White earthenware, coated with a blue-tinted lead glaze, and painted in green, flesh dark pink, red, brown, grey, and black enamels. Height: 51.8 cm/20.39 inches. Probably the work of Wood and Caldwell. This group was derived either from a now-lost marble which was excavated at Hadrian's Villa at Tivoli, or from a copy made about 1730 by Laurent Delvaux. In the collection of the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge.
*
Other examples of classically-inspired Staffordshire figures from the same period, circa 1780-1820. Most much less refined - therefore more typical? - but nonetheless charming.
|  | 
| Cupid and Psyche. | 
|  | 
| Paris. | 
|  | 
| Venus and Apollo. | 
|  | 
| Venus and Cupid. | 
|  | 
| Neptune. | 
|  | 
| Spring. | 
|  | 
| Apollo. | 
|  | 
| Rinaldo and Armida. | 
|  | 
| Ceres and Cupid. | 
|  | 
| Apollo. | 
|  | 
| Ceres. | 
|  | 
| Urania. (Made as a base for a clock.) | 
|  | 
| Anthony and Cleopatra, exhibiting two different decoration schemes. | 
|  | 
| Andromache in Mourning. | 
|  | 
| Venus. | 
|  | 
| Adonis. | 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment