 5/8 x 19 1/2in).Footnotes:ProvenanceMr and Mrs George Roslington.With MacConnal-Mason & Son Ltd., London.Private collection (acquired from the above, 1999).ExhibitedLondon, Leicester Galleries, Paintings and watercolours of Life and Landscape by Harold Knight and Laura Knight, 1907, no. 8.London, Royal Watercolour Society, Summer Exhibition, 1909, no. 124.This work is listed in the Laura Knight catalogue raisonné currently in preparation by Mr R. John Croft FCA, as cat. no. 0255.Having been in Staithes since 1895, Laura Knight moved with her husband Harold to Newlyn in 1907; they would remain there until 1918. The couple were welcomed by Stanhope Forbes, and now found themselves in a thriving, jovial and exciting artist's colony. They soon became part of a wide social circle and became close friends with Sir Alfred James Munnings and Samuel John Lamorna Birch in particular.Laura continued to paint en plein air as she had done in Staithes, and drew her inspiration from scenes she observed locally. Her watercolours of this period have an extraordinary warmth and glow. In A Little Mother, which was exhibited at The Leicester Galleries in 1907 (and also at The RWS Summer Exhibition in London in 1909), she has managed to capture an intimate moment, presumably between siblings, as they rest beside a path. The spontaneity and confidence of the brushstrokes in the foreground only serve to underline the serenity of the moment. The artist has used bodycolour to give weight to the clothing and add texture to the trees, bushes and grass. The viewer's eye is drawn to the loving glance of the girl by the intense red of the child's cap. The immediacy of the moment would suggest that this is a scene which Laura Knight had actually witnessed, rather than one drawn from her imagination. A Little Mother is a wonderful, tender example of the artist's work from this early period and an interesting addition to the known canon of one of our most loved artists.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: * AR* VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.AR Goods subject to Artists Resale Right Additional Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A pair of Arts and Crafts brass candlesticks, by Benham & Froud, London, stylised leafy drip pan, shaped pad feet, 21.5cm high, ankh and orb mark, c.1890; an Arts and Crafts copper cylindrical vase, chased with sunflowers, 16cm high, c.1900; a copper sign or nameplate, Newlyn, 15.5cm wide (4)
Joan Gillchrest (British, 1918-2008)View of Newlyn Harbour with Cat signed with initials 'JG' (lower right); further signed and titled 'View of Newyln/Harbour with Cat/Joan Gillchrest' (on Artist's label attached to backboard)oil on card16.5 x 16cm (6 1/2 x 6 5/16in).Footnotes:ProvenanceWith Beside the Wave Gallery, Falmouth, where acquired by the family of the present owner, and thence by descentPrivate Collection, U.K.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ARAR Goods subject to Artists Resale Right Additional Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Postcards, a mostly sea fishing selection of approx. 46 cards, inc. RPs of net making, fish market Folkestone, fisher girls Scarborough (2), Lowestoft harvest of the sea, and gutting herrings. Also printed cards of Sale of Conger on the Beach, Pull-out Newhaven, mackerel at Newlyn, fish market at Aberdeen, herring packing at Great Yarmouth, fisher girls, unloading fish etc (mixed condition)
Madeline (Madge) C Fawkes (Newlyn School exh.1909-1931): The Red Sun Hat, watercolour signed and dated 1913, 34.5cm x 24.5cm Notes: Fawkes studied in Paris and under Stanhope Forbes and Newlyn, PenzanceCondition Report:Reasonable overall condition, some marks in the surrounding background areas, good colour, ready to hang
λ GERALD LESLIE BROCKHURST (BRITISH 1890-1978)SEATED FEMALE NUDEPencilSigned, dated May 12 -1910- and indistinctly inscribed F Bramley [?] A.R.A. (visitor)/ 9 sittings/ F W Broach[?] (lower right) 73.5 x 48.5cm (28¾ x 19 in.)Provenance:Sale, Christie's, London, 13 May 1994, lot 131 (part lot)Frank Bramley (1857-1915) was one of the pioneering figures who founded the Newlyn School alongside Stanhope Forbes. In 1894 Bramley became an Associate of the Royal Academy (ARA) and a Royal Academician (RA) in 1911. Established artists would visit the Royal Academy School to help aid emerging artists during life drawing lessons. It is possible that 'F W Broach' refers to the class tutor. Condition Report: Executed on buff coloured wove paper. There is some smudging around the signature and inscription, consistent with the original condition. Framed under glass and unexamined out of frame.Condition Report Disclaimer
λ TERRY FROST (BRITISH 1915-2003)SUSPENDED FORMS Acrylic and collageSigned and dated 84 (lower right); further signed, titled and dated Newlyn 1984 (to backing sheet) 57 x 77.5cm (22¼ x 30½ in.)Condition Report: Unexamined out of glazed frame. Very light sheet discolouration to the lower edge. The sheet has been stuck down and the edges of the sheet are visible. The sheet is very slightly puckering to the left of the lower edge and left of the upper edge. There is a small white blemish to the lower blue ring at the left of the picture. There is another small blemish to the blue shape in the upper centre. Light surface dirt throughout. A small crease to the upper left corner. Condition Report Disclaimer
λ TERRY FROST (BRITISH 1915-2003)UNTITLED (RED, BLACK, BLUE, ORANGE)Acrylic and collageSigned (lower right); inscribed Banbury 1968, reworked Newlyn 1975 (verso)52 x 42cm (20¼ x 16½ in.)Condition Report: There is some minor damage to the extreme tip of the lower right corner and some associated paint loss. There is a further spot of paint loss to the centre of the lower edge. In generally good original condition. Framed under glass and unexamined out of frame. Condition Report Disclaimer
λ SIR TERRY FROST (BRITISH 1915-2003)YELLOW AND PURPLE, NOVEMBER 62 Oil on canvas 61 x 50.8cm (24 x 20 in.)Painted in 1962. Provenance:Waddington Galleries, London Private Collection, A.T. Langdon-Down Belgrave Gallery, London Sale, Christie's, London, Modern British & Irish Art, 26 June 2014, lot 213 Exhibited:London, Belgrave Gallery, Some of the Moderns, June-July 1988, no. 13Sir Terry Frost is one of the best-known British artists of the 20th century. His vibrant abstract paintings have come to epitomise the St. Ives artistic movement. He was a product of both the earlier Newlyn School of Art, and a natural successor to pioneers of British abstraction such as Ben Nicholson, Peter Lanyon and Barbara Hepworth, for whom he worked as a studio assistant in 1951. The present work, along with other examples of Frost's work featured in the sale, brings together imagery that he used repeatedly in his work from the early 1950s right up until the end of his life. Inspired by the Cornish landscape, Frost uses the juxtaposition of curved symmetrical forms with the intersection of horizontal lines against a vibrantly coloured backdrop. Whilst wholly abstract in execution, the forms are clearly rooted in the familiar motifs of boats, harbours, sun, moon and the sea. Frost also experimented with collage and three-dimensional construction and was also a prolific and extremely successful printmaker.

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