MACKAY HUGH BAILLIE SCOTT (1865-1945) FOR BLACKWELL HOUSE, CUMBRIA
CARVED FRUITWOOD MASTER MOULD, CIRCA 1898
£8,000
Auction: 14 February 2019 at 10:00 GMT
Description
carved with interlocking rowan branches
Dimensions
63cm x 58cm
Footnote
Provenance: Blackwell House, Windermere
Literature: Wainwright, Clive 'Architect - Designers. Pugin To Mackintosh', The Fine Art Society, London, 1981, p.56-7
V&A Museum number: W.15:1, 2-1976
Exhibited: Madrid, Fundación Juan March and Barcelona, Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya 'William Morris and the Arts & Crafts Movement in Great Britain' October 2017-May 2018, no. 233
Note: This ceiling mould was made for the decorative plasterwork of the white drawing room, at ‘Blackwell’, Cumbria designed by Baillie Scott and built between 1898–1900. Five of these moulds are known, one at LACMA (museum no. M.2009.53); one in the collection of Blackwell House, Cumbria; and two in private collections. The design of stylised rowans is a favourite decorative motif of Baillie Scott's and can also be found inlaid in furniture, for example the marquetry inlay on the doors of a Manxman piano, held by the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. This design, carved with interlocking rowan branches features on the plasterwork ceiling in a grid comprising four different designs, of which this is one. Plaster moulds would be cast from the fruitwood master mould and the actual ceiling panels created from the plaster versions.