Roger Fry (British, 1866-1934)Portrait of E.M. Forster oil on canvas73 x 60 cm. (28 1/4 x 23 5/8 in.)Painted in 1911Footnotes:ProvenanceThe ArtistEdward Morgan Forster (1879-1970)Florence Barger, thence by family descentWith Anthony d'Offay Gallery, London, 1984Private Collection, U.S.A.ExhibitedLondon, Alpine Club Gallery, Paintings and Drawings by Roger Fry, January 1912, cat.no.2 (as A Novelist)London, Arts Council, The Arts Council Gallery, Vision and Design: The Life, Work and Influence of Roger Fry, 17 March-16 April 1966, cat.no.10; this exhibition travelled to Nottingham, University Art Gallery, 27 April-22 May, Leeds, City Art Gallery, 28 May-18 June, Newcastle upon Tyne, Laing Art Gallery, 25 June-16 July, Manchester, City Art Gallery, 23 July-13 August 1966London, Courtauld Institute Gallery, Portraits by Roger Fry, 18 September-14 October 1976, cat.no.6, pl.3; this exhibition travelled to Sheffield, Mappin Art Gallery, 23 October-21 November 1976London, Anthony d'Offay Gallery, The Omega Workshops: Alliance and Enmity in English Art 1911-1920, 18 January-6 March 1984, cat.no.23LiteratureQuentin Bell, Bloomsbury, Futura Publications Ltd., London, 1974, pp.48-9 (ill.b&w.)S.P. Rosenbaum, The Bloomsbury Group: A Collection of Memoirs and Commentary, Croom Helm, 1975Philip Nicholas Furbank, E.M. Forster: A Life, Volume One, The Growth of the Novelist 1879-1914, Secker & Warburg, London, 1977, pp.205-7 (front cover illustration)Frances Spalding, Roger Fry, Art and Life, University of California Press, California, 1980, pl.51Richard Shone, The Art of Bloomsbury: Roger Fry, Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant, Tate Gallery Publishing Ltd., London, 1999, p.93, fig.80 (ill.b&w.)Wendy Moffat, E.M. Forster. A New Life, Bloomsbury, London, 2010, p.106The sitter in this arresting portrait needs little introduction. In 1911 Edward Morgan Forster (1879-1970) had recently reached a new audience and a breadth of critical acclaim with his fourth novel Howards End, published in 1910. He was not, however, a well-known figure in the London literary world. He lived comfortably with his widowed mother in Weybridge, invariably stayed in a club if he visited London for a night and kept to a relatively small circle of friends. Several of these he had met through the Cambridge University society known as The Apostles. Friends from an earlier generation at King's College included the writer Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson (1862-1932) and Roger Fry (1866-1934). Dickinson and Fry were close friends and both followed with great interest Forster's career, beginning with his first novel Where Angels Fear to Tread (1905). Over the years, Fry seems to have read everything Forster published. There was great praise for A Passage to India (1924) – 'a marvelous texture – really beautiful writing,' he wrote to Virginia Woolf, although he had reservations about the intrusive mysticism towards the end of the novel (as well as in other writings by Fortser). The novel was translated into French by Fry's friend Charles Mauron whom Forster came to know well and whom he appointed as his French translator. (He also translated Woolf's Orlando). And a few months before his death, Fry read Forster's biography of Dickinson:'it's beautifully done, I think', he wrote to Gerald Brenan, 'and it was a desperately difficult thing to do' (implying that the British public were not yet ready for male foot fetishism).Very early on, before Fry and Forster came to know one another, Forster admired a series of Adult Education lectures on art that Fry gave in Cambridge, in his pre-Post-Impressionist years. Later, in an early draft of A Room with a View, Forster included a character called Rankin (later dropped from the novel), an art historian attending tea-parties in Florence at which Florentine attributions were a leading topic and 'pictures were snatched from one great name and thrust upon another, or slighted and left as doubtful [. . . ] or utterly damned as the work of a clever forger who flourished in the middle of the nineteenth century at Hamburg'. In her recent book Roger Fry and Italian Art (London 2019), Caroline Elam gives an excellent, detailed account of Fry and Forster and the influence of the former's aesthetics on the latter (although Forster was never entirely converted to Fry's full-on formalism). Fry drew curious endpapers and a non-figurative cover for Forster's book of short stories The Celestial Omnibus, published in the same year as the present portrait was painted. Just as Fry was completing the picture (painted in his house at Guildford), Forster wrote to a friend, that he appeared to be 'a bright healthy young man, without one hand, it is true, and very queer legs, perhaps the result of an aeroplane accident, as he seems to have fallen from an immense height on to a sofa' (letter to Florence Barger, 24 December 1911). Actually Forster liked the picture and bought it but, after it was shown in Fry's one-artist exhibition in 1912, he gave it to his great friend Florence Barger and it was not seen again in public for well over fifty years. This is an important work in Fry's development as a painter and is certainly among his most accomplished portraits. Forster is depicted as both alert and yet slightly ironic in expression, finding himself plopped down among Post-Impressionist-seeming fabrics. Earlier in the year Fry had been in Turkey with Clive and Vanessa Bell and had sent a mass of textiles, mostly from Brusa, the historic centre for Turkish textile production, back to England. Some may well feature among the variety shown here and would have influenced Fry's own designs; the patterned cushion by Forster's left shoulder pre-figures textiles he designed for the Omega Workshops a year or so later. Frances Spalding has rightly drawn attention to the faceting and angularities of Forster's head (which Lytton Strachey called 'triangular'), almost certainly derived from Picasso's 1909 portrait of Clovis Sagot, which Fry had included in his momentous exhibition Manet and the Post-Impressionists held in London in 1910-11. In the same exhibition was Matisse's 1908 Girl with Green Eyes which also appears to have guided aspects of Fry's work here – the simple frontality of a figure seen against a busy but essentially flat background. The green modeling on Forster's face is further indebted to Matisse's recent portraits of his wife and himself.A number of painted and sculpted images of the men and women associated with Bloomsbury have become canonical and are frequently reproduced. Among them are, of course, several works by Grant and Bell (such as portraits of Virginia Woolf of 1911-12); Strachey by Henry Lamb; Maynard and Lydia Keynes by William Roberts. Forster was often photographed but not much painted – two portraits of him by Carrington and Vanessa Bell, and drawings by Grant, William Rothenstein and Paul Cadmus. The present portrait deserves to be better known, commemorating as it does, not only a warm personal friendship but also the association of two highly influential figures from the early twentieth century whose reputations have not dimmed.We are grateful to Richard Shone for compiling this catalogue entry.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
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Duncan Grant (British, 1885-1978)Vanessa Bell indistinctly signed with initials and inscribed 'dg/VB' (upper right)pencil and oil on board27.8 x 25.5 cm. (11 x 10 in.)Painted circa 1913Footnotes:ProvenanceWith The Bloomsbury Workshop, 19 July 1993Private Collection, U.K.ExhibitedThe Bloomsbury Workshop, Images of Vanessa - Paintings and Drawings by and of Vanessa Bell (1879 - 1961), 8 June-29 July 1993This head of Vanessa Bell was almost certainly painted in the summer of 1913 when the artists were at a camp at Brandon, near Thetford. There are similarly expressive heads painted on the same holiday. We are grateful to Richard Shone for his assistance in cataloguing this lot.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
Charles March Gere (1869-1957) "Cader Idris over the Estuary and Old Wooden Bridge at Barmouth, Wales" signed (lower left) oil on glass 17.5 x 27cm. Infomation: inscribed to reverse "copy of Cader Idris from Barmouth, a large oil, by Charles Gere which was exhibited at the Royal Academy, 1938, no. 82. This oil on glass was a demonstration to his sister Margaret Gere on how to paint on glass. Original frame hand dressed in gold leaf by Edith Payne, the artist's sister". Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection shown in this auction.
Margaret Gere (1878-1965) "The Baptism of Christ", 1924 signed and dated (lower right) oil on board 23.8 x 18.5cm. Exhibited: The Barbican Art Gallery, London, The Last Romantics, catalogue no. 101; City Museum & Art Gallery, Birmingham, Mastery Art (Birmingham School of Art 1884-1920), November 1986 - January 1987; Cheltenham Art Gallery & Museums, Margaret Gere Exhibition, catalogue no. B4, 21 January - 3 March 1984. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection shown in this auction.
Margaret Gere (1878-1965) "Pinks and Sweet Peas" signed (lower right), inscribed (to label on reverse) oil on glass 22 x 16.5cm. Exhibited: Cheltenham Art Gallery & Museums, Margaret Gere Exhibition, catalogue no. E4, 21 January - 3 March 1984. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection included in this auction.
Margaret Gere (1878-1965) "Raising Jairus Daughter" watercolour 13 x 20cm. Exhibited: Cheltenham Art Gallery & Museums, Margaret Gere Exhibition, catalogue no. B10(i), 21 January - 3 March 1984; Abbott and Holder, London. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection shown in this auction.
Margaret Gere (1878-1965) Copy of L.H panel of ''The Annunciation'' by Filippo Lippi (1406-1469), circa 1906 inscribed to label in brown ink "Copy of Italian Painting, M.Gere, N.F.S E.R. Payne, Triangle, Nr.Box, Stroud" egg tempera on board 20.5 x 13.8cm. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection included in this auction.
Henry Payne (1868-1939) "Landscape near Sheepscombe", 1921 signed and dated (lower left) watercolour 21 x 32.8cm. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection incuded in this auction.
Henry Payne (1868-1939) "Portrait of Ruth Calverley, Black Horse Inn, Amberley" signed (lower left) conte crayon on buff paper 26.5 x 19.5cm. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection included in this auction.
Bernard Sleigh (1872-1954) "A Cotswold Village", 1921 monogrammed and dated (lower left) watercolour 22.5 x 31cm. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection included in this auction.Lot 211 – appears in good condition, in a new frame & mounts, measurements including frame please see extra images online 43.5cm x 51.5cm
Elizabeth Hunter (b.1935) "Roses" signed (lower right) oil on board 28 x 22.5cm. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection included in this auction.
Murray Bernard Bladon (1864-1939) "Tremadog Bay, Wales" signed with monogram (lower right) watercolour 15.5 x 35.2cm. Information: Bladon was a Birmingham School artist who was a student of Henry Payne. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection included in this auction.
Charles March Gere (1869-1957) "Saint Francis" signed in pencil (lower right) watercolour 9 x 13cm. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection included in this auction.
Margaret Gere (1878-1965) "Painswick Church", 1952 signed and dated in pencil pen and ink 26.5 x 19.5cm. Exhibited: Cheltenham Art Gallery & Museums, Margaret Gere Exhibition, catalogue no. D14, 21 January - 3 March 1984. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection included in this auction.
Margaret Gere (1878-1965) "The Staffordshire Ornament" oil on glass 17 x 12.3cm. Exhibited: Cheltenham Art Gallery & Museums, Margaret Gere Exhibition, catalogue no. B10(i), 21 January - 3 March 1984; Abbott and Holder, London. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection included in this auction.
Charles March Gere (1869-1957) "Landscape - in the Sierra, Canton Valais" signed with initials (lower left) watercolour from the artist's 1927 sketch book 12.5 x 19cm. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection included in this auction.
William Gear (1915-1997) "Figure Study - Line Drawing", 1947 signed and dated (lower right) ink on paper 26 x 22cm. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection included in this auction.
Alan Furneaux (b.1953) "St. Just, Still Life" signed (lower left), titled (to reverse) oil on canvas 29 x 39.5cm. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection included in this auction.
Sydney d'Horne Shepherd (1909-1993) "Daphnis & Chloe" artist's proof, signed and titled in pencil (in the margin) lithograph 60 x 45cm. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection included in this auction.
Charles March Gere (1869-1957) "The Stonebreaker" etching 13 x 19.5cm. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection included in this auction.
Charles March Gere (1869-1957) "Harvesting" etching 6 x 9.5cm. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection included in this auction.
Charles March Gere (1869-1957) "Cader Idris" mezzotint 11.5 x 16cm. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection included in this auction.
Charles March Gere (1869-1957) "Knitting" after Edward R. Taylor stamped with South Kensington Schools Seal mezzotint 18.5 x 14cm. Exhibited: City Museum & Art Gallery, Birmingham, Mastery Art (Birmingham School of Art 1884-1920), November 1986 - January 1987; Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection included in this auction.
University Press Oxford after Edmund Hort New "Firenze" monochrome print in collotype 22.5 x 55cm. Provenance: From the collection of John Redman (b.1937). John Redman lived with the Payne and Gere families in their Cotswold home during the 2nd World War from 1940 to 1944. He points out the home was a constant visiting location for a number of important artists and writers including Sir Stanley Spencer, Vanessa Bell, Virginia Woolf, Sir William Rothenstein, George Bernard Shaw, John Betjeman and many others. He has collected a comprehensive range of the Payne and Gere families works through a lifetime's friendship with Edward R. Payne (1906-1991), the Payne's second son of three and also an artist. These are well represented by the selection included in this auction.
JULIA MARGARET CAMERON (1815-1879) A RARE AND REMARKABLE SET OF FOUR PHOTOGRAPHS presumably once forming pages from an photograph album, the four large format pages each featuring a single photograph, forming an intact four page booklet, each with a pencil number to the upper corner, the photographs listed below as following the page layout: 'Connor of the Royal Artillery' (Gunner Patrick Connors) with pencil inscription below reading "Winner of the prizes at the Royal Artillery Games, Freshwater" albumen print, 264mm x 206mm 'Julia Jackson looking left downwards', albumen print, 213mm x 166mm 'Mary Hillier and two children', albumen print, 255mm x 198mm 'Julia Jackson profile right', 238mm x 187mm (arched top) Single page dimensions 354mm x 264mm (spread 354mm x 528mm) with string binding still presentProvenance: Frances Byng Stamper and Caroline Byng Lucas, The Ladies of Miller's Caroline Byng Lucas (1886-1967) studied painting and sculpture in London, Paris and Rome during the 1920s and first exhibited works at the Galerie des Jeunes Peintres in Paris in 1928. In the 1930s she studied sculpture under John Skeaping and had solo exhibitions of her paintings at the Lefevre Gallery in 1934 and of her sculptures at the Leicester Galleries in 1939. In 1941, with her older sister Frances Byng Stamper (1882-1968), Byng Lucas established the Millers Gallery in a converted outbuilding at her home in Lewes. The Gallery acted as an arts centre with a programme of exhibitions, concerts and lectures. Although focussed on local artists they also hosted works by Vanessa Bell, Duncan Grant, Robert Colquhoun and Robert MacBryde. Kenneth Clarke was a visitor and E. M. Forster gave readings. The Gallery hosted over 40 exhibitions, which included showing works by Matisse, Cezanne and Pissarro. During the war, John Maynard Keynes, who was establishing the Council for the Encouragement of Music and the Arts at the time, was closely involved with the Gallery. In 1945 the sisters established the Millers Press with the aim of promoting colour lithography. Among the works published were a set of six lithographs by Byng Lucas of Lewes and Brighton. In 1948, in conjunction with the Redfern Gallery, Byng Lucas set up the Society of London Painter-Printers to support artists in producing colour prints. The sisters disbanded the press and gallery in the mid-1950s due to their increasing fraility and died within a few months of each other in 1967. In 1989 the Towner held an exhibition of the work of Byng Lucas and her sister. Both the British Museum and the Victoria and Albert Museum in London hold examples of her prints. Julia Jackson, a niece of Julia Margaret Cameron, who features twice in this group of photographs, was the mother of Virginia Woolf and Vanessa Bell. It is known that both Woolf and Bell owned albums of photographs by Cameron, and given the close links between the Ladies of Miller's and the Bloomsbury Group, it is possible that the pages offered here came from such an album.
Woolf (Viriginia). Monday or Tuesday, with woodcuts by Vanessa Bell, 1st edition, Hogarth Press, 1921, 4 full-page woodcuts, publisher's advertisement leaf at rear, some pale spotting to blanks and endpapers at front and rear, small snag to centre of extreme fore-edge of a few leaves, without loss, original cloth-backed boards, with woodcut to upper cover by Vanessa Bell, some light marks (generally in very good condition), contained in later purpose-made cloth slipcase, 8vo (Qty: 1)NOTESKirkpatrick A5a. 1000 copies printed.
Woolf (Virginia). The Waves, 1st edition, Hogarth Press, 1931, occasional light spotting, mostly to first and last few leaves, original purple cloth gilt, in dust wrapper with design by Vanessa Bell, some scattered spotting, spine darkened, chipped with a little loss to head and foot of spine and outer corners, near-detached along rear joint (restrengthened with adhesive clear tape to verso), and with closed central horizontal tear (Qty: 1)NOTESKirkpatrick A16a.
Woolf (Virginia). The Years, 1st edition, Hogarth Press, 1937, some very light spotting to outer edges of front and rear pastedowns, original green cloth gilt, a few marks and slight darkening to spine, together with: The Moment, and other essays, 1st edition, Hogarth Press, 1947, a few light spots to front and rear endpapers, original maroon cloth gilt in dust wrapper, with design to upper cover by Vanessa Bell, a little faded to extreme edges, spine somewhat toned, slightly chipped to extreme head and foot of spine and outer corners (Qty: 2)NOTESKirkpatrick A22a and A29a.
Woolf (Virginia). To The Lighthouse, 1st edition, London: Hogarth Press, 1927, some spotting, mainly to front of volume and fore-edges, bookseller's ticket of Deighton Bell & Co., Cambridge, to front pastedown, original blue cloth gilt in generally bright condition, in original dust wrapper, designed by Vanessa Bell, spine sunned and very slightly frayed to extreme head and foot, a few minor marks and spots, pale offsetting of the spine of the dust wrapper on to the cloth spine of the binding, 8vo (Qty: 1)NOTESKirkpatrick A10a. One of 3000 copies printed.
•VANESSA BELL (1879-1961) 'Desmond MacCarthy at Charleston' the sitter depicted half-length, reading in an interior, the vivid colours of Charleston behind him, monogrammed lower right, oil on board, 60cm x 50cm Sir Charles Otto Desmond MacCarthy FRSL (20 May 1877 - 7 June 1952) was the foremost literary and dramatic critic of his day. MacCarthy studied first at Eton, then Trinity College, Cambridge, where he met and befriended Lytton Strachey. He was a member of the Cambridge Apostles, the intellectual secret society, from 1896. In 1906 he married Mary 'Molly' Warre-Cornish, herself a writer, and a lifelong friend of Vanessa Bell. It was Molly who instigated the Memoir Club in 1920 at which its members, after dining together, read short autobiographical papers, some of which are invaluable records of aspects of early Bloomsbury, particularly those by John Maynard Keynes and Virginia Woolf. A work by Bell of the members of the Memoir Club, including both Desmond and Molly MacCarthy is in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery, as is a portrait of Desmond MacCarthy by Duncan Grant.
•VANESSA BELL (1879-1961) 'View from the Drawing Room, Crichel House', flowers in a vase by a window, with garden and graveyard beyond, inscribed verso "Raymond Mortim......Long Crichel", oil on canvas, 34.5cm x 24cmRaymond Mortimer CBE (1895-1980) was a British writer on art and literature, known mostly as a critic and literary editor. He was a friend of the poet and novelist Vita Sackville-West, and was involved in a long-term relationship with her husband, author and British diplomat Harold Nicolson. A resident of Bloomsbury, Mortimer was also associated with the coterie of English writers, philosophers, and artists who frequently met in the London district. Mortimer's residences, 6 Gordon Place and 6 Endsleigh Place, contained numerous Bloomsbury Group works, such as curtains designed by Duncan Grant and a group of murals executed by Grant and Vanessa Bell, later donated by Mortimer to the Victoria and Albert Museum. Raymond Mortimer joined the three original owners of Long Crichel House, Wimborne, friends Edward Sackville West, Desmond Shawe-Taylor and Eardley Knollys, as one of the residents of the 'male salon', after World War II.Duke's are grateful to Richard Shone for his assistance in identifying this composition.
GREEN (HENRY)Back, jacket designed by Vanessa Bell, 1946; Concluding, jacket by Mona Moore, 1948; Nothing, 1950; Doting, 1952, last 2 jackets by Lynton Lamb, FIRST EDITIONS; Party Going, second edition, jacket by John Banting, 1947; Living, second edition, 1948; Loving, third impression, jacket by John Piper, 1948, publisher's cloth, dust-jackets, 8vo, Hogarth Press (7)This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: •• Zero rated for VAT, no VAT will be added to the Hammer Price or the Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
Attributed to Vanessa Bell (British 1879-1961) - Abstract design in tones of green, blue and yellow, gouache on paper, signed with initials VB, 52 x 50cm approx., together with a signed, coloured, limited edition screen type print by Terence Millington of an Italian landscape - Mosti in Chianti, 52 x 56cm approx. sheet size, together with a further screen type print of a landscape subject, all unframed (3)
WOOLF, VIRGINIA. 1882-1941.A Room of One's Own. London: Leonard and Virginia Woolf at the Hogarth Press, 1929. 8vo. Publisher's cinnamon cloth, spine lettered in gilt, original Vanessa Bell designed dust-jacket printed in blue, light offsetting to endpapers, minor chipping to jacket, strengthened with tape at spine ends and upper corner.FIRST ENGLISH EDITION OF WOOLF'S LANDMARK CRITIQUE ON WOMEN AND FICTION. Springing from two lectures given in 1928, Woolf explores the intersection of women, literature and economics, giving rise to the oft-quoted observation, 'A woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction.' Her critique however is much deeper, and her arguments and analysis have become the starting point for feminist literary criticism. 'Probably the most influential piece of non-fictional writing by a woman in this century' (Hermione Lee, Financial Times). Kirkpatrick A12b.
WOOLF, VIRGINIA. 1882-1941.13 titles: 1. The Waves. London: The Hogarth Press, 1931. Publisher's purple cloth, spine gilt lettered, pictorial dust jacket design by Vanessa Bell. Minor chipping to edges. FIRST EDITION. Kirkpatrick A16a. 2. The Years. London: The Hogarth Press, 1937. Publisher's green cloth, spine gilt lettered, pictorial dust jacket design by Vanessa Bell. Some minor chipping to ends of spine panel, slight staining. FIRST EDITION. Kirkpatrick A22a. 3. To the Lighthouse. London: The Hogarth Press, 1927. Publisher's blue cloth. FIRST EDITION. Kirkpatrick A10. WITH: The Common Reader. 1925. Without dust jacket. * Kew Gardens. 1927. Limited edition, not signed. * Orlando. 1928. * The Waves. New York, 1931. * The Common Reader, Second Series. 1932. * A Letter to a Young Poet. 1932. * Three Guineas. 1938. * Between the Acts. 1941. * The Death of the Moth. 1942. * A Writer's Diary. 1953. * Granite and Rainbow. New York, 1958. All London, unless noted, mostly in dust jackets as issued and noted.
Charles Robert Owen Medley C.B.E., R.A. (1905-1994) - Abstract coloured collage, signed, 10.75" x 8.5" - ** The artist was a painter both in abstract and figurative styles and also worked as a theatre designer, he had several teaching positions in both London and Rome and studied at The Biam Shaw School of Art, also attending The Royal Academy Schools with studies at The Slade School of Fine Art. He worked with Duncan Grant and Vanessa Bell between 1929 and 934 and exhibited with The London Group, he held his first solo show at The Cooling Galleries in 1931 and began teaching at The Chelsea School of Art. ** Provenance, Katharine House Gallery, The Parade, Marlborough, SN8 1NE
Charles Robert Owen Medley C.B.E., R.A. (1905-1994) - Coloured abstract collage, signed 9.75" x 7.5" - ** The artist was a painter both in abstract and figurative styles and also worked as a theatre designer, he had several teaching positions in both London and Rome and studied at The Biam Shaw School of Art, also attending The Royal Academy Schools with studies at The Slade School of Fine Art. He worked with Duncan Grant and Vanessa Bell between 1929 and 934 and exhibited with The London Group, he held his first solo show at The Cooling Galleries in 1931 and began teaching at The Chelsea School of Art. - ** Provenance, Katharine House Gallery, The Parade, Marlborough, SN8 1NE
§ DUNCAN GRANT (1885-1978) 'SAPHO', DESIGN FOR A DINNER PLATE watercolour and pencil, later framed with exhibition label verso (Dimensions: 25.5cm diameter)(25.5cm diameter)Footnote: Provenance: Anthony d’Offay Sally Hunter Fine Art Limited, London Purchased by Lady Dundee Literature: Design & Decoration 1910-1960 (London: Spink, 1991), pp. 36-37. where designs from the service are illustrated Omega and after: Bloomsbury and the Decorative Arts , Thames & Hudson 1981, plate 49 illustrates the dinner service decorated by Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant on Wedgwood blanks Note : The current lot is a design for a plate, which formed a large dinner service, commissioned from Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant by Kenneth Clark, the late Lord Clark in 1932. The Famous Women Dinner Service was a 50-piece ceramic dish set featuring portraits of famous women from history, completed between 1932 and 1934. The subjects ranged from Hollywood star Greta Garbo to the Queen of Sheba to Marian Bergeron, who in 1933 became the youngest-ever Miss America at age 15.
Woolf (Virginia) Monday or Tuesday, first edition, full-page woodcut illustrations by Vanessa Bell (lightly offset as usual), advertisement leaf at end, endpapers a little browned, original cloth-backed decorative boards by Vanessa Bell, spine ends and corners a little bumped, 2 small patches of abrading to upper cover, rubbed, [Kirkpatrick A5a], 8vo, Hogarth Press, 1921.
Sickert (Walter, painter, printmaker and member of the Camden Town Group, 1860-1942) 2 Autograph Letters and 1 autograph note signed to Vanessa Bell, 5pp. & 1 envelope, Pemroke Gardens, London & nr. Dieppe, [1880s] & 8th November 1920; with 1 Autograph Letter signed from Vanessa Bell to Thérèse Lessore and 4 Autograph Letters signed from Thérèse Lessore to Vanessa Bell, folds (9)⁂ A good group of correspondence between the three artists. In the first letter to Bell, Sickert comments "I did not know you were a painter. The other day I was looking carefully through a N. E. A. C. [New English Art Club] catalogue & saw your name as an exhibitor". The second letter is written in the wake of the death of Sickert's second wife, Christine Drummond with Sickert reminiscing about their time together. Vanessa Bell's letter discusses the decision by her, Duncan Grant and Keith Baynes to leave the London Group. The letters by Lessore are all written following Sickert's death, discussing his final moments "He did not suffer much at the end & was very peaceful fading out" as well as future plans for meetings, exhibitions and life in London during the Blitz "The noise is ghastly when they raid".
Attributed to Duncan Grant (British, 1885-1978)Place de la Concord Oil on boardInscribed verso, purchased c.1941 15 x 21cm *This Lot May Be Subject To Artist's Resale Rights.On reverse side is a unmarked portrait of an unknown woman. Possibly Vanessa Bell, mother to Grant's only child and sister to Virginia Woolf.
Five Still Life Pictures to include Chloe Cheese (British, b. 1952):Yellow & Green, screenprint, artist's proof, hand-signed in pencil, titled & numbered 8/10, H 50 x W 38 cm; together with Michael Felmingham (b. 1935): Cyclamens, watercolour, H 27 x W 36 cm, two colour etching & aquatints of floral still life studies by Winifred Pickard (1908-1996), & Vanessa Bell colour poster, Interior with a Table, 1921 (5)
A Clarice Cliff Art in Industry Bizarre Dinner Service, designed by Graham Sutherland, painted with black lines and green ovals, comprising two tureens and covers, two graduating meat plates, six dinner platers, six dessert plates, six side plates and a gravy boat, black printed mark DESIGNED BY Graham Sutherland A.R.E PRODUCED IN BIZARRE by Clarice Cliff WILKINSON LTD COPYRIGHT RESERVED FIRST EDITION 1934 (23) Produced as part of the ''Artists in Industry'' project. In the summer of 1933 the wares were shown at a major exhibition in London. Twenty-five designers took part, including Vanessa Bell, Dod Proctor, Graham Sutherland, Paul Nash, Frank Brangwyn, Dame Laura Knight, John Armstong and Gordon M Forsyth.
Hogarth Pres.- Bell (Vanessa).- Bell (Clive) Poems, first edition, one or two faint spots, partially un-opened, original decorative wrappers, rubbed, slight bumping to corners and extremities, [Woolmer 12], Hogarth Press, 1921; The Legend of Monte Della Sibilla, frontispiece, illustrations and cover design by Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant, cracked hinges, faint spotting to first and last few leaves, original decorative boards, rubbed, lacking spine covering, sad remnants of dust-jacket loosely inserted, [Woolmer 27], Hogarth Press, 1923, 8vo (2)
Woolf (Virginia). Monday or Tuesday, with woodcuts by Vanessa Bell, 1st edition, Hogarth, 1921, 4 full-page woodcuts by Bell (offset to facing text pages), advert leaf at rear, ownership signature of Daphne Fielding in pink felt tip to front free endpaper, original cloth-backed boards with design by Bell to upper cover, rubbed and somewhat marked and soiled, 8vo (Qty: 1)Provenance: Daphne Fielding (1904-1997) was a British author, who married, firstly Henry Thynne 6th Marquis of Bath in 1927 and Major Alexander Wallace Fielding, in 1953. Kirkpatrick A5a; 1000 copies printed.
Woolf (Virginia). Kew Gardens, Decorated by Vanessa Bell, Hogarth Press, [1927], border decorations throughout, some spotting, original decorative boards, some rubbing and soiling and a little edge and corner wear, lacks spine, 4to (Qty: 1)Limited edition, 54/500 copies, signed by Virginia Woolf and Vanessa Bell in purple ink. Kirkpatrick A3a; the third English (limited) edition, the first and second editions having been published by Hogarth Press in 1919.
Woolf (Virginia). On Being Ill, 1st separate edition, Hogarth Press,1930, vignette by Vanessa Bell on final leaf, marbled endpapers, partly uncut, original vellum-backed blue-green cloth boards, gilt-titled to spine, slightly rubbed and soiled, lacks dust jacket, 8vo (Qty: 1)Limited edition, 147/250 copies numbered and signed by Virginia Woolf in her usual purple ink. Kirkpatrick A14.

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