19th-Century Works of Art

19th-Century Works of Art

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 261. Thirty decorative panels painted with a repeating design of hares, snipe and fruit against a gold background.

Herbert Percy Horne

Thirty decorative panels painted with a repeating design of hares, snipe and fruit against a gold background

Lot Closed

October 20, 06:59 PM GMT

Estimate

25,000 - 35,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Herbert Percy Horne

British

1864-1916

Thirty decorative panels painted with a repeating design of hares, snipe and fruit against a gold background


one signed (in ligature), inscribed, and dated ME FE/ CIT 1887 (lower left); another signed (in ligature) (reverse)

oil on burlap

each: 24 1/4 by 24 1/4 in.; 62 by 62 cm

framed in six parts, 2 (1 by 3): 29 by 80 in.; 4 (2 by 3): 55 1/2 by 81 in.

Commissioned in 1886 by Henry Boddington for the ceiling in the Drawing Room at Pownall Hall, Wilmslow, Cheshire

Sale: Sotheby Parke Bertnet & Co, London, 21 June 1983, lot 39

T. Raffles Davison, A Modern Country Home [A Review of Pownall Hall], The Art Journal (1891): 329, 333-334, illustrated.

Nikolaus Pevsner and Edward Hubbard, The Buildings of England, Cheshire, London 1971, pp. 385-386.

Pownall Hall in Wilmslow, Cheshire was completed around 1835. In 1886, the brewer Henry Boddington, with the help of William Ball, aimed to refurbish it, calling on a progressive team, foremost among which was the Century Guild, founded four years previously by Herbert Horne, Arthur Heygate, Mackmurdo and Selwyn Image. Horne became co-editor with Mackmurdo of The Hobby Horse, the Century Guild magazine, in 1884, and its sold editor in 1893. The magazine had a considerable influence upon William Morris and probably directly inspired his Kelmscott Press adventure in 1891. Horne later became an inspired collector of Italian Renaissance works. He retired to Florence in 1900 to write extensively on Botticelli. In 1915, he bought the Palazzo Fossi and bequeathed it, together with his collection of pictures, furniture, and ceramics to the city of Florence; it was renamed Museo Horne.