Southport Visiter

Treasures are hall for sale

- With Christophe­r Proudlove

HERE’S a curious conundrum: an anonymous buyer pays a reported £8 million to purchase one of Britain’s finest stately homes with the avowed intent to restore it for his young family and the local community as “a model of how an important historic estate such as this can be managed, in the 21st century”. Then he announces he is to auction off its contents.

Perhaps he’s not a fan of fine 18th-century English and continenta­l furniture, tapestries, paintings, porcelain and works of art, whatever the explanatio­n, 200 lots from the extraordin­ary Grade 1-listed Mawley Hall will be sold on September 11-12.

It will be sad to see the interiors of what has been described as Shropshire’s Baroque masterpiec­e stripped of their treasures, but that’s progress I suppose. The flip side is that dealers and collectors will rejoice at the opportunit­y offered by the sale at Cambridge auctioneer­s Cheffins.

Cheffins director Luke Macdonald said: “We are expecting a lot of interest in the Mawley Hall consignmen­t, given the high quality of the lots on offer and that they are fresh to the market. The consignmen­t augments a strong catalogue at one of our flagship sales of the year.”

Among the expected highlights from the consignmen­t are:

IN FURNITURE AND FURNISHING­S

A mid-18th century Altona Padouk and parcel gilt bombe secretaire cabinet, 271cm high, estimate £15,000-£25,000

George I carved pinewood serpentine console table, 128cm wide, £4,000-£6,000

George III mahogany ‘Chinese Chippendal­e’ longcase clock, by Henry Hindley, York, £2,500 - £4,000

Louis XV Aubusson verdure tapestry, 280cm x 381cm, £2,000£4,000,

Zeigler carpet, circa 1880, 774cm x 462cm, £10,000 -£15,000

PAINTINGS

Johannes Bosschaert (Dutch, 16061629). A stone urn on steps decorated with flowers and fruit beside a dolphin-headed spouting fountain in an extensive landscape, oil on canvas, estimate £20,000-£30,000

Henryk Cieszkowsk­i (Polish, 19th century), The Colosseum, Rome, signed, inscribed and dated H Cieszkowsk­i, Roma, 1874, oil on canvas, 69cm x 132cm, £3,000-£5,000

Attributed to Jakob Bogdani (Hungarian, 1660-1724), a Muscovy duck, mallard, shelduck, pochard, and a ruff with a kingfisher in a river landscape, oil on canvas, £4,000£6,000

European School, circa 1700, an equestrian portrait traditiona­lly said to be Muhammad ben Haddu, oil on canvas, £3,000-£5,000

Follower of Jacob Bunel (French, 1558-1614), portrait of King Henri IV of France (1553-1610), standing full-length, in black, wearing the insignia of the Order of Saint-Esprit, at a green-covered table, his hand upon a letter, £3,000-£5,000

PAINTINGS

Chinese export armorial part dinner service, Qianlong (1736-95), the central arms of Watts impaling Carter surrounded by flowers and family motto ‘Pour la Foy’ on a cartouche below, with the crest of a greyhound holding a spear, estimate £5,000£8,000

Tournai plate, circa 1763, painted in puce by Michel-Joseph Duvivier, STAYING in Shropshire, collectors of the work of acclaimed bird and wildlife artist Charles Tunnicliff­e (1901-1979) are invited to attend a talk and special view of some of his works by Ken Broughton, Secretary of the Charles Tunnicliff­e Society, on Friday, September 13, prior to their sale at Shrewsbury auctioneer­s Halls. The 20-minute presentati­on will start at 11am and the paintings will be available to view between 10am and noon. the central vignette with a coastal scene with a galleon setting sail and a group of figures in the foreground, £1,000-£2,000

WORKS OF ART

Set of four Louis XVI style ormolu three-branch wall-lights, in the manner of Gouthiere, each backplate with musical trophy, satyr mask, garlands, serpent and ribbon-tied drapery with ram’s mask finial, estimate £1,500-£2,500

Set of four Regency toleware tea canisters, decorated with Chinese

The private collection of 25 pencil and watercolou­r drawings by the famed Anglesey, North Wales, artist and a handwritte­n letter describing time spent by a lake watching ducks will be sold on Wednesday, September 18.

Each has a guide price of £300-£500. The image, right, shows an Asiatic breed of fancy domestic pigeon known as a Yellow Jacobin. For more informatio­n: Halls, telephone 01743 450700. characters and numbered, fitted as lamps, £1,000-£1,500

Early 19th-century Régence-style ormolu 10-branch chandelier, by Johnston Brooks & Co, believed to be a matching pair at Burghley House. Supplied in 1823, estimate £7,000£10,000

Architectu­ral historian Jeremy Musson describes Mawley as “one of the most extraordin­ary early 18th century country houses in England”.

The imposing 12-bedroom Palladian mansion near Cleobury Mortimer on the Shropshire­Worcesters­hire border, was designed by Francis Smith of Warwick or possibly Thomas White of Worcester for Sir Edward Blount, the 4th

Baronet and built with local bricks between 1728 and 1730.

Stone dressings, keystones over the windows, narrow giant order Doric pilasters, and classical figures and urns on the parapets are the only hint of extravagan­ce outside but as Musson points out, “the stately exterior does little to prepare the visitor for the astonishin­g interiors, which are among the finest and best-preserved of their period in England.”

If money was saved by building in brick, it was lavished inside apparently free of budget constraint­s, funded probably by the generous dowry of Lady Apollonia Blount (née Throckmort­on).

“Especially remarkable is the stucco decoration, depicting busts, beguiling mythologic­al figures, and, in the hall, a vast flowing ‘trophy’ of arms and armour, all said to be by Italian-speaking stuccador,

Francesco Vassalli – who often worked with James Gibbs,” Musson notes.

“The glorious freestandi­ng staircase has a wave-like handrail with no obvious English precedent and encapsulat­es the baroque love of movement.

“There is also a fine inlaid room with its unique marquetry panels.”

An entry in the diary of Mrs Philip Lybbe Powys (Caroline Powys 1756-1808) of Hardwicke House, Oxfordshir­e, who visited Mawley in 1771, reads: “The floors are most of them inlaid like those of the Queen’s palace as is the grand staircase; that and the hall being exceedingl­y pleasant.

“Each room is carved in the most expensive taste... the library, eatingroom and large drawing room all good”.

Interestin­gly, in 1960, the property was bought at auction for £15,500 by JE Talbot, MP for Brierley Hill, who planned to demolish and replace it.

However, the Ministry of Works intervened, and it was saved by Anthony Galliers-Pratt and his wife, Angela, daughter of Sir Charles Cayzer, 3rd Bt., who bought the estate in 1961 and carried out a total restoratio­n.

Sale viewing is on September 8-10. Further informatio­n:

Cheffins, telephone 01223 213343.

 ??  ?? Right: Mawley Hall – Shropshire’s Baroque masterpiec­e and some of the paintings and furniture in the sale in situ in the sumptuous sitting room. Photograph: John Perry Jakob Bogdani. Muscovy duck, mallard, shelduck, pochard, and a ruff with a kingfisher
For sale:
The bombe secretaire cabinet, left, Chinese Chippendal­e longcase clock and toleware tea canisters, fitted as lamps, below
Right: Mawley Hall – Shropshire’s Baroque masterpiec­e and some of the paintings and furniture in the sale in situ in the sumptuous sitting room. Photograph: John Perry Jakob Bogdani. Muscovy duck, mallard, shelduck, pochard, and a ruff with a kingfisher For sale: The bombe secretaire cabinet, left, Chinese Chippendal­e longcase clock and toleware tea canisters, fitted as lamps, below
 ??  ?? Johannes Bosschaert. Stone urn with flowers, fruit and fountain Early 19th century Régence-style chandelier
Johannes Bosschaert. Stone urn with flowers, fruit and fountain Early 19th century Régence-style chandelier
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