• Hammond (British, fl. 1930s) Original design for poster and flyer for Carnival Night at the King's Head

    26x19 cm Gouache, 1937 Sadly nothing is known of the life of the artist of this series of rather fine Art Deco designs we have listed. An elegant couple dance in this well composed design. Designed to be lithographed, the artist has restricted himself to four colours. If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Condition: Generally very good.
  • Robert Morden (1650-1703) Nottingham Shire (or Nottinghamshire)

    Engraving with recent hand colouring 34x42cm First published in 1695 for Camden's Britannica (1695-1772) and reprinted several times during the succeeding century.
  • Food Study

    Original Poster 51x76cm If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • What to Eat and Why

    Original Poster 51x76cm If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk  or call us on 07929 749056.
  • Margaret Macadam (1902-1991)

    Spring: Lady with an Afghan Hound

    Signed Mixed media c.1930 28x23cm If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • Reginald Hallward (1858 - 1948)

    Design for a banner in the shape of a strawberry

      Watercolour 14 x 10 cm A design for a banner featuring a strawberry motif. The design, like many others by Hallward, is likely influenced by in the Arts and Crafts style popularised by William Morris in the 1890s. Reginald Hallward was born on the Isle of Wight, and was a painter, poet, glassmaker and book designer. He is best known for his stained glass window designs and the tempera murals he painted in several churches. A great exponent of the English Arts and Crafts movement, he often used black paint for outlines, rather than leaded glass. A consumate craftsman, he insisted on painting, firing and leading with his own hands. Condition: mounted to board, old glue marks to margins, and some loss of colour; otherwise good. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other pictures by Reginald Hallward.
  • Out of stock

    Lancaster Bomber

    Original Silver Gelatin photograph, July 1942 11 x 16 cm Stamped to reverse 'Passed for Publication 2 July 1942 Press and Censorship Bureau', 'Public Relations Branch MAP'. A fine photograph; two erks are adjusting the starboard undercarriage of a Lancaster bomber whilst being supervised - the supervisor apparently with his hands in his pockets in very unmilitary fashion! The sun is high in the sky, casting a rather fine shadow under the bomber.
  • Mabel Oliver Rae (1868-1956) Wadham College Oxford

    Etching Signed and titled in pencil 11x8.5 cm The rich tones of the etchings make them as popular today as when they were first made. Click here for biographical details and other pictures by the artist. If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Condition: Good.
  • Vanity Fair Spy Magazine President of St john's College Oxford

    1 April 1893 Lithograph If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Condition: Good.
  • 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.
  • Eric Gill

    Border for The Canterbury Tales (1929) - Three Men with Spears

    Woodblock Print Published Hague & Gill 1934 in an unnumbered edition of 300 23x21cm Following Chichester Technical and Art School, Gill moved to London in 1900 to train with the ecclesiastical architects W D Caroe. Finding architecture somewhat pedestrian he took stonemasonry lessons at Westminster Technical Institute and calligraphy lessons at the Central School of Arts and Crafts, coming under the influence of Edward Johnson, the designer of the London Underground's own typeface. In 1903 he ceased his attempts to become an architect, instead becoming a monumental mason, letter-cutter and calligrapher. Based in Ditchling, he began direct carving of stone figures, the semi-abstract figures taking their influence from mediaeval statuary, mixed with influences from Classical statuary from the Greeks and Romans, with a little post-Impressionism added in. With major commissions from Westminster Cathedral for its Stations of the Cross (1914), a series of War Memorials including the Grade II* memorial in Trumpington, and three of the sculptures for Charles Holden's 1928 headquarters of London Underground at 55 Broadway, St James's, and a series of sculptures for the new 1932 Broadcasting House. The list continues. Never one to rest on his laurels, he was at the same time engaged in typographical adventures. He had collaborated with Edward Johnson on the latter's initial thoughts on his London Transport typeface, but in 1925 designed Perpetua on his own, and Gill Sans between 1927-30. For the Golden Cockerel Press he created, in 1929, a bolder typeface to complement wood engravings. And of course Gill was publishing decorated books. His 1929 Canterbury Tales was an epic work, with a whole series of beautiful wood engravings such as this one. The present print is from the 1934 edition for Faber & Faber ('Engravings 1928-1933 by Eric Gill') he printed with his son-in-law, Rene Hague, produced with the original engraved wood blocks. If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Condition: Generally very good condition.
  • D L Hadden

    Design for Hepplewhite Mahogany Settee

    Watercolour and pencil 18x26cm For biographical details and other works by the artist click here. If you are interested email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • after Samuel Buck (1696 - 1779) and Nathaniel Buck (active 1724 - 1759)

    The South View of Bindon Abbey, in the County of Dorset (1733)

      Engraving 20 x 37 cm An engraved view of Bindon Abbey, a Cistercian monastery on the River Frome in Dorset. The monastery was founded in 1149 by William de Glastonia on the site since known as Little Bindon near Bindon Hill. In 1172 the monastery moved to a site near Wool, and was supported by the house of Plantagenet. The abbey was scheduled for Dissolution in 1536, and finally dissolved in 1539. Only ruins remain. Samuel and Nathaniel Buck were brothers and notable 18th century architectural artists, best known for their depictions of ancient castles and monasteries entitled 'Buck's Antiquities' and those of townscapes of England and Wales, ''Sea-Ports and Capital Towns''. Little is known about the brothers' lives. Samuel was born in Yorkshire and died in penury in London in 1779, and was buried in the churchyard of St Clement Danes. Nathaniel pre-deceased him, dying between 1759 and 1774. Condition: generally good; some age toning; mounted to board; sheet trimmed outside platemark. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056.
  • Donald Ayres (b. 1936)

    The Clifton Foot Beagles on Butcombe Hill

      Lithograph 24 x 44 cm Signed and numbered 423/500. A lithograph of the Clifton Foot Beagles, now the Chilmark and Clifton Foot Beagles. Donald Ayres is a landscape painter specialising in country sports such as hunting, shooting, and fishing. His work has been exhibited in most of the major commercial galleries in Britain, as well as many in Europe and America. Condition: very good. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. Click here for other hunting pictures.
  • W. A. Scott

    The Titanic Sinking

     

    23 x 37 cm

    Bodycolour and ink on paper

    W. A. Scott was a marine artist known for his highly accurate line and body colour drawings.

    It is likely that Scott was an admirer of Laurence Dunn as his work bears much resemblance to Dunn's highly regarded marine drawings. 

  • Jane Gray (b.1931)

    Warrington Hospital Chapel, Design for Stained Glass Window (1984)

      Watercolour 7.5 x 5 cm Dated, detailed in artist’s hand and studio label verso.

    Warrington Hospital was originally built as an isolation hospital in 1893. The Warrington Union Workhouse Infirmary was built on the site shortly after in 1898, and it was occupied by the Whitecross Military Hospital during the First World War. It wasn’t until 1930, that the infirmary officially became the Warrington Borough General Hospital. Gray’s design for this window in the hospital’s chapel wonderfully demonstrates her colourful, modern style and features the Cross suspended between land and sky, and a line from Psalm 139: ‘O Lord, Thou hast searched me out and known me’. This was one of Gray’s simplest but most favourite window designs, it was installed in the chapel in 1984.

    Provenance: the artist’s studio sale. Literature: Jane Gray, Playing with Rainbows. (Shropshire: Ellingham Press, 2011), pp.23, 77. Condition: very good. If you are interested, please email info@manningfineart.co.uk or call us on 07929 749056. For other works by Jane Gray and more information about her, please click here.    

Title

Go to Top