Covent Garden Piazza.
P. Sandby delin. Edw.d. Rooker Sculp.
Publish'd as the Act directs Feb.ry. 20 1768, by Edw.d Rooker Queens Court Queen Street Lincoln's Inn Fields.
Etching. 420 x 560mm (16½ x 22"). Thread margin at bottom, small repaired tears, mounted on card.
Covent Garden seen from the south east side of the colonnade, with figures including a woman selling goods on the right, a pair of shoe-shiners, a beggar, a boy with a hoop and two boys playing marbles in the foreground to left. A sedan chair sits unoccupied. An early example, published by the engraver. Later editions were published by John Boydell.
[Ref: 63940] £450.00
Covent Garden Market Westminster Election.
Pugin & Rowlandson del. et Sculpt. J. Bluck, Aquat.
London. Pub June 1, 1808 at R. Ackermann’s Repository of Arts 101, Strand.
Hand coloured aquatint. 240 x 285mm (9½ x 11¼"), with large margins.
A view of the hustings in front of St Paul's Church, Covent Garden, with crowds extending to scaffolds and roofs listening to candidates during the Westminster Elections. Parades with pennants showing the names of the parishes "St Margaret's Westminster" and "St Martin's in the Fields" can be seen in the foreground. Published in Ackermann's famous work, the 'Microcosm of London', the figures were drawn by the famous caricaturist Thomas Rowlandson and the architecture by Augustus Pugin. Abbey, Scenery: 212.
[Ref: 46884] £280.00
(£336.00 incl.VAT)
The House of Lord Archer in Covent Garden.
[Sutton Nicholls?]
Published according to Act of Parliament 1754, for Stowes Survey.
Etching with engraving. 350 x 465mm (13¾ x 18¼"). Original folds. Small margins.
43 King Street, Covent Garden, built in 1717 for Admiral Russell, 1st Earl of Orford, to designs by Thomas Archer. The Lord Archer of the title was the architect's nephew, also Thomas (1695-1768), who had married Lord Orford's great-niece in 1726 and came into ownership of the house in 1729. He was raised to the peerage in 1747 as 1st Baron Archer. The house, once the home of the National Sporting Club, is now the London premises of 'Glossier', a cosmetics firm. From the sixth edition printed in 1754 - 1755 of John Stowe's work 'A Survey of the Cities of London and Westminter and the Borough of Sothwark', originally published in 1598 and 1603.
[Ref: 62522] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
The House of Lord Archer in Covent Garden. 6.
Published according to Act of Parliament 1754 for Stowes Survey.
Copper engraving with etching, image 330 x 455mm (13 x 17¾"). Age toning. Vertical folds as issued.
43 King Street, Covent Garden, built in 1717 for Admiral Russell, 1st Earl of Orford, to designs by Thomas Archer. The Lord Archer of the title was the architect's nephew, also Thomas (1695-1768), who had married Lord Orford's great-niece in 1726 and came into ownership of the house in 1729. He was raised to the peerage in 1747 as 1st Baron Archer. The house, once the home of the National Sporting Club, is now the London premises of 'Glossier', a cosmetics firm. From the sixth edition printed in 1754 - 1755 of John Stowe's work 'A Survey of the Cities of London and Westminter and the Borough of Sothwark', originally published in 1598 and 1603.
[Ref: 8771] £240.00
(£288.00 incl.VAT)
Covent Garden.
Publish'd March 15th. 1796 by T. Malton.
Hand coloured aquatint with etching, sheet 370 x 285mm. 14½" x 11¼". Trimmed to plate.
A view of Covent Garden piazza from King Street, including Lord Archer's House, which still stands in the northwest corner of the square. From 'A Picturesque Tour Through the Cities of London and Westminster, illustrated With the most interesting Views, accurately delineated And executed in Aquatinta by Thomas Malton', 1792 - 1801. Thomas Malton (1748 - 1804) was an architectural watercolourist and teacher of Thomas Girtin and Joseph Mallord William Turner; also an aquatinter, notably after his own designs of London views. Abbey Scenery: 204, 34.
[Ref: 15846] £320.00
The Cov: Garden Morning Frolick. Gaillardise du Commun Jardin.
Invented & Engrav'd by L. P. Boitard.
Invented & Engrav'd by L. P. Boitard Publish'd According to Act of Parliam.t. Octr. 9. 1747 Price Six Pence. Sold by C. Moseley Engraver & Printseller in Round Court in ye Strand.
Scarce engraving. 240 x 325mm (9½ x 12¾"). Narrow margins, notch in bottom edge, stains in top corners, laid on card at margins.
A scene of three drunken revellers in the centre of Covent Garden. In a sedan chair carried by two exhausted chairmen is Betty Careless (c.1704-1739), a brothel-keeper. Seated on the chair's roof is Captain 'Mad' Montague, said to be the brother of the 4th Earl of Sandwich. Behind, carrying an artichoke presumably stolen from a street vendor, is Marcellus Laroon III, painter and army officer. Before the chair is Laurence Casey (known as Little Cazey), the personal linkboy of Careless. Henry Fielding, novellist and magistrate at Bow Street, complained that Montague, Laroon and Casey were 'the three most troublesome and difficult to manage of all my Bow Street visitors'. Casey was transported to America in 1750. This state has Moseley's inscription added. BM Satire 2877.
[Ref: 64201] £480.00
The West Front of St. Paul's Covent Garden.
P.Sandby delin. Edwd Rooker Sculp.
Publish'd According to Act of Parliament by Edw. Rooker Dec. 31 1766.
Copper Engraving, first issue, good impression, 555 x 415mm (21¾ x 16½"). Small repaired tear on left, slight crease in sky..
The classic view of Covent Garden. One of Edward Rooker's 'Six Views of London' published in 1768. This engraving is one of three in the series executed by Rooker from drawings by Paul Sandby, the influential watercolourist and printmaker. Adams: 58.5
[Ref: 19619] £380.00
A View of Covent Garden / Vue de Couvent Jarden
T. Loveday Sculp.
[n.d., c.1750]
Engraving rare with very large margins, 18th century watermark, 200 x 310mm (8 x 12¼"). Slight creasing.
Covent Garden piazza, in London's West End. Until the 1970s a market was held in the centre of the piazza, as shown here. Until the early 19th century the market was open-air, but in 1830 Charles Fowler was commissioned to design the market building which stands to this day. The view looks northwards, with St. Paul's church on the left.
[Ref: 33778] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
A Perspective View of Covent Garden. Vüe de Covent Garden.
J. Maurer de. & sc. London 1753.
Engraving and etching. 170 x 280mm (6¾ x 11"). Small margins.
View of the Covent Garden Piazza looking north, with St Paul's Church on the left. See 43297 for 1746 version.
[Ref: 43298] £240.00
(£288.00 incl.VAT)
Covent Garden.
[n.d., c.1780.]
Engraving. Sheet 100 x 155mm. (4 x 6"). Trimmed within plate, laid on album paper.
A rare view of the Piazza, looking north, with St Paul's Church on the left.
[Ref: 51657] £70.00
(£84.00 incl.VAT)
Covent Garden Piazza.
P. Sandby delin. Edw.d. Rooker fecit.
Publish'd as the Act directs Feb.ry. 20 1768, by Edw.d Rooker Queens Court Queen Street Lincoln's Inn Fields.
Etching, very scarce scratched letter proof before title. 420 x 560mm (16½ x 22"). Narrow margins, repaired tears, mounted on card.
Covent Garden seen from the south east side of the colonnade, with figures including a woman selling goods on the right, a pair of shoe-shiners, a beggar, a boy with a hoop and two boys playing marbles in the foreground to left. A sedan chair sits unoccupied. One of Edward Rooker's 'Six Views of London' published in 1768.
[Ref: 63941] £650.00
[Pair of portraits from comic operas performed at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden.] Flora. [&] Rosina.
H. Singleton Pinx.t. F.D. Soiron Sculp.t. [&] T. Stothard Pinx.t. C. Knight sculp.t.
London. Published June 1, 1791, by C. Knight, Engraver, Brompton Road, W. Dickinson, No. 23 Old Bond Street, & Moltino Colnaggi, Pall Mall.
Pair of very fine stipples, printed in sepia, with very large margins. 365 x 275mm (14½ x 10¾").
Two pastoral scenes with portraits of women from comic operas performed at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden, during the 1780s: 'Flora' is from John O'Keeffe's 'Love in a camp; or, Patrick in Prussia', 1786; 'Rosina' from Frances Brooke's 'Rosina', 1783.
[Ref: 28155] £520.00
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A Perfect Description of the Firework in Covent Garden that was performed at the Charge of the Gentry and other inhabitans of that Parish for y.e joyful return of his Ma.tie from his Conquest in Ireland Sept, 10, 1690. From a rare print communicated to the publisher by General Dowdeswell, F.A.S.
B Lens fe
London Published as the Act directs 30 May, 1809, by John Thomas Smith, N.o 4 Polygon, Somers Town.
Aquatint, plate 255 x 285mm (10 x 11¼"), with margins on three sides. Trimmed to plate.
A copy of a 1690 print, with additional information printed underneath; on either side of the 1809 title is a short column entitled: Extracts from the Parish Books. Most likely after one of the Dutch/British artists either: Bernard Lens I (c.1630–1707) or his son Bernard Lens II (1659–1725).
[Ref: 57432] £95.00
(£114.00 incl.VAT)
The Grand Hotel , Covent Garden, London.
[n.d. c.1815.]
Engraving. Plate 95 x 133mm. 3¾ x 5¼".
A view of the Grand Hotel, on the North-West corner of Covent Garden Market, north of St Paul's Church.
[Ref: 19108] £35.00
(£42.00 incl.VAT)
Le Marché aux Fleurs a Londres. Vüe Perspective du Marché aux Fleurs a Londres.
a Paris chés Huquier fils, Graveur, rue St. Jacques, au dessus de celle des Mathurins, au G.d St. Remy. [n.d. c.1770.]
Hand-coloured engraving. Plate 254 x 406mm. 10 x 16".
A perspective view of the Covent Garden Market, looking north, These views in reverse are known as "vue D'optique" and were very popular as entertainments in the late 18th and early 19th Century. St Paul's Church appears to be situated on the eastern edge of the square whereas in reality it is on the western side. Another characteristic of the "Vue D'Optique" was bright colour to enhance the perspective.
[Ref: 17813] £190.00
(£228.00 incl.VAT)
Covent Garden Market.
Drawn and Lith by T. Turner. [n.d., c.1855]
8, Hatton Garden
Rare lithograph, printed area 165 x 190mm. 6½ x 7½".
View across Covent Garden piazza from the North-East corner, with the market in full flow. Various street vendors fill the cobbled market place. By lithographer Thomas Turner, who also made a print commemorating the 1855 visit of Napoléon III to London.
[Ref: 29667] £130.00
(£156.00 incl.VAT)
Covent Garden Market.
Drawn by Will.m & Fred.k J. Havell Engraved by Fred.k Ja.s Havell.
[Published by J. Robins & Sons, Tooley Street, Southwark]. [c.1832]
Engraving. sheet 220 x 415mm (8½ x 16¼"). Trimmed close to image on three sides, publisher's inscription scraped and illegible. Repaired tear on right.
Busy view of the Covent Garden Market from the corner of King Street, published for the Stationers' Company Almanack.
[Ref: 57571] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
North East View of the New Theatre Royal, Covent Garden. The first foundation stone for the Rebuilding of this Theatre was laid by His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, the 31st day of Oct.r 1808. the whole was executed in ten months, and opened the 18th of Sept.r 1809.
Rob.t Smirke Jun.r Arch.t. Alex.r Copland, Builder. Drawn & Engraved by G.Hawkins, from Admeasurements.
London, Published Dec.r 21st 1809 by Geo. Hawkins, No. 11 Queen Street, Golden Square.
Fine coloured aquatint. 270 x 365mm (10½ x 14½"), paper watermarked Whatman 1808.
The second Theatre Royal, destroyed by fire 1856.
[Ref: 51124] £430.00
48. View of the New Theatre Royal, Covent Garden. Designed by R.t Smirke Jun.r Esq.r (Built by Mr. Copeland), The first Stone was laid by H.R.H. The Prince of Wales as G.M. of Free Masons, 31st. Dec.r 1808. and Opened 18th Sept.r 1809.
Published 12th Jan.y 1810, by Laurie & Whittle, 53 Fleet Street London.
Engraving with hand colour, verso in ink "Smirke circulating library, Glasgow"; 300 x 450mm (11¾ x 17¾"), large margins. Some surface dirt. Laid on linen. Small hole left margin. Repaired tears right.
On 20 September 1808, the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden, was completely destroyed by fire. George, Prince of Wales, laid the foundation stone of the new theatre on 31 December 1808, and within ten months, the theatre was finished. The new theatre was designed by the architect Robert Smirke and modelled on the Temple of Minerva in the Athenian Acropolis. The main façade was on Bow Street with a Doric portico. For uncoloured version see Ref 3756.
[Ref: 60700] £280.00
(£336.00 incl.VAT)
View of the New Theatre Royal, Covent Garden. Designed by R.t Smirke Jun.r Esq.r (Built by Mr. Copeland), The first Stone was laid by H.R.H. The Prince of Wales as G.M. of Free Masons, 31st. Dec.r 1808. and Opened 18th Sept.r 1809.
Published 12th Jan.y 1810, by Laurie & Whittle, 53 Fleet Street London.
Engraving. 280 x 440mm.
[Ref: 3756] £330.00
Covent Garden Piazza.
T. Sandby delin. Edw.d Rooker Sculp.
Published Jan.y 1:st 1777, by John Boydell, Engraver, in Cheapside, London.
Hand-coloured engraving. 410 x 553mm (16¼ x 21¾").
Covent Garden seen from the south-east side of the colonnade; figures including a woman selling goods on the right, a pair of shoe-shiners, a beggar, a gentleman and lady walking, a boy with a hoop and two boys playing marbles in the foreground to left; others leaning on wooden railings and selling goods with large baskets in the middle of the square. From Boydell's "Six Views of London".
[Ref: 19656] £490.00
Piazza, Covent Garden.
[drawn and engraved by Thomas Malton]
Published March 15th 1796, by T. Malton
Coloured aquatint, sheet 305 x 410mm (12 x 16").
The arches on the East side of Inigo Jones' Covent Garden Piazza, looking from North to South. Plate from Thomas Malton's 'Picturesque Tour through London' consisting of 100 London views, all drawn, engraved and published by Malton himself. Abbey Scenery: 204.35
[Ref: 23155] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
Covent Garden Theatre.
Pugin & Rowlandson del.t et Sculp.t. J. Bluck, Aquat.
London: Publish'd July 1, 1808 at R. Ackermann’s Repository of Arts 101, Strand.
Hand coloured aquatint. 240 x 285mm (9½ x 11¼") very large margins.
An interior view of the original Royal Opera House, built by Edward Shepherd for John Rich in 1732. A choir and orchestra surround an organ in the centre of the stage. Only three months after the publication of this print, on the morning of 20 September 1808, the theatre was completely destroyed by fire. The performance of 'Pizarro' on the previous evening had required the firing of a gun, and it was supposed that the wadding from the gun had lodged in the scenery. Published in Ackermann's famous work, the 'Microcosm of London', the figures were drawn by the famous caricaturist Thomas Rowlandson and the architecture by Augustus Pugin. Abbey, Scenery: 212.
[Ref: 58203] £320.00
New Covent Garden Theatre.
Rowlandson & Pugin del.t. et sculp.t. Bluck, Aquat.
London. Pub Jan 1st 1810 at R. Ackermann’s Repository of Arts 101, Strand.
Coloured aquatint. 24 x 285mm (9½ x 11¼) large margins.
The newly-opened theatre, built after the original building burnt down in 1808, itself burning down in 1856. Its replacement become the Royal Opera House in 1892. Abbey, Scenery: 212.
[Ref: 53544] £380.00
Saloon to the Private Boxes, Covent Garden Theatre. Plate 12, Vol. 2.
N.º 14 of Ackermann's Repository of Arts & Pub. Feb. 1. 1810, at 101 Strand London.
Coloured aquatint. Sheet 150 x 240mm (6 x 9½"). Trimmed into plate.
A corridor lined with statues and seats, the doors to the boxes off the left side. A plate from the periodical, the 'Repository of Arts, Literature, Commerce, Manufactures, Fashions, and Politics', published from 1809-29. It discussed day to day life in England, its illustrations influencing taste in fashion, architecture and literature.
[Ref: 62665] £140.00
(£168.00 incl.VAT)
Convent of Nativity, Bethlehem.
W. Devereux, del.t Dickinson & Co. Lith.
[n.d. c.1850.]
Lithograph, rare. 362 x 544mm. 14¼ x 21½".
The Convent of the Holy Nativity, Bethlehem, Palestine. Not in Abbey.
[Ref: 20377] £280.00
(£336.00 incl.VAT)
Six Views of the Ancient Gates of Coventry. Drawn on Stone by Miss Eld, and Printed by C. Hullmandel. Price One Guinea. Gosford Gate, Coventry. Taken down about 1760. [&] Mill Lane Gate, Coventry. [&] Spon Gate, Coventry. Taken down 1770. [&] Grey Friars Gate, Coventry. Taken down 1781. [&] Stanswell Gate, Coventry. [&] Cook Street Gate, Coventry.
S.E. del.t. S.E. del et lithog. Printed by C. Hullmandel.
Coventry. Published for the Proprietor by C.A.N. Rollason, January 1840.
Six tinted lithographs in wrapper. Rare. Sheet 500 x 354mm. 19¾ x 14".
Not in Abbey.
[Ref: 19694] £380.00
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Lady Godiva and Peeping Tom of Coventry.
[n.d. c.1820.]
Engraving and etching, rare. 102 x 165mm (4 x 6½"). Laid on album sheet.
Lady Godiva, the 11th century Anglo-saxon noblewoman, who rode naked through the streets of Coventry in order to gain a remission of the oppressive taxation imposed by her husband on his tenants. The man seen at the window, was 'Peeping Tom' who after watching her ride was struck blind or dead.
[Ref: 28945] £50.00
(£60.00 incl.VAT)
A Trip to Coventry an Old Dance to a New Figure.
[by Charles Williams]
Pub.d June 2d 1802 by S W Fores Picc[adilly.] Folios of Caracatures lent out for the Eve[ning.]
Coloured etching, 18th century watermark; S.W.F. in ink bottom right; 250 x 400mm (9¾ x 15¾"). Patched hole in publisher's inscription, losing text on bottom right. Small margins
An elderly Lord Coventry, attempts to dance with two young girls, propped up with two walking sticks. BM Satires 9930.
[Ref: 51860] £190.00
(£228.00 incl.VAT)
Coventry Cross.
J. Seago sculp.
Sold by I: Seago Printseller High Street St. Giles's London. Where may be had great choice of Topographical and other prints.
Engraving. Plate: 430 x 190mm (17 x 7½"), with large margins. Light foxing.
A view of Coventry Cross built in 1539 in the centre of Coventry, the cross was removed bit by bit between 1750 and 1780 as it was deemed unsafe.
[Ref: 45400] £70.00
(£84.00 incl.VAT)
The South Prospect of the City of Coventry, in Warwickshire.
S. & N. Buck delin. et Sculp.t 1732.
Engraving. Plate: 305 x 800mm (12 x 31½"). Central fold as issued, old ink mss. plate number. Slight offsetting in title at top.
A detailed prospect of Coventry, with a descriptive text below and a key to the right. From the series 'Buck's Perspective Views of Cities and Chief Towns in England and Wales'; an early printing, before the addition of a plate number top right.
[Ref: 46970] £420.00
The North View of S.t Michaels Church Coventry.
Mary Rann Del.t.
[n.d., c.1800.]
Ink with grey and blue washes. Sheet 810 x 640mm (31¾ x 25¼"), on J. Whatman watermarked paper. Folds, small tear in edges.
A large and well-executed copy of the etching of the original St Michael's Cathedral, by John Roe after Piaza (c.1780, BM 1981,U.2573), without the staffage.
[Ref: 66816] £650.00
Procession of Lady Godiva, at Coventry Fair.
D. Jee.
Published by David Lewin, Coventry [n.d., c.1840].
Engraving. Sheet 150 x 410mm (6 x 16"). Trimmed, original folds.
A locally published view of the annual Coventry Great Fair, with a local beauty recreating Lady Godiva's famous ride, but not quite naked. The Godiva Procession was first recorded in 1678. It has survived several attempts to suppress it.
[Ref: 66862] £160.00
(£192.00 incl.VAT)
Coventry Show Fair, Grand Procession.
[n.d., c.1840].
Wood engraving. Sheet 130 x 390 (5 x 15¼"), with title excised and appended. Trimmed as scrap.
A view of the annual Coventry Great Fair, with a local beauty recreating Lady Godiva's famous ride. It was probably the illustration to a broadsheet guide to the procession. The Godiva Procession was first recorded in 1678. It has survived several attempts to suppress it.
[Ref: 66863] £160.00
(£192.00 incl.VAT)
Tottenham High Cross. [&] Coventry Cross.
Publish'd Oct.r 29th 1787 by J. Seago, Printseller High Street, St Giles, London.
Pair of engravings on one sheet. Plates: 185 x 120mm (7¼ x 4¾) and 210 x 185mm (8¼ x 7¼"), with large margins.
A pair of engravings showing medieval crosses, the first is Tottenham High Cross built in around 1609, the image shows it in its plain form before it was ornamented in 1809. The second cross is Coventry cross which was pulled apart bit by bit between 1750 and 1780 as it was deemed unsafe.
[Ref: 45408] £70.00
(£84.00 incl.VAT)
Procession of Lady Godiva, at Coventry Fair.
Engraved by M.U. Sears I Warwick Sq.r Paternoster Row.
Published by Henry Merridew, Coventry [n.d., c.1840.]
Scarce engraving on chiné collé. 180 x 400mm (7 x 15¾"). Trimmed at sides.
A locally published view of the annual Coventry Great Fair, with a local beauty recreating Lady Godiva's famous ride, but not quite naked. The Godiva Procession was first recorded in 1678. It has survived several attempts to suppress it.
[Ref: 57626] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
Deerhurst's Defeat or the End of Unqualifies Ambition.
Pub.d Novem.r 1 1812 for the Proprietors of Town Talk.
Hand-coloured etching. Sheet: 270 x 430mm (10½ x 17''). Trimmed within plate, vertical creases as normal.
A political satire on the election for the MP of Worcester in the 1812 election, George Coventry, Viscout Deerhurst challenged William Gordon for the seat but was defeated. A funeral processes in the foreground mourning 'Interests of the Coventry Family' while behind a carriage races past celebrating the re-election of Gordon. BM Satire 11913.
[Ref: 50843] £240.00
(£288.00 incl.VAT)
Viscount Deerhurst & The Turnpike-Man. [&] Viscount Deerhurst & Sophia. [&] The Cock Inn, at Sutton.
J. Finlay del. Roberts. sc.
London, Published by J.J. Stockdale, 24, Opera Colonnade 10, Sept.r 1825.
3 Hand-coloured aquatints on one sheet. Sheet: 485 x 200mm (19 x 8''). Paper tone.
Three scenes, the first shows a carriage leaving an inn, the middle shows George Canning, Viscount Deerhurst leaving a wine and brandy shop with his mistress Sophia Dubochet, the final image shows Canning in a boxing fight with a toll road man. Perhaps illustrations to the memoir of Harriette Wilson, sister of Dubochet, which were published in 1825.
[Ref: 51107] £160.00
(£192.00 incl.VAT)
The Right Hon.ble Maria Countess of Coventry.
[After Jean Étienne Liotard.]
Printed for Rob.t Sayer Map & Printseller at the Golden Buck near Serjeants Inn Fleet Street.
Fine mezzotint, 18th century watermark. 355 x 255mm (14 x 10"), very large margins. Some faint creasing.
Portrait of Maria Coventry, Countess of Coventry (1732 -1760), Irish beauty and London society hostess during the reign of King George II. She died at a young age due to lead poisoning from toxins in her beauty regimen. CS31 ii of ii. Ex: collection of The Hon. Christopher Lennox-Boyd.
[Ref: 67236] £280.00
(£336.00 incl.VAT)
[A cow.]
[Published by Lemercier in Paris?, c.1850.]
Lithograph with hand colour, finished with gum arabic. Sheet 500 x 635mm (19¾ x 25". Trimmed to image, some minor spotting.
A large plate of a cow standing in by a river.
[Ref: 48188] £320.00
Vache Normande _ Cow _ Vacca _ Kuh _ Vaca. Grand Cours d'Animaux (Autographie d'après nature).
H. Lalaisse.
London: Victor Delarue _ Berlin, S.P. Christmann. Monrocq fr. édit. imp. r. Suger, 3, Paris. [n.d., c.1850.]
Lithograph. Printed area 300 x 445mm (11¾ x 17½"). Surface soiling.
A sketch portrait of a cow, published in the 'Grand Cours d'Animaux'.
[Ref: 43469] £160.00
(£192.00 incl.VAT)
[Cow.]
[n.d., c.1825.]
Coloured lithograph on india. 245 x 330mm (9¾ x 13") large margins.
Profile of a cow, standing in a field, river behind.
[Ref: 43476] £140.00
(£168.00 incl.VAT)
[Cows, Goats and Sleeping Family.]
C.P. Berghem inventer et fecit [but engraved by Christian Gottlieb Geyser].
[Berlin, n.d., c.1780.]
Etching. Sheet: 210 x 255mm (8¼ x 10''). Trimmed and laid on album sheet. Staining.
A rural scene showing a urinating cow, a herd of goats and a sleeping man, woman and child. A copy of an etching by Dutch printmaker Nicolaes Berchem (1621-1683) by Christian Gottlieb Geyser (1742 - 1803). BM S.6476.
[Ref: 49654] £140.00
(£168.00 incl.VAT)
[Cows and Sheep.] No.3.
R. Hills delin.t
Pub.d by R. Bowyer, Pall Mall, 1825.
Hand-coloured aquatint. Printed area: 260 x 340mm (10¼ x 13½''). Slight foxing
A rural scene in a cow shed, on the left a farmer bends to pick up a basket of turnips while in the background two children play on the ground.
[Ref: 48523] £280.00
(£336.00 incl.VAT)
[Watercolour of a cow standing in water.]
[n.d., c.1830.]
Ink and grey wash, sheet 230 x 275mm (9 x 11").
[Ref: 48288] £130.00
(£156.00 incl.VAT)
[Cow, sheep, and a woman (a drover?) riding a donkey.]
T. Sidney Cooper 1838.
[London, Published by Ackermann & Co. 30th. March, 1839. Printed by C. Hullmandel.]
Lithograph. 368 x 546mm. 14½ x 21½".
Cows and sheep being lead across a stream; a woman on a donkey herding at the rear. A plate from Thomas Sidney Cooper's (1803-1902) 'Groups of Cattle, Drawn from Nature', 1839. He was an English landscape painted noted for his images of cattle and farm animals.
[Ref: 22736] £150.00
(£180.00 incl.VAT)
The Cow-Doctor.
C. Tschaggeny, Pinx.t C. Cousen Sculp.t
London, Virtue & Co. [n.d. c.1854.]
Engraving. 250 x 351mm. 9¾ x 13¾".
Outside a cottage, a peasant couple looks on as a dutch man (a healer?) raises his hand in front of a cow. Illustration to "The Art Journal" of 1860.
[Ref: 21399] £60.00
(£72.00 incl.VAT)
[In pencil underneath image:] Mr Joseph Cowen the radical candidate for Newcastle on Tyne elected M.P January 1874 a good likeness.
[n.d. c.1874.]
Lithograph. 495 x 305mm. 19½ x 12". Creasing. Horizontal fold through the centre. Tears at edges of the fold and along lower edge. Light foxing.
Joseph Cowen (1829-1900) holding a wind-up organ. He was an English politician and journalist. At Edinburgh University he interested himself in European revolutionary movements. He joined his father in his Blaydon brick business, smuggling documents abroad in the consignments of bricks, a trade which earned more than expected. In 1874 he was elected Member of Parliament and held the Newcastle-upon-Tyne seat as a Liberal. He was at that time a strong Radical on domestic matters, and a sympathizer with Irish Nationalism. He was highly respected by the nation and the House of Commons, and as an Imperialist and Colonial Federationist he supported Disraeli's foreign policy. He eventually retired and devoted his time to his newspaper, the Newcastle Daily Chronicle. See Ref: 17960
[Ref: 17959] £70.00
(£84.00 incl.VAT)
[In pencil underneath image:] Joseph Cowen elected M.P. Jany 1784. (both good portraits.) Charles Frederic Hamond unsuccessful candidate. [Above image:] Newcastle Election - 1874.
Supplement to the "Newcastle Critic," January 10, 1874.
Lithograph. 286 x 445mm (11¼ x 17½"). Vertical fold through centre. Creasing and some light foxing.
The Newcastle-upon-Tyne 1874 Election. Portraits of Joseph Cowen, the liberal candidate and Charles Frederick Hamond, the conservative candidate. See ref: 17959.
[Ref: 17960] £70.00
(£84.00 incl.VAT)
Cowes Castle.
[William] Payne delin. Bluck sculp.
London Pub. 1 Jan. 1801, at R. Ackermann's Repository of Arts 101 Strand.
Scarce hand coloured etching with aquatint, printed border 210 x 275mm. 8¼ x 10¾". Trimmed to plate.
Cowes is a seaport town on the Isle of Wight. Cowes Castle (1540) was built for coastal defence by Henry VIII; it has been the headquarters of the Royal Yacht Squadron (founded 1815) since 1856. Annual sailing regattas culminate in Cowes Week, in early August. Not in Abbey.
[Ref: 20292] £130.00
(£156.00 incl.VAT)