19th and 20th Century Sculpture

19th and 20th Century Sculpture

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 47. Herodias and Salome.

Charles S. Ricketts

Herodias and Salome

Lot Closed

December 9, 01:46 PM GMT

Estimate

5,000 - 7,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

Charles S. Ricketts

British

1866 - 1931

Herodias and Salome


signed: CR

bronze, black patina

44.5cm., 17½in.

Lots marked "W" will be sent to Greenford Park Warehouse immediately after the auction.

Sculpture was only one of the many art forms mastered by Charles de Sousy Ricketts. He could work on a large scale - he is lauded as a set designer of vision and originality - and he was equally adept on an intimate scale - he was both a gifted illustrator, writer and publisher. Ricketts was also an eclectic collector and art historian, authoring a book on Titian in 1910, and was offered the directorship of the National Gallery, which he declined. The collection he built with his partner Charles Shannon was bequeathed to the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge.


His artistic style was informed by his cosmopolitan heritage. He was raised in Switzerland, the son of an English naval officer and noble French mother, and educated mostly in France until 1880. Two years later he became a student at the City and Guilds Art School in Kennington. His art is a personal interpretation of Pre-Raphaelitism and the Arts and Crafts movement combined with French symbolism. The latter in particular informed his choice of tragic and emotionally charged subject matter. These pervade his paintings, such as The Betrayal of ChristThe Death of Don Juan or Jepthah’s Daughter, as much as his sculptural oeuvre of around twenty models. The present collection of three bronzes of dramatic mythological subjects - Orpheus and EurydiceHerodias and Salome and Nessus and Deianeira - epitomise Ricketts’s favoured themes.


Ricketts’s depiction of Salome and Herodias is original and powerful. Salome, beautiful and fully naked, sits in Herodias’s lap, her left arm around her mother’s shoulder as they are hold hands. Herodias is fully dressed and holds her daughter close. The scene is presumably after Salome’s dance and Salome’s seeming regression to a childlike intimacy with her mother underlines Herodias’s sinister hold over her daughter. It is interesting to note the Ricketts was the stage designer for Oscar Wilde’s controversial 1906 performance of Salome.