Arthur John Elsley (1861-1952)
Arthur John Elsley (1861-1952)

The Punch and Judy Show

Details
Arthur John Elsley (1861-1952)
The Punch and Judy Show
signed and dated 'Arthur J Elsley/1912.' (lower left) and signed and inscribed 'No.1./"Punch and Judy"/Arthur J. Elsley/26 Queens Road/St John's Wood. N.W' (on a old label on the reverse)
oil on canvas
49 x 66 in. (112 x 169 cm.)
Provenance
Mrs E. Harrop; Christie's London, 6 December 1920, lot 92, (86 gns. to Barclay).
Literature
T. Parker, Golden Hours, The Paintings of Arthur J. Elsley 1860-1952, 1998, p. 121-122, illustrated p. 122.

Lot Essay

In his catalogue raisonn of the artist, Terry Parker states 'This work is Elsley's tour de force'. Painted at the height of his career, few other oils approach it in terms of size, or the range of figures depicted. It has not been seen in public for most of this century.

Parker spent much time in conversation with the artist's daughter, Marjorie, and has recorded her reminiscences about the picture. 'The collie, called 'Old Scenter', was very well behaved. Marjorie remembers her father saying 'Go on you old silly' to the dog who would follow without a lead. Elsley forgot to say it on one occasion and the dog refused to cross the road.

Elsely painted a small head and shoulders oil study of the central figure in this work, signed and dated 1908, which was sold at the Studio Sale (part of lot 19). Either he had been wroking on the large painting since that date or had simply decided to include her in this position. The man wearing a policeman's outfit, borrowed from a relative, ran the W.H. Smith newspaper barrow at the end of the road. The drum man, wearing the bowler hat, was well known for 'propping up the bar' at the local pub. The bearded man, holding a striped cane on the left of the crowd was Mr. Cox, a local character who lived at 112 Sixth Avenue, Queens Park. He was nick-named 'Slopper', and his job was to put down staw to deaden the noise of horses' hooves and help their grip on the cobbled street at the end of Queens Road, where Elsley lived. He also shovelled up mud and kept the street clean. For his labours, coachmen would toss him small change. The old man with an arm on his hip was Mr. Gooderam who appeared as the shepherd in Rescued, 1911. The bearded man wearing a cap was the local carpenter who lived in the next street. (He also appears as the blacksmith in As Good As Ever, 1912).

The dee gee on the ground belonged to Marjorie and featured in Won't You Fix My Horse Too, 1912. Marjorie's cousin, Frances Everett, is the girl, bottom left, holding the slate. This work was probably painted partly at Barton-on-Sea'.

Born in 1860, the son of coachman, Elsley joined the South Kensington School of Art at the age of fourteen. In 1876 he became a probationer at the Royal Academy Schools, and submitted his first exhibit to the Royal Academy in 1878. By 1887 he was sharing a studio at 151 Gloucester Road, Kensington, with George Greville Manton, who later introduced Elsley to Fred Morgan. Elsley was to paint the animals in Morgan's pictures in succession to Allen Sealey, and following the death of Charles Burton Barber in 1894, was considered the foremost painter of animals and children in the country. In 1900, following an estrangement with Morgan who accused him of stealing ideas for pictures, Elsley started to execute works on a grander scale. He continued to exhibit at the Royal Academy until 1917, but thereafter painted less and less, owing to failing eyesight.

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