A GEORGE III ARTIFICIAL 'COADE' STONE MODEL OF A LION
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A GEORGE III ARTIFICIAL 'COADE' STONE MODEL OF A LION

CIRCA 1800

Details
A GEORGE III ARTIFICIAL 'COADE' STONE MODEL OF A LION
CIRCA 1800
Standing with one paw raised on a ball on an integral plinth, restoration
46 in. (117 cm.) high; 56½ in. (144 cm.) long
Literature
A. Kelly, Mrs Coade's Stone, Upton-upon-Severn, 1990, pp 257-263.
Special notice
This lot will be removed to an off-site warehouse at the close of business on the day of sale - 2 weeks free storage

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Lot Essay

Eleanor Coade's 'Artificial Stone Manufactory' was established at King's Arms Stairs, Narrow Wall, Lambeth - now the site of the Royal Festival Hall. Eleanor Coade (1708-1796) and her daughter, also Eleanor (1733-1821), founded the business in partnership with a Daniel Pincot in 1769, who had been manufacturing artificial stone in Lambeth during the 1760's. Eleanor Coade was one of a handful of independent women in the 18th century who began their own businesses and then managed them successfully. The business produced sculpture and decorative architectural ornament in a material - today referred to as 'Coade' stone - which could be cast in complex forms and which was highly resistant to damage from the elements. 'Coade' stone, a manufactured stone meant to mimic limestone, was made from a mixture of ground glass, flint, sand, clay and petrified clay, a combination which often turned out to be more durable than the stone it was imitating. The mixture was then poured into moulds, dried, fired in kilns and finished by hand.

Coade made more lions than any other animal, with designs for couchant and rampant poses in various sizes. Examples can be seen at Audley End, Essex, Kew Gardens, Westminster Bridge and Paxton House, Scotland. The present lot is closest to the examples on either side of the Queen's Gate, Victoria Park, Bath.
Standing lions were the most challenging to make as result of the problems of supporting the body before the clay had hardened in the kiln.
A 'Coade' model of sold of a lion was sold Dunsborough Park, Christie's, London, 19-20 June 2013, lot 100, \D50,000.

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