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It's no secret that Mark Hill is one of our favourite celebrities in the antiques firmament and we really enjoyed this engaging blog and thank him for his kind words!
Mark Hill
As regular readers of my blog will know, I buy a lot of pictures and prints. I began buying them at school, when I was 15, and they’re all still surrounding me, spread around our home. And I honestly like all of them as much today as I did when I bought them. Whether or not this is true for one particular purchase, I can’t still tell you – yet. But, bizarre and slightly horrid as it looks, I trust my gut instinct…
I was reminded of it the other day when the marvellous Gail McCleod from Antiques News & Fairs came to our home for a working lunch. With over 30 years experience in the business – particularly with decorative antiques – she was quite taken with it. I also trust her, and her eye, implicitly.
First off, as you can see, there can only be one. For so many reasons, there must only be one! If there are any more, I’d love to know what they look like. It’s not signed (some may say “Why would you own up to making it?!“) and I have no idea who made it, or why. For all I know it could be a school project but, in a way, I don’t care much and I also don’t think it is – there’s far too much work in it for a start. When I saw it, I laughed at it, loved it, and had to own it. Framed in an early 20thC oak frame, it’s ready to hang on the wall, despite its slightly tatty state. Let’s take a closer look to see what I saw when I bought it from Acorn Antiques & Collectables a fair few years ago.
At the top are a row of miniature carte de visite style Victorian album photographs of Henry Irvine, Charles Warne, E.Terry, Bancroft, Ben Davis and W.H. Kendal. Irvine, Kendal and (Squire) Bancroft were all Victorian actors, so I presume the rest also were. E. Terry shows a man, not a woman, so perhaps the artist intended to show Ellen Terry, but got it wrong.
The Picasso-like yet Renaissance-like stylised profile of a queen (I presume, as she wears a crown) is made up of some roughly cut late 1960s-1970s floral flock fabric on the shoulders, with a patch of Victorian lace in between, topped off with a part of an old green velvet belt decorated with surprisingly good but knackered and faded light blue fabric flowers, and gilt paper Victorian scraps in the shape of leaves.
And the ‘fun’ continues. The neck and face are made up of seemingly random newspaper clippings, with a printed completed crossword at the front of her neck. Nothing is easy to read, presumably intentionally so, but subjects include Wall Street, shipping news, a company’s profits and value, pigeon racing, and distillery share prices. Her eyes and mouth are also newspaper clippings, and her cheeks are highlighted by white tissue paper.
In the same vein, her hair is made up of fragments of cartoons, at least one (or all) of which is Gun Law by Harry Bishop, published in the 1960s & 70s in the Daily and Sunday Express. To make it look more ‘like’ hair, varnish has been applied and black wool trailed over it in a pattern.
Her crown is made from discoloured Victorian or Edwardian lace highlighted with more of the gilt paper Victorian scraps in the shapes of leaves found on her collar.
Then you get to her ‘words’. These are made up of rows of tiny printed plastic stickers of bowler-hatted businessmen, men in coats, sports jackets and suits. As if she’s spitting them out.
There seems to be no single theme, with inspiration and style crossing the centuries and execution done in the manner of a primary school child meets a Victorian scrap booker meets a découpage artist. With a bit of the opening credits of Monty Python’s Flying Circus thrown in for good measure. But I think it’s more than that. It has an almost ‘folk art’ appeal and someone obviously spent quite some time amassing it all and putting it together. Quite what it is, why it or was done what it means, I don’t know. Any ideas?!
It's no secret that Mark Hill is one of our favourite celebrities in the antiques firmament and we really enjoyed this engaging blog and thank him for his kind words!
Mark Hill
As regular readers of my blog will know, I buy a lot of pictures and prints. I began buying them at school, when I was 15, and they’re all still surrounding me, spread around our home. And I honestly like all of them as much today as I did when I bought them. Whether or not this is true for one particular purchase, I can’t still tell you – yet. But, bizarre and slightly horrid as it looks, I trust my gut instinct…
I was reminded of it the other day when the marvellous Gail McCleod from Antiques News & Fairs came to our home for a working lunch. With over 30 years experience in the business – particularly with decorative antiques – she was quite taken with it. I also trust her, and her eye, implicitly.
First off, as you can see, there can only be one. For so many reasons, there must only be one! If there are any more, I’d love to know what they look like. It’s not signed (some may say “Why would you own up to making it?!“) and I have no idea who made it, or why. For all I know it could be a school project but, in a way, I don’t care much and I also don’t think it is – there’s far too much work in it for a start. When I saw it, I laughed at it, loved it, and had to own it. Framed in an early 20thC oak frame, it’s ready to hang on the wall, despite its slightly tatty state. Let’s take a closer look to see what I saw when I bought it from Acorn Antiques & Collectables a fair few years ago.
At the top are a row of miniature carte de visite style Victorian album photographs of Henry Irvine, Charles Warne, E.Terry, Bancroft, Ben Davis and W.H. Kendal. Irvine, Kendal and (Squire) Bancroft were all Victorian actors, so I presume the rest also were. E. Terry shows a man, not a woman, so perhaps the artist intended to show Ellen Terry, but got it wrong.
The Picasso-like yet Renaissance-like stylised profile of a queen (I presume, as she wears a crown) is made up of some roughly cut late 1960s-1970s floral flock fabric on the shoulders, with a patch of Victorian lace in between, topped off with a part of an old green velvet belt decorated with surprisingly good but knackered and faded light blue fabric flowers, and gilt paper Victorian scraps in the shape of leaves.
And the ‘fun’ continues. The neck and face are made up of seemingly random newspaper clippings, with a printed completed crossword at the front of her neck. Nothing is easy to read, presumably intentionally so, but subjects include Wall Street, shipping news, a company’s profits and value, pigeon racing, and distillery share prices. Her eyes and mouth are also newspaper clippings, and her cheeks are highlighted by white tissue paper.
In the same vein, her hair is made up of fragments of cartoons, at least one (or all) of which is Gun Law by Harry Bishop, published in the 1960s & 70s in the Daily and Sunday Express. To make it look more ‘like’ hair, varnish has been applied and black wool trailed over it in a pattern.
Her crown is made from discoloured Victorian or Edwardian lace highlighted with more of the gilt paper Victorian scraps in the shapes of leaves found on her collar.
Then you get to her ‘words’. These are made up of rows of tiny printed plastic stickers of bowler-hatted businessmen, men in coats, sports jackets and suits. As if she’s spitting them out.
There seems to be no single theme, with inspiration and style crossing the centuries and execution done in the manner of a primary school child meets a Victorian scrap booker meets a découpage artist. With a bit of the opening credits of Monty Python’s Flying Circus thrown in for good measure. But I think it’s more than that. It has an almost ‘folk art’ appeal and someone obviously spent quite some time amassing it all and putting it together. Quite what it is, why it or was done what it means, I don’t know. Any ideas?!
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