A SET OF NINE CHINESE PAINTED-PAPER PANELS IN PAPIER MACHE FRAMES
THE STONELEIGH ABBEY CHINESE PAINTINGS SUPPLIED BY BROMWICH & LEIGH
A SET OF NINE CHINESE PAINTED-PAPER PANELS IN PAPIER MACHE FRAMES

SUPPLIED BY THOMAS BROMWICH AND LEONARD LEIGH, 1764

细节
A SET OF NINE CHINESE PAINTED-PAPER PANELS IN PAPIER MACHE FRAMES
SUPPLIED BY THOMAS BROMWICH AND LEONARD LEIGH, 1764
Each depicting Chinese scenes with figures among lakeside buildings and trees and with mountains beyond, the courtly figures with attendants and servants, within the original English white-painted and oil-gilt papier-mâché frames decorated with guilloche and joined C-scrolls, two frames signed 'Wm Akenhead'
The two largest 51 x 24 ¼ in. (129 x 62 cm.)
five 31 x 24 in. (79 x 61 cm.)
two 18 ½ x 24 in. (47 x 61 cm.)
来源
Supplied by Bromwich and Leigh in 1764 to Edward, 5th Lord Leigh (d. 1786) for Stoneleigh Abbey, Warwickshire, for Miss Leigh's Bedchamber, the bill dated 10 December 1965, and thence by descent until sold,
Christie's, London, 'Property of the Trustees of the Stoneleigh Settlement, The Executors of the late 4th Lord Leigh and the Stoneleigh Abbey Preservation Trust Ltd.', October 15-16, 1981, lot 67.
The Collection of Patricia Kluge, sold Sotheby's, Virginia, 8-9 June 2010, lot 436.
出版
Thomas Bromwich's bill in the Shakespeare Centre Library and Archive, Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshire, invoice (DR18/5/4402), dated 10 December 1765.
W.A. Thorpe, 'Stoneleigh Abbey and its Furniture - II', Connoisseur, March 1947, p. 19.
C. Aslet, 'Stoneleigh Abbey - Warwickshire II', Country Life, 20 December 1984, p. 1935.

拍品专文

This important set of nine Chinese painted-paper panels in their original frames was supplied in 1764 by the upholsterer and ‘Paper-stainers’, Thomas Bromwich and Leonard Leigh, as part of the extensive redecoration at Stoneleigh Abbey, Warwickshire, mainly on the bedroom floor, carried out for Edward, 5th Lord Leigh, following his coming of age in 1763. In 1764, the firm supplied, 78 Yards of fine pea Green paper, 252 feet of Papier Mache Borders in party gold and 193 feet of Papier Mache Vine Cornice Ornament for Miss Leigh’s Bedchamber, sister to Lord Leigh (C. Aslet, ‘Stoneleigh Abbey – Warwickshire II’, Country Life, 20 December 1984, p. 1935).
The Stoneleigh bill (7 pages) of 28 May 1763 - 16 June 1764 totals £356 7s. 0 ½d., and lists ‘Indian’ (Chinese) pictures in Miss Leigh’s Bedchamber, receipted by Bromwich on 10 December 1765 (Shakespeare Centre Library, DR18/5/4402). The relevant entry, 16 June 1764, is as follows:

2 Large Indian Pictures in Party gold frames £4 12s
6 Smaller Do. £6 6s
9 Do. @ 13/- £5 17s

the amounts listed are probably the labour charges for hanging the pictures.
The present group of nine Chinese painted panels is part of the set from Miss Leigh’s Bedchamber, with seven of the remaining eight panels now in a private collection.
Part of this room decoration, dismantled after the fire of 1961, is shown in situ in W.A. Thorpe, 'Stoneleigh Abbey and Its Furniture - II', The Connoisseur, March 1947, p. 19.

Thomas Bromwich (fl. 1740-87) is first recorded as linen-draper and upholsterer, 'At the Golden Lyon', Ludgate Hill, from 1740-48; then circa 1758-76 as 'Thomas Bromwich & Leonard Leigh, Paper-Stainers'; and finally (1777-84) as 'Bromwich, Isherwod & Bradley, Paper-hangers, 35 Ludgate Hill'. As early as 1748 Bromwich's trade card stated he `Makes and Sells all manner of Screens, Window Blinds, and covers for Tables, Cabins, Stair-Cases. , Hung with Guilt Leather, or India Pictures, Chints's, Callicoes, Cottons, Needlework,  Matched in Paper; to the utmost exactness, at Reasonable Rates'. Bromwich was appointed ‘Master of the Painter-Stainers Co.’ in 1761, and ‘Paper-hanging Maker in Ordinary to the Great Wardrobe’ in 1764. The firm’s recorded commissions include supplying ‘the new furniture wallpaper’ to Horace Walpole for Strawberry Hill in 1754, and Chinese paper for Lord Darnley at Cobham Hall in 1773 (still in situ), in addition to work at Alscot Park, Corsham Court and Croome Court(G. Beard, Craftsmen and Interior Decoration in England, 1660-1820, London, 1981, p. 248). A papier-mâché ceiling by Bromwich survives at Dunster Castle, Somerset.

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