Loading Spinner
Don’t miss out on items like this!

Sign up to get notified when similar items are available.

Lot 227: THE PROPERTY OF A PRIVATE COLLECTION THOMAS ROBINS 1715-1770 THE GROUNDS AT HONINGTON HALL,

Est: £25,000 GBP - £40,000 GBP
Sotheby'sLondon, United KingdomJune 30, 2005

Item Overview

Description

THE PROPERTY OF A PRIVATE COLLECTION THOMAS ROBINS 1715-1770 THE GROUNDS AT HONINGTON HALL, WARWICKSHIRE, SHOWING THE SOUTH AND WEST FRONTS; THE GROUNDS OF HONINGTON HALL, WARWICKSHIRE, SHOWING THE ORNAMENTAL WATER DESIGNED BY SANDERSON MILLER

two, watercolour, pen and brown ink and bodycolour over pencil on vellum

Quantity: 2

PROVENANCE

Commissioned from the artist by Joseph Townsend, August 1759;
by descent to Mr E.Townsend;
by whom presented to Mary Stanton, 1900;
by whom presented to the Townsend Hall Management Committee, 1964;
The Trustees of Townsend Hall, their sale at Christie's, 14th July 1987, lots 135 & 136
EXHIBITED

Royal Institute of British Architects, Heinz Gallery, Gardens of Delight: The Art of Thomas Robins, 9th December 1975 - 20th March 1976
LITERATURE AND REFERENCES

John Harris, Gardens of Delight: The Art of Thomas Robins, Royal Institute of British Architects Exhibition Catalogue, 1975, pl.2;
John Harris, Gardens of Delight: The Rococo English Landscape of Thomas Robins the Elder, 1978, nos.11 & 12, plates 80 & 81
CATALOGUE NOTE

'An artist who painted English houses and gardens when they were most enchanting; whose eye captured the rococo garden at its perfection and when it was most whimsical; whose paintings are almost sensual in the sheer delight they give; such was Thomas Robins the Elder' (John Harris, Gardens of Delight: The Art of Thomas Robins, Royal Institute of British Artists exhibition catalogue, 1975, p.1)

Robins clearly took great delight in drawing the beautifully landscaped grounds of Honington Hall, Warwickshire, as these two rare watercolours show.

In the foreground of one of the works the artist is seen seated with the wife of his patron, Joseph Townsend. He gestures with his paint brush towards the Hall which is seen surrounded by woodland in the far distance. A stream winds through the centre of the composition where a boating party can be seen enjoying their tranquil surroundings. The trees and shrubbery are all depicted in minute detail and so also is the garland of common English wildflowers which frames the composition.

In the other watercolour Robins leads the viewers eye from a chinese bell pavilion in the foreground, past a small grove of trees and on to the ornamental water. The water meanders through the landscape, at one point breaking into a gentle cascade. Crossing the water is a Chippendale bridge and beyond, almost hidden amongst the trees, is a classical temple. The sinuous forms of the small group of picnicers in the foreground become part of the landscape. Although depicted in minute detail they are incidental and only appear to exist for decorative effect. Robins' attention to detail is demonstrated again by the mixture of rare and familiar flowers which frame this view.

The gardens at Honington Hall, the seat of Joseph Townsend, were almost contemporary with those at Stourhead. Following his marriage in 1744 Townsend set about making improvements to the house and gardens. It is thought that he commissioned John Freeman of Fawley to design the exhuberant rococo plasterwork interiors of the house and following their completion (circa 1751-2) he consulted Sanderson Miller to design the grounds. Miller worked there until at least 1760, creating gardens that reflected the style of the interior of the house. In the summer of 1759, when Miller has almost finished working on the grounds, Robins was commissioned to make drawings of them as a record for Townsend and posterity.

Robins was born in Chalton Kings near Cheltenham and although he worked a great deal from Bath, he did not finally move there until 1760 when he bought a house in Merchants Court off the Market Place. Known as the 'Limner of Bath' he produced many watercolours of the city and its environs. He was also well known for his prospects of houses and gardens which he typically framed with borders of flowers, birds, shells and butterflies. Unlike his precursors, Kip, Rocque and Rigaud, however, his topographical work was not engraved and after his death his work was slowly forgotten. For a while his watercolours were confused with those of his son, Thomas Robins junior, but gradually enough of his work emerged from country houses, public libraries, museums and private collections for it to become clear that many of these works pre-dated Thomas Robins junior and that there were, in fact, two Thomases, and not one.

The importance of Thomas Robins' watercolours lies is the fact that they provide the only topographical record of English country houses and their gardens between the appearance of Rocque and Badeslade's Vitruvius Brittanicus volume the fourth of 1739 and Watt's Seats of the Nobility and Gentry of 1779. During the span of his working career from 1747 until 1766 Robins captured a fashion of garden design that soon disappeared. The gardens which he drew with their serpentine water ways and paths, fretwork fences and bridges and whimsical temples and pavilions were no longer popular by the late eighteenth century. Thomas' record was unique and, in the words of John Harris 'he was a rococo artist and his gardens are the emodiment of rococo art' (John Harris, Gardens of Delight: The Art of Thomas Robins, Royal Institute of British Artists exhibition catalogue, 1975, p.4)

Dimensions

both 33 by 49 cm., 13 1/3 by 19 1/4 in.

Artist or Maker

Auction Details

Watercolours & Portrait Minatures

by
Sotheby's
June 30, 2005, 12:00 AM EST

34-35 New Bond Street, London, LDN, W1A 2AA, UK