A LEAD MODEL OF VICTORY
A LEAD MODEL OF VICTORY
A LEAD MODEL OF VICTORY
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A LEAD MODEL OF VICTORY

FIRST HALF 18TH CENTURY, ATTRIBUTED TO JOHN VAN NOST THE ELDER

Details
A LEAD MODEL OF VICTORY
FIRST HALF 18TH CENTURY, ATTRIBUTED TO JOHN VAN NOST THE ELDER
The goddess with flowing drapery to her right shoulder and waist, her right arm holding aloft a floral crown, restorations
66½ in. (169 cm.) high
Together with a carved stone pedestal, 18th century, with panelled sides -- 42 in. (106.5 cm.) high
Provenance
Acton Burnell Park, Ruckley, Shrewsbury, Shropshire.

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Lot Essay

The van Nosts were a family of sculptors of Flemish descent. The eldest, John van Nost, is first recorded working at Windsor Castle circa 1678. He had his own yard by circa 1687 and there manufactured 'Marble and Leaden figures, Busto's and noble Vases, Marble Chimney Pieces and Curious Marble Tables'. However, he is best remembered, and most influential, as a supplier of cast-lead garden statues, his subjects for garden figures invariably drawn from classical mythology and literature. He had a large school of pupils and assistants and after his death, circa 1712, the workshop near Hyde Park Corner was continued by his nephew, Gerard van Nost, until it was taken over by John van Nost the younger in 1729. Many of the moulds for his lead statues continued in use until at least the mid-18th century.

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