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Pet, a Pure Arabian, purchased by a German Nobleman, for 3000, Guineas.
Printed by Dean & Munday 40, Threadneedle St.
Published by Dean & Munday 35, Threadneedle Street.
Rare lithograph. Sheet: 280 x 375mm (11 x 14¾''). Trimmed. Creasing.
A portrait of an Arabian stallion in an exotic landscape.
[Ref: 48399] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
[Bees.]
E. Dayes delin. F. Hollyer [?] sculp.
[n.d., c.1800.]
Coloured stipple, rare. Sheet 450 x 550mm (17¾ x 21¾"). Trimmed, losing title and publication line, other inscriptions worn; margins stained, laid on archival tissue, wormhole in image.
A family wave a swarm of bees from a tree in the farmyard back to their hives.
[Ref: 48517] £130.00
(£156.00 incl.VAT)
To Henry Howard Esq.r M.P. [This Distant View of Chepstow, with the Confluence of the Rivers Wye and Severn is with the greatest Respect inscribed by his most obedient h.ble Servant F. Jukes. Plate 16th.]
Drawn by E. Dayes. Engraved by F. Jukes.
[London Pub.d Oct 1 1802 by F. Jukes No 57 John St, Fitzroy Square.]
Rare coloured aquatint. Sheet 340 x 455mm (13½ x 18"). Trimmed within plate, losing half of title and all the publication line, surface scratches,tear in top edge, two worm holes in sky.
The last plate of 'View of the River Wye', published 1797-1802. Abbey: 545.
[Ref: 37046] £240.00
(£288.00 incl.VAT)
"Derby Day" [in pencil lower left outside image.]
George H.J. Day [pencil signature lower right.]
[n.d. c.1910.]
Etching. Plate 254 x 336mm. 10 x 13¼". Laid on board, with foxing and faint mount burn. Damage top left and vertical crease on left.
Derby Day at Epsom Downs. Here the grandstand in the distance, with a fun fair and other spectators in the foreground; make-shift tents and grandstands can be seen in every direction.
[Ref: 18901] £160.00
(£192.00 incl.VAT)
Euripides. From a Bust in the Museum at the Vatican.
Drawn by A. Day Rome. Engraved by M.ne Bovi.
London Published by Cadell & Davies Aug.t 1796.
Stipple. Plate: 290 x 220mm (11.5 x 9"). Creasing in corners and through upper part of plate. Small margins.
A portrait of the Ancient Greek tragedian Euripides (c480- 406BC) after a bust in the Vatican.
[Ref: 45812] £70.00
(£84.00 incl.VAT)
[Charles James Fox.] [quotation in Greek.]
T. Day del.t. J. Jones fecit.
[Publish'd as the Act directs, Feby 5th 1787, by J. Jones, No 63, Great Portland Street.]
Stipple, sheet 180 x 140mm (7 x 5½"). Trimmed, losing publication line; good impression.
Charles James Fox (1749-1806), British Whig statesman whose parliamentary career spanned thirty-eight years. Fox was the first foreign secretary of the United Kingdom and a vocal supporter of American independence. Also known for his rivalry with William Pitt the Younger and as a staunch opponent of George III, Fox held office briefly as a Tory under Lord North then leading the opposition. He strongly criticised Lord North and the conduct of the American war, viewing the cause of the American patriots as a struggle for liberty against oppressive external power. He supported the revolutionaries of the United States, often dressing in the colours of George Washington's army. He championed America’s cause, denouncing taxation of Americans without their consent. Reform was a passion but as a supporter of the revolutionary cause in France, his credibility was diminished from 1792 by the excesses of the French revolutionaries. Stipple engraving after the little-known miniaturist Thomas Day, who exhibited at the Royal Academy between 1772 and 1778. Probably published as a pendant to a portrait of Edmund Burke (see ref. 40559). O'D 10. Ex Collection of Hon. Christopher Lennox-Boyd.
[Ref: 40559] £160.00
(£192.00 incl.VAT)
Frontispiece. Liberty presenting Britannia with Magna Charta, the Bill of Rights &c...
Dayes delin. Grainger sculp.
[London: W. & J. Stratford, c.1795.]
Engraved frontispiece to 'A New and Complete History of England, from the first settlement of Brutus ... to the year 1793, etc' by Charles Alfred Ashburton. 335 x 215mm, 13¼ x 8½". Tatty extremities; creasing.
An allegory, set into a decorative frame; with Britannia from her throne next to a recumbent lion instructing personifications of various European states in the ways of British liberty and prosperity. British Library: 000127483.
[Ref: 14869] £140.00
(£168.00 incl.VAT)
[To the Right Honorable Earl Grosvenor K.t This View of Grosvenor Square...] Grosvenor Square [in ink.]
E Dayes. R. Dodd [in ink.]
[Robert Pollard, c.1789.]
Aquatint, rare proof before all letters. 412 x 545mm (16¼ x 21½"). Laid on board.
View of Grosvenor Square, Westminster, showing a group of musicians playing while being watched by a woman in a carriage and a boy with a dog. To the right a man is walking with two dogs on a lead and a basket in his hand, reading a note. Collage: p5415177.
[Ref: 30027] £320.00
View of Guildford.
Dayes del.t W: Knight sculp.t
[n.d. c.1800.]
Engraving. Plate 210 x 285mm. 8¼ x 11¼".
A view of Guildford, Surrey.
[Ref: 19071] £75.00
(£90.00 incl.VAT)
To the Right Hon.ble T: Harley This distant View of Hereford. Commencing a Series of Views on the River Wye, is most respectfully and humbly inscribed by his obedient and obliged Servant F. Jukes. Plate I.
Drawn by E. Dayes, Draftsman to His Royal Highness the Duke of York. Engraved by F. Jukes.
London Pub.d March 1. 1797, by F. Jukes [in ink:] 57 John St Fitzroy Sq.
Hand-coloured aquatint with very large margins, rare. Plate 355 x 459mm (14 x 18").
View from a hill with road in the foreground, on which a couple walk behind a descending covered wagon, a clump of undergrowth and trees framing the image at right, fields beyond with the town in the middle distance, the cathedral and spires of two churches visible, the Malvern hills in the distance at left. From "Views on the River Wye", E. Dayes & F. Jukes. Ex Collection: The Late Hon.ble Christopher Lennox-Boyd. Abbey Scenery: 545.1.
[Ref: 28773] £320.00
To the Volunteers of Great Britain This Plate of His Majesty Reviewing the Armed Associations on the Fourth of June 1799 in Hyde Park Is most Respectfully Dedicated By their obedient humble Servant Joseph Collyer.
Drawn by E.Dawes. Engraved by I.Collyer.
London, Published as the Act directs the 4th of June 1801, by Joseph Collyer Constitutution Row, Grays Inn Road.
Coloured stipple engraving with etching. 460 x 670mm. Laid on card, some slight rubbing and soiling of plate surface, a small worm hole.
King George III reviewing the 12,000 troops of the Volunteer Corps in Hyde Park on his birthday.
[Ref: 1608] £750.00
An Airing in Hyde Park.
Design'd by Edw.d Dayes Draughtsman to his Royal Highness the Duke of York, 1793. Engraved by T..Gaugain.
London, Publish'd Jany. 1796, by T. Gaugain No.4 Little Compton Street Soho.,
Very fine stipple engraving with etching. 460 x 686mm. Minor repairs to outer marginal tears, small faint stain in trees to left.
Companion print to 'The Promenade in St. James's' engraved by F.D. Soiron.
[Ref: 1604] £1,450.00
View of Hyde Park Corner.
Dayes delt. Hall sculpt.
Pubd. August 1st 1810 by John Stockdale Piccadilly.
Aquatint and etching. 221 x 246mm (8¾ x 9¾"). Rare.
View of the turnpike at Hyde Park. Illustration for the History of London, 1810.
[Ref: 38409] £95.00
(£114.00 incl.VAT)
Trelawney Town, the Chief Residence of the Maroons.
Publish'd Sept. 25 1800, by John Stockdale, Piccadilly.
Engraving, platemark 200 x 260mm (8 x 10"). Fold as normal;
View in Trelawny Parish, Jamaica. The Maroons formed two distinct communities in the mountains of central Jamaica, known as ‘cockpit country’. The word ‘maroon’ derives from the Spanish ‘cìmarron’ meaning ‘wild’, and maroon communities (composed of runaway slaves and their descendants) frequently settled in areas across the Caribbean that were outside the control of European colonial powers. In 1730, in a treaty signed by the governor of Jamaica and Cudjoe, the Maroon leader, the Maroons’ land was secured in exchange for their loyalty to Britain. In the peace that followed, the Maroons were true to their word, returning runaways and helping to put down slave insurrections. Despite this, the British were always wary of the Maroons, who remained outside their control. During the revolutionary crisis of the 1790s, this fear of the Maroons resulted in Britain turning a minor confrontation into an all-out war, and many Maroons were exiled. The communities survived, however, and their descendants live in Jamaica to this day. Plate from the 1801 edition of 'The History, Civil and Commercial, of the British Colonies in the West Indies' (first edn. 1793) by the planter and politician Bryan Edwards (1743-1800). Edwards was bequeathed two estates in Trelawny parish, and led a distinguished political career in Jamaica. For Edwards' house 'Bryan Castle' in Trelawny parish, see ref. 37208.
[Ref: 41691] £160.00
(£192.00 incl.VAT)
Lymne Castle, with a distant View of the French Coast. It is situated on the descent of a Hill, about two miles West of Hythe: Its remains bear marks of great Antiquity, but when, or by whom founded, is not certain: It has been suppos'd to be the famous Portius Lemanis; but that the Sea had retired from its spacious Haven, once a Harbour for 250 Danish Vessels, Anno 893. Here it was that Prince Edward, exacted the Oath from the Barons of the Cinque Ports.
Dayes del.t. Jukes aq.t.
[London, Pub.d Jany. 31. 1790 by F. Jukes Engraver, Howland Street.] [but later.]
Coloured aquatint very rare & fine. Sheet 390 x 500mm (15¼ x 19¾"). Tear in inscription area skillfully repaired.
Lympne Castle, built at the former Roman Channel port of 'Portus Lemanis'. The topographical watercolours of Edward Dayes (1763–1804) often contained ruins, and had an influence on the early work of J.M.W. Turner.
[Ref: 36754] £320.00
East View of Sydney.
V. Woodthorpe sc.
Published Dec. 24. 1803, by M.Jones Paternoster Row.
Hand-coloured stipple, sheet 125 x 210mm (4¾ x 8¼"). Cut to platemark.
Early view of Sydney, from 'The History of New South Wales [...]' supposedly by the famous pickpocket George Barrington (first published 1802), although there is no evidence of his involvement with the book, and London publishers used his name without scruples. This view, as McCormick notes, is a mirror-image of an engraving published in David Collins' 'An Account of the English Colony' (London, 1798), itself after a watercolour by Edward Dayes. The source has been augmented with the addition of an Aboriginal Australian aiming a spear at a British settler, drawing parallels with violence against settlers often depicted in prints such as those documenting Cook's voyages. Tim McCormick, 'First Views of Australia 1788-1825', p.276; for another view of Sydney from the series see ref. 15718.
[Ref: 56330] £190.00
(£228.00 incl.VAT)
Sydney.
V. Woodthorpe sc.
Published Dec.24.1802, by M.Jones Paternoster Row.
Hand-coloured stipple, sheet 125 x 210mm (4¾ x 8¼"). Small margins. Staining.
Early view of Sydney. A rough reworking of a 1796 engraving (itself based on a watercolour by Edward Dayes) which represents a team of Cape bullocks toiling up Brickfield Hill, George Street near present-day Central Railway Station. Here the cattle have been retained but the landscape is flatter and less detailed. From 'The History of New South Wales [...]' supposedly by the famous pickpocket George Barrington (first published 1802), although there is no evidence of his involvement with the book, and London publishers used his name without scruples. Tim McCormick, 'First Views of Australia 1788-1825', p.276; for another impression see ref. 15718.
[Ref: 37076] £180.00
(£216.00 incl.VAT)
South East View of Christ Church Cathedral. The Oxford Almanack For the Year of our Lord God MDCCCIII [1803].
Drawn by E. Days. Engraved by James Basire.
[Oxford, 1803.] Price Two Shillings and Six Pence.
Engraving. 565 x 485mm (22¼ x 19"), with very large margins, stamp duty ink stamp lower right margin. Uncut. Horizontal fold, pinholes in the margins.
The Oxford Almanack has been published annually since 1674. The stamp duty was payable to the compiler of the almanac, set at 4 pence per year.
[Ref: 51434] £230.00
(£276.00 incl.VAT)
Richard Reynolds of the Society of Friends, Late of Bristol; Whose Life and Fortune were devoted to the Glory of God by relieving the humble in Distress~This Plate is dedicated by Permission to his Royal Highness the Prince Regent, by his most devoted & very humble Serv. Willm. Hobday.
W. Hobday pinxt. W. Sharp sculpt.
Published Decr. 1st. 1817 by Willm. Hobday London.
Engraving. 396 x 303mm. 15½ x 12". Trimmed to the plate. Some scuffing and creasing.
Quaker and 'Ironmaster' at Bristol [1735 - 1816].
[Ref: 14386] £130.00
(£156.00 incl.VAT)
[Royal Horse Artillery.]
Gilbert Holiday.
[n.d., c.1920.]
Photolithograph. 255 x 400mm (10 x 15¾"), trimmed to image and laid on board, as issued.
Charles Gilbert Holiday (1879-1937) worked as an illustrator at The Graphic, The Tatler and The Illustrated London News before the Great War. Receiving a commission with The Royal Field Artillery, he served with distinction at Arras, Passchendaele and the Third Battle of Ypres. After the war he returned to his main interest, painting horses. Lionel Edwards said: ''no one can, or ever could, paint a horse in action better than Gilbert could''.
[Ref: 55433] £230.00
(£276.00 incl.VAT)
The Miraculous Conversion of Saul.
Edward Dayes pinx.t. Thomas Hellyer sculpsit.
S. Morgan excudit. London Published 1804, by S. Morgan, N.o 32 Clipstone Street, Fitzroy Square, and C. Josi, Amsterdam.
Etching, sheet 925 x 640mm (36½ x 25¼"). Trimmed to plate, creases and repaired tears and nick to edges.
A scene of the conversion of Saul on the road to Damascus, with Saul falling backwards from his horse, flinging out his arms in terror as he hears the voice of God, surrounded by a company of Roman soldiers. The city of Damascus is visible in the right background.
[Ref: 59641] £580.00
To the Right Hon.ble the Earl of Leicester - President of the Antiquarian Society &c, &c. This View of the West End of Tintern Abbey is most respectfully and humbly inscribed by his Lordships obedient & obliged Servants E.Days & F.Jukes.
Drawn by E.Dayes. Engraved by F.Jukes.
London Published at M. Deeley's Pleasant Place Pentonville. 1836.
Aquatint with original hand colouring, on Whatman paper dated 1839. 360 x 460mm (14¼ x 18"). Some expert restoration, almost unnoticable from the front.
[Ref: 3507] £190.00
(£228.00 incl.VAT)
[Communications Trench.]
Gilbert Holiday. 54.
Copyright. Published by Geo. Pulman & Sons Ltd, London W. and the Leicester Galleries, London, W.C.
Photolithograph signed in pencil, limited edition of 200?, rare; 210 x 300 (8¼ x 11¾"), mounted on original printed backing paper.
Charles Gilbert Holiday (1879-1937) worked as an illustrator at The Graphic, The Tatler and The Illustrated London News before the Great War. Receiving a commission with The Royal Field Artillery, he served with distinction at Arras, Passchendaele and the Third Battle of Ypres. After the war he returned to his main interest, painting horses. Lionel Edwards said: ''no one can, or ever could, paint a horse in action better than Gilbert could''.
[Ref: 44771] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
Mrs. Young, in the character of Cora from the Tragedy of Pizarro. Act.5th. Yes, Yes, be merciless, though Tempest dire. Scene 1st.
Painted by W. Hobday. Engraved by W. Bond.
Published Feb. 15. 1804, by W. Hobday. No.9. Holles Street, Cavendish Square, & W.Bond, No.87, Newman Street.
Fine stipple. Plate 660 x 432mm. 26 x 17". Trimmed to the plate top and bottom, close left and right, slight staining in title area.
Anne Young (nee Biggs) (born 1773) in Richard Brinsley Sheridan's 'Pizarro' of 1799. NPG: D36273. Not in Harvard Catalogue.
[Ref: 17165] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
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