• Margaret Souttar (1914 - 1987)

    Magdalene College, Cambridge III

      Acrylic paint 75 x 55 cm Signed lower left; titled in margin upper left. Souttar was a Scottish painter and printmaker known for her images of town- and cityscapes. In the early 1960s, she was commissioned to produce a series of prints of the Cambridge colleges. She captures the modernity and optimism of 1960s Cambridge; the fact that a female artist was commissioned to create the prints reflects the changing attitudes of the University towards women. These views highlight the layers of history and architectural styles which make up a Cambridge college. Provenance: the artist's studio sale. Condition: generally very good; some crinkling as a result of using water-based paints on thin paper. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other views of Magdalene College, Cambridge.
  • Margaret Souttar (1914 - 1987)

    Magdalene College, Cambridge IV

      Acrylic paint 70 x 100 cm Signed lower left; titled in margin upper left. Souttar was a Scottish painter and printmaker known for her images of town- and cityscapes. In the early 1960s, she was commissioned to produce a series of prints of the Cambridge colleges. She captures the modernity and optimism of 1960s Cambridge; the fact that a female artist was commissioned to create the prints reflects the changing attitudes of the University towards women. These views highlight the layers of history and architectural styles which make up a Cambridge college. Provenance: the artist's studio sale. Condition: generally very good; some crinkling as a result of using water-based paints on thin paper; a little creasing to edges. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other views of Magdalene College, Cambridge.
  • Margaret Souttar (1914 - 1987)

    Magdalene College, Cambridge V

      Acrylic paint 75 x 55 cm Signed lower left; titled in margin upper left. Souttar was a Scottish painter and printmaker known for her images of town- and cityscapes. In the early 1960s, she was commissioned to produce a series of prints of the Cambridge colleges. She captures the modernity and optimism of 1960s Cambridge; the fact that a female artist was commissioned to create the prints reflects the changing attitudes of the University towards women. These views highlight the layers of history and architectural styles which make up a Cambridge college. Provenance: the artist's studio sale. Condition: generally very good; some crinkling as a result of using water-based paints on thin paper; slight toning to paper in some areas. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other views of Magdalene College, Cambridge.
  • Major F A Molony

    Fellows’ Garden Emmanuel College Cambridge (19th century)

    Watercolour 22x30cm In the Royal Engineers, Major F A Molony was an accomplished watercolourist who published several views of Cambridge. If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.ukor call us on 07929 749056. Condition: Good.
  • Major F A Molony (c. 1865 - ?) St John's College, Cambridge

    watercolour, probably early twentieth century 7x10" Molony was member of the Royal Engineers and a talented watercolourist. 25 July 1882: Promoted to the rank of Lieutenant. 1885: Served in the 10th Company, Royal Engineers during the Suakin Expedition. 22 October 1890: Promoted to the rank of Captain. 27 October 1899: Promoted to the rank of Major. Fought at Battle of Pieters Hill, in the Anglo-Boer war. 23 June 1902: Mentioned in Lord Kitchener's Despatches.m, If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Condition: Good.
  • Sutton Nichols (1668 - 1729)

    Map of Cambridgeshire

      Engraving 43 x 36 cm Signed in plate lower left. A beautifully coloured 18th century map engraving of Cambridgeshire. The map was produced by Robert Morden for publication in Edward Gibson's 1695 translation of William Camden's Britannia, a topographical and historical survey of Great Britain and Ireland produced to "restore antiquity to Britaine, and Britain to his antiquity" - a most noble aim. William Camden (1551 - 1623) was an English antiquarian, historian, topographer, and herald, best known as the author of Britannia, the first chorographical survey of the islands of Great Britain and Ireland, and the Annales, the first detailed historical account of the Queen Elizabeth I's reign. Sutton Nicholls was a draughtsman and engraver best known for his panoramic views of the cities of London and Westminster. Almost all of his engravings were commissioned by publishers. Nicholls specialised in topographical and architectural designs; he also produced many maps, notably illustrating John Strype’s edition of John Stowe’s ‘Survey of London’ in 1720. Condition: good. Mounted to board. If you’d like to know more, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • Pieter van der Aa (1659-1733), after David Loggan (1634–1692)

    Map of Cambridge

      Engraving (1727) 12 x 16 cm An eighteenth-century map of Cambridge engraved by Pieter van der Aa after David Loggan, the noted engraver, draughtsman, and painter who specialised in engravings of Oxford and Cambridge. Loggan's vision illustrates the inimitable layout of Cambridge; the River Cam, Bridge Street, and Trumpington Street bend across the map like arteries. Pieter van der Aa of Leiden was a Dutch publisher best known for preparing maps and atlases, though he also printed editions of foreign bestsellers and illustrated volumes. He is noted for the many engravings he produced after David Loggan's series of Oxford and Cambridge colleges and costumes. In 1727 Van Der Aa illustrated "Les Delices de la Grande Bretagne & de L'Irelande" by James Beeverell, the book in which this engraving appears. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • Marianne James

    Entrance to Third Court St. John’s College Cambridge (c.1810-1860)

    Watercolour & pencil Signed 10×17cm If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Condition: Good.
  • Map of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely (1622) engraved by William Hole for Drayton’s Poly Olbion

    London (1622) 24 x 31 cm (9 x 12 in)   If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • Nancy Weir Huntly  (1890-1963)

    St John's College Bridge of Sighs Cambridge

    Oil on canvas; framed. Signed 'Huntly' 50x61cm Born in India, in Nusserabad, she studied art at the Royal Academy Schools in Dusseldorf. She lived in Welwyn Garden City, in Hertfordshire, with her daughter, Faith Sheppard, also a painter. She also painted under the name Nancy Sheppard. If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • Nancy Weir Huntly  (1890-1963)

    Trinity College Bridge Cambridge

    Oil on canvas; framed in an antique-white-finished frame with gilt slip. Signed 'Huntly' 50x61cm Born in India, in Nusserabad, she studied art at the Royal Academy Schools in Dusseldorf. She lived in Welwyn Garden City, in Hertfordshire, with her daughter, Faith Sheppard, also a painter. She also painted under the name Nancy Sheppard. If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • Charles Paine (1895 - 1967)

    Boat Race 1921

    Lithograph 102 x 64 cm Signed upper right in plate. Charles Paine's iconic 1921 poster encourages the use of the London Underground in order to view the Boat Race. The slick design features one boat’s stern disappearing from the frame and the other boat’s bow entering it (Cambridge won that year), alongside a strikingly Art Deco typeface. Charles Paine was a versatile and prolific designer, who drew on his training in stained glass to create bold, structured and highly stylised lithographs for a variety of companies. This decorative and brightly-coloured map illustrates the various county regiments of Great Britain, with a border of regimental badges. Condition: backed to linen; excellent, two small areas of repair to margin (invisible); hint of old folds. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other Boat Race pictures.
  • P S Lamborn (1722-1774)

    A view of the Public Library, the Senate House and St Mary's Church and the University of Cambridge

    Engraving, 1768 40x54cm If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.  
  • Percy Drake Brookshaw (1907-1993) Boat Race

    Lithograph in colours, 1937 25 x 30cm (10 x 12.5 inches) Vintage Oxford v Cambridge Boat Race poster from 1937. These small posters were designed to be utilised on buses. Born in Southwark and educated at the Central Schools of Arts and Crafts, Drake Brookshaw was a renowned designer for the Underground Group and London Transport between 1928 and 1958. His wonderful posters evoke a feeling of movement, and probably none more so than this one as the seven visible men strain on their oars.  His clever use of colour includes both light blue for Cambridge, and dark blue for Oxford. If you are interested in something similar, or have something similar to sell email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • Philip Pimlott

    Gate of Honour, Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge

    Etching 17x10.5cm If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Condition: Good.
  • Piero Sansalvadore (1892-1955)

    Chithurst Bridge Surrey

    Signed Sansalvadore. Titled to verso. Oil on wood panel 21.5 x 28cm (8.5 x 11 in) Provenance: Stacy-Marks Gallery, Eastbourne, c. late 1940s An Italian who arrived in London around 1930, the Museum of London and City of London have a series of pictures  Sansalvadore painted of war-damaged London. Click here for other works by the artist. If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • Piero Sansalvadore (1892-1955)

    Queens’ College Cambridge

    Signed Sansalvadore. Titled to verso. Oil on wood panel 21.5 x 28cm (8.5 x 11 in) £1850 Provenance: Stacy-Marks Gallery, Eastbourne, c. late 1940s An Italian who arrived in London around 1930, the Museum of London and City of London have a series of pictures  Sansalvadore painted of war-damaged London. Click here for other works by the artist. If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • Pieter van der Aa (1659-1733), after David Loggan (1634-1692)

    The Costumes of the University of Cambridge

    Engraving, 14 x 36 cm Early 18th century   This engraving by van der Aa (based on a prior design by David Loggan) illustrates the various forms of academic dress worn by members of the University of Cambridge. Pieter van der Aa of Leiden was a Dutch publisher best known for preparing maps and atlases, though he also printed editions of foreign bestsellers and illustrated volumes. He is noted for the many engravings he produced after David Loggan's series of Oxford and Cambridge colleges and costumes.   Condition: Generally very good; slight age toning, and spotting to margins.
  • Out of stock

    David Loggan (1634 - 1692)

    Queen's College, Cambridge (1690)

      Engraving 36 x 46 cm Loggan was born to English and Scottish parents, and was baptised in Danzig in 1634. After studying engraving in Danzig with Willem Hondius (1598-1652 or 1658), he moved to London in the late 1650s, going on to produce the engraved title-page for the folio 1662 Book of Common Prayer. He married in 1663 and moved to Nuffield in Oxfordshire in 1665. Loggan was appointed Public Sculptor to the nearby University of Oxford in the late 1660s, having been commissioned to produce bird’s-eye views of all the Oxford colleges. He lived in Holywell Street as he did this. The 'Oxonia Illustrata' was published in 1675, with the help of Robert White (1645 - 1704). Following its completion, Loggan began work on his equivalent work for Cambridge; the 'Cantabrigia Illustrata' was finally published in 1690, when he was made engraver to Cambridge University. The 'Oxonia Illustrata' also includes an engraving of Winchester College (Winchester and New College share William of Wykeham as their founder) whilst the 'Cantabrigia Illustrata' includes one of Eton College (which shares its founder, Henry VIII, with King’s College). Bird’s-eye views from this era required a particular talent as an architectural perspectivist; it was not until 1783 that it became possible for artists to ascend via hot air balloons and view the scenes they were depicting from above. Loggan thus had to rely on his imagination in conceiving the views. Loggan’s views constitute the first accurate depictions of the two Universities, in many ways unchanged today. Whilst the Oxford engravings were produced in reasonable numbers and ran to a second edition by Henry Overton (on thicker paper and with a plate number in Roman numerals in the bottom right-hand corner), those of Cambridge were printed in much smaller numbers. The Dutchman Pieter van der Aa published some miniature versions of the engravings for James Beverell’s guidebook to the UK, 'Les Delices de la Grande Bretagne' (circa 1708). The contemporary artist Andrew Ingamells has produced a highly-acclaimed series of etchings which bring Loggan’s original vision up to date. Condition: generally good; mostly even over-all toning, fraction lighter down central fold; has previously been washed. If you’d like to know more, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • Margaret Souttar (1914 - 1987)

    Queens' College, Cambridge I

      Acrylic paint 67 x 74 cm Signed below. Souttar was a Scottish painter and printmaker known for her images of town- and cityscapes. In the early 1960s, she was commissioned to produce a series of prints of the Cambridge colleges. She captures the modernity and optimism of 1960s Cambridge; the fact that a female artist was commissioned to create the prints reflects the changing attitudes of the University towards women. These views highlight the layers of history and architectural styles which make up a Cambridge college. Provenance: the artist's studio sale. Condition: generally very good, on thin paper; some crinkling to paper as a result of being painted. Possible slight discolouration around pediment. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other views of Queens' College, Cambridge.
  • Margaret Souttar (1914 - 1987)

    Queens' College, Cambridge II

      Acrylic paint 55 x 75 cm Souttar was a Scottish painter and printmaker known for her images of town- and cityscapes. In the early 1960s, she was commissioned to produce a series of prints of the Cambridge colleges. She captures the modernity and optimism of 1960s Cambridge; the fact that a female artist was commissioned to create the prints reflects the changing attitudes of the University towards women. These views highlight the layers of history and architectural styles which make up a Cambridge college. Provenance: the artist's studio sale. Condition: generally very good; some crinkling as a result of using water-based paints on thin paper; slight toning to paper in some areas. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other views of Queens' College, Cambridge.
  • Margaret Souttar (1914 - 1987)

    Queens' College, Cambridge

      Lithograph 72 x 56 cm Numbered 169/178 lower left, and signed lower right, in pencil. Souttar was a Scottish painter and printmaker known for her images of town- and cityscapes. In the early 1960s, she was commissioned to produce a series of prints of the Cambridge colleges. She captures the modernity and optimism of 1960s Cambridge; the fact that a female artist was commissioned to create the prints reflects the changing attitudes of the University towards women. These views highlight the layers of history and architectural styles which make up a Cambridge college. Provenance: the artist's studio sale. Condition: generally very good. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other views of Queens' College, Cambridge.
  • Hugh Casson (1910 - 1999)

    Queens' College, Cambridge

      Lithograph 28 x 34 cm Signed and numbered 485/550, both in pencil. Casson's warm-hued view of Queens' College, Cambridge, featuring the famed and beauteous Mathematical Bridge. Sir Hugh Casson was educated at Eastbourne College; St John’s College, Cambridge; and the Bartlett School of Architecture. Trained in the 1930s in the early modernist style, he taught at the Cambridge School of Architecture. After employment as a camoufleur during World War 2 by the Air Ministry, in 1948 he was appointed as director of architecture for the Festival of Britain. A close friend of the Royal Family, he undertook designs for the 1953 coronation, designed the interior of the Royal Yacht Britannia (“The overall idea was to give the impression of a country house at sea”), and taught the young Charles III to paint in watercolours. Amongst his architectural achievements are the Elephant House at London Zoo, the 1978 redevelopment of Bristol Docks, the Raised Faculty Building for The University of Cambridge, and a building for the Royal College of Art. He published a number of illustrated books, of which Casson’s Oxford and Casson’s Cambridge are probably the best known. A limited edition series of prints was produced from the paintings. Condition: very good. If you’d like to know more, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other views of Queens' College, Cambridge.
  • Margaret Souttar (1914 - 1987)

    Queens' College, Cambridge

      Lithograph 72 x 56 cm Proof print aside from the numbered edition of 178. Souttar was a Scottish painter and printmaker known for her images of town- and cityscapes. In the early 1960s, she was commissioned to produce a series of prints of the Cambridge colleges. She captures the modernity and optimism of 1960s Cambridge; the fact that a female artist was commissioned to create the prints reflects the changing attitudes of the University towards women. These views highlight the layers of history and architectural styles which make up a Cambridge college. Provenance: the artist's studio sale. Condition: generally very good. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other views of Queens' College, Cambridge.
  • R Hacking

    St. John’s College, Cambridge (1978)

    Watercolour 17x25cm If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.ukor call us on 07929 749056. Condition: Good.
  • R Warwick (British, fl c. 1900-1930) St John's College Cambridge

    Etching size: 9x6cm; sheet size 15x12cm On deckle-edged paper If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Condition: Generally very good condition.
  • R Warwick (British, fl c. 1900-1930) Trinity College Cambridge, Great Gate

    Etching size: 9x6cm; sheet size 15x12cm On deckle-edged paper If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Condition: Generally good condition, some foxing to sheet, but scarcely within image area.
  • Rowland de Winton Aldridge (1906-1997) The Backs, St John's College Cambridge

    34x51cm watercolour Born in Kent he was given 'de Winton' after his grandmother, who was related to the De Wintons of the Welsh engineering company De Winton & Co (1854-1901) that built narrow-gauge railways. He was a protégé of Edward Wesson, one of Britian's most important twentieth century watercolourists, and was a prolific artist of landscapes and urban riverscapes. St John's College Cambridge was one of his favourite views to paint, combining as it does an urban riverscape, a landscape and late 17th century buildings. Aldridge was an authority on 18th century architecture and was adviser to Baron Iliffe during his restoration of Basildon Park. If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.ukor call us on 07929 749056. Condition: Good.
  • R.H.B Trinity College, Cambridge

    22.5x13cm 1915 If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.ukor call us on 07929 749056. Condition: Good.
  • Ray Turrefield (active late 20th century)

    Hitcham Building, Pembroke College, Cambridge (1978)

      Print 18 x 25 cm Signed and dated lower right. A print of Pembroke College, Cambridge's Hitcham Building. Built in 1659, the Hitcham Building marks the first instance in Pembroke of the Classical Style, which was soon to find full expression in Wren’s Chapel. The building was intended for the Master’s use and was originally connected to the former Master’s Lodge. Both the poet Thomas Gray and the Prime Minister William Pitt lived in the building during their times at Pembroke. Condition: very good.
  • Attributed to Richard Bankes Harraden (1778–1862)

    First Court, Pembroke College, Cambridge c1830

    Watercolour, unsigned 27.5x39cm Pembroke prior to the demolition of the south range of Old Court in 1874 by Alfred Waterhouse. (His plans for the near-complete rebuilding of the College included the demolition of Wren’s chapel, but the Fellows’ caution prevented this.) If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • Richard Henry Wright (1857-1930)

    Trinity Great Gate, Cambridge

    Watercolour 47x39cm (frame) 25x18cm (9.8×7 inches) Originally from Hampshire, Wright was an artist who specialised in topographical views, mostly in Europe and Egypt. He exhibited at the RA from 1885 to 1913. In 1892 he married the artist Catherine Morris Wood, who also exhibited at the RA – but from 1880 until the 1920s. They lived at 2 Harcourt Buildings in the Inner Temple If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • Robert Dighton A View from Trinity College, Cambridge

    27x20cm Etching A caricature portrait of William Lort Mansel (1753-1820), Master of Trinity College, Cambridge and later the Bishop of Bristol. If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Condition: Good.  
  • Robert Tavener (1920-2004) Jesus College Gateway Cambridge

    Signed and numbered 10/50 Lithograph 54.5 x 39 cm c. 1970 For other works by Robert Tavener and biographical details click here. If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Condition: Good.
  • Robert Tavener (1920 – 2004) King’s College, Cambridge Signed in pen lower right, titled verso 10 1/2 x 15 Watercolour and ink 27x38cm (10.6×14.9 inches) unframed Renowned print-maker Robert Tavener was born in London.  After the war he was educated at the Hornsey College of Art, and became head of print-making at Eastbourne College of Art and Design in 1953.   His work is held in over twenty-five public collections, including the Government Art Collection and the V&A. Here, in a rare watercolour, he shows his skill extended well beyond print making. For other works by Robert Tavener and biographical details click here. If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • Robert Thomson (British, 20th Century) Trinity College Cambridge - Trinity Bridge over the River Cam with Punts

    22 x 32 cm Watercolour Signed in pencil 'Thomson' to bottom right An old favourite view, painted in a bold and confident fashion by Robert Thomson, capturing the carefree spirit of an afternoon's punting, and the bold and clear architecture of Cambridge's biggest and wealthiest College. If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Condition: Excellent.  
  • Robert Woodlark, Founder of Catherine Hall, Cambridge from a Picture at the Hall (1815)

      Hand-coloured aquatint 24 x 20 cm Published by Rudolph Ackermann (1764 - 1834). A copy of this engraving is held by the National Portrait Gallery, reference NPG D4871. Robert Woodlark (also spelt Wodelarke) was an English academic and priest. He was the Provost of King's College, Cambridge, and the founder of St Catharine's College, Cambridge. He drew up the original statutes for the governance of the college and obtained a charter from Edward IV, 16 August 1475. Woodlark was a professor of sacred theology at the University and served as Chancellor of the University of Cambridge from 1459 to 1460, and again from 1462 to 1463. Rudolph Ackermann was an Anglo-German bookseller, inventor, lithographer, publisher and businessman. In 1795 he established a print-shop and drawing-school at 96 Strand. Here Ackermann set up a lithographic press and began a trade in prints. He later began to manufacture colours and thick carton paper for landscape and miniature painters. Within three years the premises had become too small and he moved to 101 Strand, in his own words "four doors nearer to Somerset House", the seat of the Royal Academy of Arts. Between 1797 and 1800 Ackermann rapidly developed his print and book publishing business, encompassing many different genres including topography, caricature, portraits, transparencies and decorative prints. Condition: good. Some gentle age toning. Handsome gilded frame with elaborate wash line mount. If you’d like to know more, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • Sarah Orange (19th century)

    The Kitchen Bridge, St John's College, Cambridge (c. 1830)

      Watercolour 14 x 20 cm Provenance: Bene't Gallery, Cambridge. This 19th century watercolour depicts the Kitchen Bridge at John's. A scholar in gown and mortarboard stands alone in the bridge's centre, gazing meditatively into the glassy water below.
  • Margaret Souttar (1914 - 1987)

    Selwyn College, Cambridge I

      Acrylic 70 x 51 cm Souttar was a Scottish painter and printmaker known for her images of town- and cityscapes. In the early 1960s, she was commissioned to produce a series of prints of the Cambridge colleges. She captures the modernity and optimism of 1960s Cambridge; the fact that a female artist was commissioned to create the prints reflects the changing attitudes of the University towards women. These views highlight the layers of history and architectural styles which make up a Cambridge college. Provenance: the artist's studio sale. Condition: generally very good; some crinkling as a result of using water-based paints on thin paper; a little creasing to edges. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other views of Selwyn College, Cambridge.
  • Margaret Souttar (1914 - 1987)

    Selwyn College, Cambridge II

      Acrylic 71 x 52 cm Souttar was a Scottish painter and printmaker known for her images of town- and cityscapes. In the early 1960s, she was commissioned to produce a series of prints of the Cambridge colleges. She captures the modernity and optimism of 1960s Cambridge; the fact that a female artist was commissioned to create the prints reflects the changing attitudes of the University towards women. These views highlight the layers of history and architectural styles which make up a Cambridge college. Provenance: the artist's studio sale. Condition: generally very good; some crinkling as a result of using water-based paints on thin paper; a little creasing to edges. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other views of Selwyn College, Cambridge.
  • Margaret Souttar (1914 - 1987)

    Selwyn College, Cambridge III

      Acrylic 51 x 70 cm (image); sheet 67 x 98 cm Inscribed left Selwyn Cambridge '61, with annotations by the artist concerning colour. Souttar was a Scottish painter and printmaker known for her images of town- and cityscapes. In the early 1960s, she was commissioned to produce a series of prints of the Cambridge colleges. She captures the modernity and optimism of 1960s Cambridge; the fact that a female artist was commissioned to create the prints reflects the changing attitudes of the University towards women. These views highlight the layers of history and architectural styles which make up a Cambridge college. Provenance: the artist's studio sale. Condition: generally very good; some crinkling as a result of using water-based paints on thin paper. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other views of Selwyn College, Cambridge.
  • Margaret Souttar (1914 - 1987)

    Selwyn College, Cambridge

      Lithograph 77 x 56 cm Signed in pencil lower right. Souttar was a Scottish painter and printmaker known for her images of town- and cityscapes. In the early 1960s, she was commissioned to produce a series of prints of the Cambridge colleges. She captures the modernity and optimism of 1960s Cambridge; the fact that a female artist was commissioned to create the prints reflects the changing attitudes of the University towards women. Selwyn College was one of the first Cambridge colleges to admit women as students - it did not do so until 1976. Provenance: the artist's studio sale. Condition: generally very good. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other views of Selwyn College, Cambridge.
  • Margaret Souttar (1914 - 1987)

    Selwyn College, Cambridge

      Lithograph 77 x 56 cm Souttar was a Scottish painter and printmaker known for her images of town- and cityscapes. In the early 1960s, she was commissioned to produce a series of prints of the Cambridge colleges. She captures the modernity and optimism of 1960s Cambridge; the fact that a female artist was commissioned to create the prints reflects the changing attitudes of the University towards women. Selwyn College was one of the first Cambridge colleges to admit women as students - it did not do so until 1976. Provenance: the artist's studio sale. Condition: generally very good. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other views of Selwyn College, Cambridge.
  • Walter Hoyle (1922 - 2000)

    Senate House, Cambridge (Cambridge Series 1956 - 66)

      Linocut 46 x 70 cm Trial print aside from the series, with different colourway. Senate House, under a lively blue sky. Hoyle trained at Beckenham School of Art and the Royal College of Art. At the latter he was strongly influenced by Edward Bawden, one of Britain’s greatest linocut printers. Bawden had been commissioned by the 1951 Festival of Britain to produce a mural for the South Bank, and chose Hoyle to assist on account of his great talent. Hoyle moved to Great Bardfield in Essex, becoming a part of the Great Bardfield group of artists; diverse in style, they created figurative work, in stark contrast to the abstract art of the St Ives artists at the opposite end of the country. Hoyle taught at St Martin’s School of Art from 1951-60, the Central School of Arts and Crafts from 1960-64, and the Cambridge School of Art from 1964-1985, during which time he launched Cambridge Print Editions. His work is held in the collections of the Tate Gallery, the Victoria and Albert Museum, The British Museum, Kettle’s Garden and the Fry Art Gallery. Provenance: family of the artist. Condition: generally very good; a few handling marks and areas of discolouration to extreme margins, extraneous ink to right hand side, and a very small brown spot to very top right beyond the blue sky. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other general views of Cambridge.
  • Ebenezer Challis (1806 - 1881)

    Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge (1834)

      Engraving 27 x 43 cm A 19th century view of Sidney Sussex, complete with Victorian undergraduates in academic dress, horse and cart, and behatted rider. Condition: good. Trimmed. Otherwise generally good with the occasional tiny spot. If you’d like to know more, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for more views of Sidney Sussex.
  • John Le Keux (1783 - 1846) after Frederick Mackenzie (1788 - 1854)

    Sidney College from the Master's Garden (1845)

      Hand-coloured engraving 12 x 15 cm Published by Rudolph Ackermann (1764 - 1834). An engraving of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge. The College was founded in 1596 under the terms of the will of Frances Sidney, Countess of Sussex, wife of Thomas Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Sussex, and named after its foundress. Frederick Mackenzie (circa 1788 - 1854) was a British watercolourist and architectural draughtsman. He first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1804, and contributed eleven drawings between that year and 1828. He contributed to the Society of Painters in Water Colours exhibitions from 1813, becoming an associate in 1822, and a full member the following year. From 30 November 1831 until, his death he was treasurer to the society. In later life Mackenzie was no longer commissioned to illustrate books. John Le Keux was a British engraver. When working as an apprentice to his father, a pewter manufacturer, he began engraving pewter, and trained as an engraver. He was then apprenticed to the noted engraver James Basire, and went on to produce engravings for the architectural publications of John Britton, Augustus Welby Pugin, John Preston Neale, and others. He produced various engravings of Oxford and Cambridge colleges. Rudolph Ackermann was an Anglo-German bookseller, inventor, lithographer, publisher and businessman. In 1795 he established a print-shop and drawing-school at 96 Strand. Here Ackermann set up a lithographic press and began a trade in prints. He later began to manufacture colours and thick carton paper for landscape and miniature painters. Within three years the premises had become too small and he moved to 101 Strand, in his own words "four doors nearer to Somerset House", the seat of the Royal Academy of Arts. Between 1797 and 1800 Ackermann rapidly developed his print and book publishing business, encompassing many different genres including topography, caricature, portraits, transparencies and decorative prints. Condition: good; a couple of spots and some age toning. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other views of Sidney Sussex.
  • Sir Albert Edward Richardson K.C.V.O., F.R.I.B.A, F.S.A., P.R.A. (1880-1964) 

    Cambridge Revisited (1933)

    Pen, ink, and wash
    24 x 35 cm
    Signed and dated lower right.
    Renowned for his architectural fantasies, Richardson here depicts Sir Christopher Wren revisiting the chapel he built in 1677. Wren is a Colossus, surveying not only the architecture of the chapel but the fantastical assortment of characters present in the quad. Seventeenth century lords, ladies, and scholars occupy the centre of the picture while 20th century tourists (on the left) watch the scene unfold.
    Richardson was a leading English architect, teacher and writer about architecture during the first half of the 20th century. He was Professor of Architecture at University College London, a President of the Royal Academy, editor of Architects' Journal, founder of the Georgian Group and the Guild of Surveyors and Master of the Art Workers' Guild. He also received the Architectural Association’s Professor Bannister Fletcher Medal (an award for the study of post- Great Fire London architecture) in 1902.
    If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • David Loggan (1634 - 1692)

    St Catharine's College, Cambridge (1690)

      Engraving 35 x 46 cm Loggan was born to English and Scottish parents, and was baptised in Danzig in 1634. After studying engraving in Danzig with Willem Hondius (1598-1652 or 1658), he moved to London in the late 1650s, going on to produce the engraved title-page for the folio 1662 Book of Common Prayer. He married in 1663 and moved to Nuffield in Oxfordshire in 1665. Loggan was appointed Public Sculptor to the nearby University of Oxford in the late 1660s, having been commissioned to produce bird’s-eye views of all the Oxford colleges. He lived in Holywell Street as he did this. The 'Oxonia Illustrata' was published in 1675, with the help of Robert White (1645 - 1704). Following its completion, Loggan began work on his equivalent work for Cambridge; the 'Cantabrigia Illustrata' was finally published in 1690, when he was made engraver to Cambridge University. The 'Oxonia Illustrata' also includes an engraving of Winchester College (Winchester and New College share William of Wykeham as their founder) whilst the 'Cantabrigia Illustrata' includes one of Eton College (which shares its founder, Henry VIII, with King’s College). Bird’s-eye views from this era required a particular talent as an architectural perspectivist; it was not until 1783 that it became possible for artists to ascend via hot air balloons and view the scenes they were depicting from above. Loggan thus had to rely on his imagination in conceiving the views. Loggan’s views constitute the first accurate depictions of the two Universities, in many ways unchanged today. Whilst the Oxford engravings were produced in reasonable numbers and ran to a second edition by Henry Overton (on thicker paper and with a plate number in Roman numerals in the bottom right-hand corner), those of Cambridge were printed in much smaller numbers. The Dutchman Pieter van der Aa published some miniature versions of the engravings for James Beverell’s guidebook to the UK, 'Les Delices de la Grande Bretagne' (circa 1708). The contemporary artist Andrew Ingamells has produced a highly-acclaimed series of etchings which bring Loggan’s original vision up to date. Condition: has previously been washed, otherwise generally very good. If you’d like to know more, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • Walter Hoyle (1922-2000)

    St Catharine's College, Cambridge (1973)

      Linocut 72 x 56 cm Signed and dated '73 lower right, numbered 85 / 200 lower left, and signed below. Hoyle trained at Beckenham School of Art and the Royal College of Art. At the RA, he was strongly influenced by Edward Bawden, one of Britain’s greatest linocut printers. Bawden had been commissioned by the 1951 Festival of Britain to produce a mural for the South Bank, and chose Hoyle, a promising student, as his assistant. Hoyle moved to Great Bardfield in Essex and became part of the Great Bardfield group of artists: diverse in style, they created figurative work in stark contrast to the abstract art of the St Ives artists at the other end of the country. Hoyle taught at St Martin’s School of Art from 1951 - 1960, the Central School of Arts and Crafts from 1960 - 1964, and the Cambridge School of Art from 1964 - 1985, during which time he launched Cambridge Print Editions. His work is held in the collections of the Tate Gallery, the Victoria and Albert Museum, The British Museum, Kettle’s Yard, and the Fry Art Gallery. Condition: very good. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • Anonymous (British, c. 1900) St John's College Cambridge from the River, Scholars Before

    39x28cm Watercolour Scholars loll on the bank of the River Cam as they do today, and presumably have done ever since the foundation of the college in 1511. A dreamy view of one of the prettiest views in Cambridge. Condition: generally very good, slight staining to very margins, outside mount area.
  • Tony Broderick (late 20th century)

    St John's College, Cambridge Great Gate

      Conte 38 x 27 cm Signed and dated in pencil lower left. A Lincoln-based artist known for his pictures of Lincoln and also of Cambridge's colleges. Condition: very good. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other views of St John’s College, Cambridge.
  • The Wren Bridge, St John's College, Cambridge

      Engraving 35 x 24 cm Signed as a cypher lower right. A 1911 watercolour of St John's College's Wren Bridge, also known as the Kitchen Bridge. There had been a wooden bridge in this location since the early days of the medieval Hospital of St John the Evangelist. Christopher Wren had submitted designs to St John’s for a stone bridge in the 1690s, but building work did not commence until 1709. The Wren Bridge was completed in 1713. Its construction was overseen by Robert Grumbold, a local master stonemason and architect who was also responsible for building the Wren Library at Trinity College. The bridge reflects Wren's design, although in his original drawings he had suggested urns and pyramids, which were never added. In this view, a lone figure gazes down from the bridge into the muddy waters of the River Cam. Condition: very good. If you’d like to know more, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • D Havell (1785 - 1822) after William Westall (1781 - 1850)

    The Library of St John's College, Cambridge (1815)

      Hand-coloured aquatint 24 x 29.5 cm Published by Rudolph Ackermann (1764 - 1834). An engraving of St John's College, Cambridge's marvellous library. It was built between 1623 and 1628, largely through the donations and efforts of two members of the college: Valentine Carey, Bishop of Exeter, and John Williams, Lord-Keeper and Bishop of Lincoln. The building's shell was completed in 1624, a date which appears on the south gable of the western oriel window. The building is constructed in the Jacobean Gothic style, and measures 110 feet by 30 feet wide. The tall two-light windows are a very early example of Gothic Revival, but the façade is Renaissance-inspired. The library contains 42 bookcases arranged at right angles to the north and south walls, and is the home of the College's double-manual harpsichord. William Westall was a British landscape artist. He was born in Hertford and enrolled at the Royal Academy schools in 1799. He later became the draughtsman for a voyage to Australia and the South Seas. After being shipwrecked, he travelled to Canton in China and to India, staying in Bombay for several months. He returned to England in 1805 but later set off for Madeira and Jamaica. He became a member of the Society of Painters in Water Colours (1811) and an associate of the Academy (1812). Following a mental breakdown, he regularly visited the Lake District and published ‘Views of the Valley and Vale of Keswick’ (1820). His series of aquatints of the Thames, the great universities, and England''s public schools for Ackermann are among his most popular works. The Havell family of Reading, Berkshire, England, included a number of notable engravers, etchers and painters, as well as writers, publishers, educators, and musicians. Daniel and Robert Havell set up in partnership as aquatint engravers. Soon Daniel began to work independently, engraving plates for Rudolph Ackermann''s History of Cambridge (1815) and hid history of various public schools including Eton, Winchester, and Rugby (1816), as well as a celebrated views of St Paul''s Cathedral (1818) and various other London landmarks for Ackermann''s Repository of Arts. Rudolph Ackermann was an Anglo-German bookseller, inventor, lithographer, publisher and businessman. In 1795 he established a print-shop and drawing-school at 96 Strand. Here Ackermann set up a lithographic press and began a trade in prints. He later began to manufacture colours and thick carton paper for landscape and miniature painters. Within three years the premises had become too small and he moved to 101 Strand, in his own words "four doors nearer to Somerset House", the seat of the Royal Academy of Arts. Between 1797 and 1800 Ackermann rapidly developed his print and book publishing business, encompassing many different genres including topography, caricature, portraits, transparencies and decorative prints. Condition: good. Some age toning. If you’d like to know more, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • George Pyne (1800 - 1884)

    St John's College, Cambridge Old Chapel

    Watercolour 35 x 23 cm A view of the Old Chapel of St John’s College, Cambridge before its demolition. In 1861, the Fellows of St John’s agreed to mark the seven hundredth jubilee of their college by building a new chapel. Sir George Gilbert Scott was appointed to carry out the work, and Dr James Wood (a previous Master of the college) bequeathed the huge sum of £20,000 for the purpose of the new chapel. George Pyne was related to two founders of the Society of Painters in Watercolours – William Henry Pyne was his father, and John Varley his father-in-law. Pyne trained as an architectural draughtsman and lived in Oxford from the 1850s until his death in 1884, specialising in views of the city and its colleges. His Oxford pictures are both architecturally-minded and romantically creative, often combining intensely detailed depictions of college buildings with imagined pedestrian scenes. Pyne was also noted for his views of Cambridge and Eton, and for his drawing manuals ‘A Rudimentary and Practical Treatise on Perspective for Beginners’ (1848) and ‘Practical Rules on Drawing for the Operative Builder, and Young Student in Architecture’ (1854); the latter texts offer an insight into his method of depicting architecture and its surroundings. Condition: very good. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other views of St John's College, Cambridge.
  • After Ernest William Haslehurst (1866 - 1949)

    E Staircase, Second Court, St John's College, Cambridge (circa 1915)

      Watercolour 33 x 22 cm Haslehurst's watercolour of a staircase at John's. The artists captures the quintessential Cambridge combination of dark wood and old stone, focusing on a beautiful but overlooked passageway in the college. Light streams in from the court. Second Court was built in the years immediately after 1599, to the designs of Ralph Symons of Westminster and Gilbert Wigg of Cambridge. The harmonious proportions and local brickwork of the Court in general make it the finest example of this style of architecture in Cambridge. Ernest William Haslehust was an English landscape painter and book illustrator who worked in watercolours. He was a member of the Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours (RI), Royal Society of British Artists (RBA), Royal West of England Academy (RWA) and Royal British Colonial Society of Artists (RBC), and exhibited regularly at many venues including the Royal Academy in London. He also designed posters for the LNER and LMS railway companies, and his art was featured in many magazines of the day including the Illustrated London News and The Tatler. His painting of this view was featured in the illustrated book of Cambridge  by Noel Barwell (Blackie & Son) 1910, and the artist of this painting has recorded the view from the same corner. Condition: very good; some light spotting. Handsome antique frame which bears some signs of age. If you’d like to know more, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • E. T. Talbot

    St John's College, Cambridge, showing the First Court and Chapel

      Watercolour 30 x 25 cm A richly-coloured watercolour painting of the First Court of St John's. First Court was built in 1511-20 to the south of the old Hospital of St John the Evangelist, and was designed to contain living quarters, chapel, library, hall, and kitchens. The version of First Court which Talbot paints looks markedly different to the college today - the chapel on the far left of the picture was demolished after the new chapel was completed in 1869.
  • James Bolivar Manson (1879 - 1945) St John's College, Cambridge

      Watercolour 29 x 40 cm Signed lower right. A wintry view of St John's College, Cambridge. The chapel tower nestles behind bare trees, set against a white sky. Manson was an artist who worked at the Tate Gallery and was its Director from 1930 to 1938. His time there was clouded by his frustrated ambitions as a painter and his descent into alcoholism. His professional career began as an office boy - leaving Alleyn's School in Dulwich at 16 - with the publisher George Newnes, and then as a bank clerk. He simultaneously studied painting at Heatherley School of Fine Art, commencing in 1890, and then Lambeth School of Art - much encouraged by Lilian Laugher, a violinist who came to stay in the Manson household. He married her in 1903 - the same year he abandoned his bank job. They moved to Paris for a year. Manson shared a studio with Jacob Epstein, who became a lifelong friend. When they returned to London, Manson joined the Camden Town Group, becoming Secretary. Lilian was a close friend of the Director of the Tate and ensured that Manson, aged 33, became Tate Clerk. Manson continued to paint feverishly at the weekend. The Tate website describes Manson as its 'least succesful' director. Kenneth Clark described him with "a flushed face, white hair and a twinkle in his eye; and this twinkling got him out of scrapes that would have sunk a worthier man without trace." His painting continued to show promise, and he joined the London Group in 1914 and showed with the New England Art Club from 1915. His first solo show was at the Leicester Galleries in 1923 and he became a member of the NEAC in 1927. He attended a dinner at the Hotel George V in Paris in 1938 to celebrate the British Exhibition at the Louvre. Clive Bell wrote to his wife, "Manson arrived at the déjeuner given by the minister of Beaux Arts fantastically drunk - punctuated the ceremony with cat-calls and cock-a-doodle-doos, and finally staggered to his feet, hurled obscene insults at the company in general and the minister in particular, and precipitated himself on the ambassadress, Lady Phipps, some say with amorous intent; others with lethal intent." Bell concluded: "The guests fled, ices uneaten, coffee undrunk... I hope an example will be made, and that they will seize the opportunity for turning the sot out of the Tate, not because he is a sot, but because he has done nothing but harm to modern painting." The Director of the Tate was arbiter as to whether imported items amounted to art (which would make them exempt from customs duty). This caused controversy when Peggy Guggenheim imported sculpture by Marcel Duchamp and others. Manson pronounced Constantin Brâncuși's Sculpture for the Blind (a large, smooth, egg-shaped marble) to be "idiotic" and "not art", and therefore subject to duty. Letters were written to the press and the matter reached the House of Commons, where Manson was criticised and eventually had to back down. He retired at the age of 58. By his own account, "my doctor has warned me that my nerves will not stand any further strain... I have begun to have blackouts, in which my actions become automatic. Sometimes these periods last several hours.... I had one of these blackouts at an official luncheon in Paris recently, and startled guests by suddenly crowing like a cock...." His successor was Sir John Rothenstein, who discovered that the staff referred to artwork in the basement as 'Director's Stock'. It transpired that Manson had been selling it to boost his salary. His work now hangs in the Tate, as well as in many other galleries in Britain and abroad. Condition: Good. If you’d like to know more, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for more views of St John's College, Cambridge.
  • George Frederick Nicholls (1850 - 1935)

    Wren Bridge, St John's College, Cambridge

      Watercolour 37 x 24 cm Many of Nicholls' paintings are of the Cotswolds and Oxford. He painted the illustrations for a series of county books for A & C Black, including Cornwall (1915) and Cotswolds (1920). Condition: very good. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other views of St John’s College, Cambridge.
  • Anonymous

    St John’s College, Cambridge

    Watercolour and pencil 13x18cm Probably early 19th century. This watercolour depicts St John’s prior to construction of Hutchinson’s 1831 New Court buildings; two figures wearing gowns and square caps are engaged in conversation by the Wren Bridge. If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Condition: Good.
  • St John’s College, Cambridge

    Watercolour and pencil 13x18cm Probably early 19th century. This watercolour depicts St John's prior to construction of Hutchinson's 1831 New Court buildings; two figures wearing gowns and square caps are engaged in conversation by the Wren Bridge. If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.

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