A pair of polychrome wood and copper mounted lunette panels, 20th century
A pair of polychrome wood and copper mounted lunette panels, 20th century

Details
A pair of polychrome wood and copper mounted lunette panels, 20th century
Each painted with the words MOEL and TRYVAN around opposing sheet copper relief models of a twin masted gaff rigged vessel 25½in. (64.8cm.) high, 47½in. (120.8cm.) wide (2)

Lot Essay

The iron barque Moel Tryvan was built in 1884 at the yard of William Doeford and Sons of Sunderland, for the Gwynedd Shipping Company, being named after one of the higher mountains of Snowdonia. She was intended for use as a general cargo transporter and is recorded as serving all around the world in this role until 1901, when she capsized and foundered whilst under tow in a gale, twenty-five miles North West of Alderny. Of the crew, ten drowned and eight were saved and taken to Cherbourg.
The panels are reputedly from a house in North Wales, in the vicinity of Porthmadog, in which presumably the owners of the vessel or one of her captains resided.

More from OAK, COUNTRY FURNITURE, FOLK ART

View All
View All