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The Bank.
The Bank.
T. Malton delin.t & fecit.
Publish'd Oc.t 1.st 1781 by T. Malton N.o 8 Carlisle Street. Soho, London.
Etching with aquatint and fine hand-colour. Plate 370 x 505mm (14½ x 19¾"), with very large margins
View from the Mansion House, looking towards the Bank of England, with the church of St Christopher le Stocks before the bank on the left; the view clustered with other buildings, a sign on the far right building reads "By her Majestys Royal / Letters Patent Irwins / Fruit Lozenge Drops"; many figures in foreground including a man on crutches with one leg, men unloading a cart on the left and groups of smartly dressed men in black hats.
[Ref: 68920]   £680.00  
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Buckingham Palace.
Buckingham Palace.
E. Walker, Del et Lith. Day & Son, Lithrs. to the Queen.
London, Published May 1st 1852, by Mess.rs Lloyd Brothers & Co., 22 Ludgate Hill.
Fine hand coloured lithograph, sheet 425 x 585mm (16¾ x 23"), very large margins.
The principal façade, the East Front, of Buckingham Palace, figures watching the guard marching in foreground. The palace was designed by Edward Blore and built by Thomas Cubitt, completed in 1850. Buckingham House, the building which forms the core of today's Buckingham Palace, was a large townhouse built for the Duke of Buckingham in 1703 and acquired by George III in 1761 as a private residence, known as "The Queen's House". It was enlarged over the next 75 years, and Buckingham Palace finally became the official royal palace of the British monarch on the accession of Queen Victoria in 1837. From a series of 12 views of famous London buildings by Edmund Walker (1850 - 1856; fl.); Abbey describes the folio as 'Views of the Principal Buildings in London'.
Abbey Scenery 247, 1.
[Ref: 68983]   £550.00  
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Buckingham Palace. Her Majesty's Escort _ 16th Lancers.
Buckingham Palace. Her Majesty's Escort _ 16th Lancers. Ackerrmann's Series, N.º 9.
Drawn by G.S. Shepherd _ T. Picken lith. Day & Son, Lith.rs to the Queen.
[n.d., 1851.]
Lithograph with very fine hand colour. Sheet 240 x 310mm (9½ x 14¼"). Laid on album paper at edges.
A view of the new East Wing of Buckingham Palace, designed by Edward Blore and built by Thomas Cubitt between 1847 & 1849, with Queen Victoria's carriage being escorted towards Birdcage Walk.
[Ref: 69300]   £260.00   (£312.00 incl.VAT)
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General Post Office, S.t Martin's Le Grand.
General Post Office, S.t Martin's Le Grand.
W. Simpson, del. _ T. Picken, Lith. Day & Son, Lithrs. to the Queen.
London, Published May 1.st 1852, by Mess.rs Lloyd Brothers & C.o Ludgate Hill.
Tinted lithograph with fine hand colour, sheet 340 x 435mm (13½ x 17").
A street scene with the post office on the left and St Paul’s Cathedral rising in the distance to the right; in the right foreground is the shop of “F. Litton, Tobacco and Snuff.” A carriage passes a heavily laden wagon, while a man stands carrying a board on his back, surrounded by street traders and pedestrians. Before becoming a war artist, William Simpson (1823–1899), he had apprenticeships with lithographic firms Macfarlane and Allan & Ferguson in Glasgow. Alongside his work, he developed his drawing skills by sketching from nature and attended evening classes at the Government School of Design (now the Glasgow School of Art). In 1851, he joined the London lithographic firm Day & Son, where this print was produced.
[Ref: 68985]   £680.00  
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General Post Office, S.t Martin's Le Grand.
General Post Office, S.t Martin's Le Grand.
W. Simpson, del. _ T. Picken, Lith. Day & Son, Lithrs. to the Queen.
London, Published May 1.st 1852, by Mess.rs Lloyd Brothers & C.o Ludgate Hill.
Tinted lithograph with fine hand colour, sheet 375 x 480mm (14¾ x 18¾"), very large margins.
A street scene with the post office on the left and St Paul’s Cathedral rising in the distance to the right; in the right foreground is the shop of “F. Litton, Tobacco and Snuff.” A carriage passes a heavily laden wagon, while a man stands carrying a board on his back, surrounded by street traders and pedestrians. Before becoming a war artist, William Simpson (1823–1899), he had apprenticeships with lithographic firms Macfarlane and Allan & Ferguson in Glasgow. Alongside his work, he developed his drawing skills by sketching from nature and attended evening classes at the Government School of Design (now the Glasgow School of Art). In 1851, he joined the London lithographic firm Day & Son, where this print was produced.
[Ref: 68979]   £680.00  
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Six Views of the River Thames &c:
Six Views of the River Thames &c: No.1. A View of Fulham Bridge and Putney. London Sold by T. Major at the Golden Head in West Street.
Published May 2:d 1750. accord.g to Act of Parliament.
Rare engraving, sheet 120 x 170mm (4¾ x 6¾"). Trimmed within plate. Very slight foxing.
A distant view of Putney with Fulham bridge. From a set which were originally issued on a single leaf, however most frequently trimmed and split up.
See [Ref: 4028] for a set.
[Ref: 69488]   £130.00   (£156.00 incl.VAT)
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The Quadrant, Regent Street.
The Quadrant, Regent Street.
E. Walker, Del et Lith. Day & Son, Lithrs. to the Queen.
London, Published May 1st 1852, by Mess.rs Lloyd Brothers & Co. 22 Ludgate Hill.
Lithograph with fine hand-colour, sheet 410 x 520mm (16¼ x 20½"), very large margins.
A street view looking down Upper Regent Street, with the Quadrant on the right; in the foreground at the right, a cluster of figures crowds the pavement corner, one carrying a placard advertising a panorama of the Himalayas.
[Ref: 68982]   £650.00  
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