Hawker Aluminum Table and Cupboard lead our five auction highlights

Hawker aluminium bedroom cupboard, £1,730 ($2,280) with buyer’s premium at Claydon Auctioneers August 19.

Hawker Aluminum Dressing Table and Aluminum Bedroom Cupboard, $2,165 and $2,280

MIDDLE CLAYDON, UK – The sale at Claydon Auctioneers on August 19 included a suite of aluminum bedroom furniture by the HG Hawker Engineering Company. The Kingston-upon-Thames, Surrey, England firm, better known as the maker of the RAF’s Hurricane and other wartime aircraft, diversified into railways, motorcycles, engineering components, and furniture in the course of 43 years. Apparently, the range of Art Deco-styled bedroom furniture was often used on RAF bases across Europe.

The four lots offered at Claydon were (minus the wardrobe that occasionally appears at auction) pretty much the full suite. The most desirable of the piece was the dressing table with adjustable swing mirror (£1,640, or $2,165 with buyer’s premium) and a cupboard with a single drawer and a shelf, (£1,730, or $2,280 with buyer’s premium) but there were also bids of £500 ($670) for a bed headboard and footboard and £600 ($790) for a pair of bedside cabinets.

Hawker aluminium dressing table, £1,640 ($2,165) with buyer’s premium at Claydon Auctioneers August 19.
Hawker aluminum bedroom cupboard, £1,730 ($2,280) with buyer’s premium at Claydon Auctioneers August 19.

George Jones Majolica Giraffe and Stag Centerpiece, $24,990

George Jones majolica giraffe and stag centerpiece, $24,990 with buyer’s premium at Strawser Auction Group August 20.
George Jones majolica giraffe and stag centerpiece, $24,990 with buyer’s premium at Strawser Auction Group August 20.

WOLCOTTVILLE, IN – This 14in (35cm) high giraffe and stag centerpiece, designed circa 1875 at the peak of the majolica boom, is considered the most coveted of all George Jones models. However, perhaps because of the complexity of the design, very few were made. Just two are recorded. 

The pictured example was part of the third and final tranche of the Flower collection sold by majolica specialists Strawser Auction Group on August 20. Estimated at $12,000-$15,000, it hammered at $21,000 and sold for $24,990 with buyer’s premium. 

The centerpiece – the original artwork survives – is one of a series of George Jones ‘animals under a canopy’ comports emblematic of the continents. There were half a dozen different examples in the sale, each provenanced to the collection of Ann and Robert Fromer, prescient collectors who began acquiring late 19th-century decorative arts more than 50 years ago.

Property lawyer Edward Flower (1929-2022) and his wife Marilyn (1930-2017) began collecting majolica in the 1990s, their large and varied holdings ultimately including more than 600 pieces. The collection, which embraced all members of the majolica family from academic exercises in historicism and revivalism to the best of Victorian whimsy, was cataloged for sale by the London-based dealer Nicolaus Boston.

Early 19th-century Plaster Cast of the Skull of Robert the Bruce, $13,830

Early 19th-century plaster cast of the skull of Robert the Bruce, £10,480 ($13,830) with buyer’s premium at Lyon & Turnbull August 30.
Early 19th-century plaster cast of the skull of Robert the Bruce, £10,480 ($13,830) with buyer’s premium at Lyon & Turnbull August 20.

EDINBURGH, UK – The early 19th century was a time of a great awakening for Caledonian identity. Aiding the surge of interest in Scottish heritage, which reached its zenith with the stage-managed visit of George III to Scotland in 1822, was the rediscovery at Dunfermline Abbey in 1818 of the tomb of Robert the Bruce, King of Scots from 1306 to 1329.

The remains of ‘the Bruce’ were carefully studied, and the sculptor William Scoular (1796-1854) was invited to take a cast of the skull. There are examples of the cast of the Scottish monarch’s skull in important collections including the Scottish National Portrait Gallery, the Royal Collection, and the Hunterian, while another came up at Edinburgh auction house Lyon & Turnbull on August 20.

Engraved to the neck ‘O’Neil Edinboro’ (perhaps for one of Scoular’s students) a handwritten note reads ‘Lent by Stewart Robertson Colquhalzie [Perthshire] Cast of the skull of King Robert Bruce’. It came by descent from a Perthshire family collection with an earlier provenance to James Stewart Robertson of the Edradynate estate. Estimated at £600-£800 ($790-$1,055), the hammer price was £8,000 ($10,560) and the price with buyer’s premium was £10,480 ($13,830)

Bruce’s remains were re-interred at the abbey in 1819. When historians reconstructed his face in 2016, Scoular’s skull copy was a key point of reference.

1904 Steiff No. PB28 Golden or Apricot-colored Mohair Teddy Bear, $13,420

1904 Steiff no. PB28 golden or apricot-colored mohair teddy bear, $13,420 with buyer’s premium at Cora Violet Auctions August 18.
1904 Steiff no. PB28 golden or apricot-colored mohair teddy bear, $13,420 with buyer’s premium at Cora Violet Auctions August 18.

EVANSTON, IL — A ‘very rare’ Steiff golden or apricot-colored mohair jointed teddy bear dating to 1904 blew past its $3,000-$5,000 estimate to hammer for a surprising $11,000, or $13,420 with buyer’s premium at Cora Violet Auctions on August 18.

X-rays provided with the lot proved the no. PB28 bear was complete with its center seam joint rod for articulation. The bear was described as ‘Apparently all original with some areas of restoration and loss throughout.’ All action came from LiveAuctioneers bidders.

George III Presentation Silver Six-light Candelabra Centerpiece by William Bateman, $79,000

George III presentation silver six-light candelabra centerpiece by William Bateman, £59,840 ($79,000) with buyer’s premium at Dawsons August 22.
George III presentation silver six-light candelabra centerpiece by William Bateman, £59,840 ($79,000) with buyer’s premium at Dawsons August 22.

MAIDENHEAD, UK – Pulling out a suitcase from under a bed during a probate valuation, Dawsons’ valuer could not have guessed what lurked inside. Wrapped in newspaper dating from 1974 was a George III presentation silver six-light candelabra centerpiece standing just under 2ft high and weighing more than 600oz. It was among the silver the vendor’s family had bought from house sales in the 1960s and 1970s.

This piece, with its acanthus leaf branches and a base featuring a cast Bacchic scene, is a more-or-less identical design to those made by the newly formed partnership of Paul Storr and John Mortimer in 1822 as part of a monumental silver dinner service for Portuguese merchant and politician Henrique Teixera de Sampaio (1774-1833). The Royal Academy sculptor Thomas Stothard (1764-1817) is thought to have created the molds. However, it does present a small art historical conundrum as it predates the Sampaio service by two years and has hallmarks for William Bateman, London, 1820. 

It prompts the question – Did Storr and Bateman, two of the greatest London silversmiths of the age, have some sort of collaborative relationship that art historians to date are unaware of?

This link to the Sampaio service fired bidding beyond the £15,000-£20,000 ($19,800-$26,400) estimate at Dawsons on August 22. After a keenly fought battle, it was hammered down for £44,000 ($58,090) and sold for £59,840 ($79,000) with buyer’s premium to a UK trade phone bidder.

A pair of six-branch candelabra from the Sampaio service sold at Sotheby’s Paris in October 2022 for a premium-inclusive £415,800 (about $537,950). 

Gerard Collection of Chinese export silver showcased at Chiswick October 9

Chinese export silver ewer, estimate £2,500-£3,500 ($3,300-$4,600) at Chiswick.

LONDON – The Gerard Collection of Chinese export silver will be offered for sale at Chiswick Auctions on Wednesday, October 9. The 120-lot collection, inspired by the birthday gift of a tea caddy twenty years ago, represents a cross-section of the forms, patterns, retailers, and makers of silver in the late Qing and early Republic period.

Chinese silversmithing in the western manner has a long history. The distinctive ‘China Trade’-era wares began in the late 18th century as near copies of pieces made in London, but by the mid-19th century had developed to become a medium truly of its own. Most pieces combine typical European forms with Chinese decoration.

Chinese export silver has been widely collected since the late 20th century. However, the market has been fueled by a new buying audience from the Far East and by recent scholarship. It is only in recent decades that the markings on these pieces have been properly studied. Previously, the focus had been on the Arabic numerals, often 90 or 85, which allude to the purity of the silver and the prominent retailer’s marks in Latin characters. Large Canton, Shanghai, and Hong Kong distributors such as Wang Hing, a name that appears on numerous items made from circa 1860 to 1930, were once erroneously credited as manufacturers.

However, it is now understood that it is the artisan’s marks, stamped in Chinese characters, which denote the actual silversmithing workshop responsible for producing the piece. As scholars slowly but surely build up a picture of these workshops and their output, understanding these marks has become the focus of collecting of ‘China Trade’ silver.

There are many good examples in the Gerard collection that are cataloged according to recent research on the topic. A baluster-form ewer with the mark ‘WH’ for Wang Hing also carries the Chinese characters for Ye Bo. A prominent workshop in Canton (modern day Guangzhou) that appears to have almost exclusively supplied Wang Hing and the Shanghai retailer Luen Wo, it is noted for finely worked figural or scenic tableau. This ewer, estimated at £2,500-£3,500 ($3,300-$4,600), is chased and embossed to the body with storks fishing for eels, with the handle and finial modeled as a prunus branch.

A similar ewer by this workshop formed part of the influential exhibition Chinese Export Silver: The Chan Collection, shown at the Asian Civilisations Museum in Singapore in 2005.

A Cantonese campana-form standing cup decorated with a figural battle scene (estimate £2,000-£3,000, or $2,600-$3,900) has the mark ‘Quan Ji’ (the workshop of Quan). Like many pieces of its type, it was used as a trophy by one of the many sporting clubs set up by British expats in Shanghai and Hong Kong, and has a presentation inscription reading ‘Moor 17 October 1886’.

A circa-1920 Republican-period bowl with cast and applied decoration of peacocks amid peonies and flowering prunus is marked for Tai Chang Long. Another of the Cantonese makers, the workshop appears to have made a speciality of this idiosyncratic wavy-edged form that copies the English spittoon or the Portuguese cuspidor. It is unlikely they were intended as vessels for excess saliva, but instead simply an example of how a European form took on new life in the hands of a Chinese silversmith. It has an estimate of £1,500-£2,500 ($1,950-$3,300).

Other uncommon forms in the Gerard collection include a Qing epergne, or centerpiece, with dragon’s head feet marked for the Shanghai maker Kun He and the retailer Wo Shing (estimate £2,000-£3,000, or $2,600-$3,900).

Kun He operated in Shanghai between 1880 and 1925, producing well-made holloware often using cast and applied decoration. A similar epergne by the maker formed part of the Chinese Export Silver exhibition held by London dealer John Sparks in 1990.

Seven Paul Storr silver pieces make Hill’s October 9 sale truly epic

Circa-1822 covered silver bowl by Paul Storr, estimate $20,000-$40,000 at Hill Auction Gallery.

SUNRISE, FL – Englishman Paul Storr (1770-1844) has been called the greatest silversmith of the 19th century. Hill Auction Gallery has given its Wednesday, October 9 sale the one-word title EPIC. It can do that in good conscience because the lineup contains no fewer than seven works of silver by Storr. The sale catalog is now open for bidding and review at LiveAuctioneers.

Storr’s career aligns with the English Regency period, the time in which the popular Netflix series Bridgerton is set. While his works are too precious to appear as part of the set dressing for the show, its characters would have owned, and aspired to own, silver bearing his stamp.

Four of the seven Storr pieces on offer share the individual estimate of $20,000-$40,000, while the other three are each estimated at $10,000-$20,000.

Of particular note is a lavish circa-1822 George IV covered silver bowl, bearing a plaque depicting a scene of Jupiter, mythological Roman king of the gods, expelling the vices. An inscription on the base rim of the bowl reads: ‘Presented to Sir Thomas Le Breton on his retiring from the Office of Bailiff of Jersey by one hundred and seventy Gentlemen of that Island, a feeble, but sincere testimony of their respect, esteem, and attachment, 1832.’

Jersey lies off the coast of England and is the southernmost of the Channel Islands. As Bailiff of Jersey, Le Breton served as its chief justice and presided over the island’s parliament, the States Assembly. The image of Jupiter, a righteous leader deity who witnessed oaths and launched thunderbolts to smite those who broke them, was an appropriate cultural reference for the piece, and an allusion to the power Le Breton would have so recently held.