Woolley & Wallis Auctioneers

Page 1


ARTS OF AFRICA, OCEANIA AND THE AMERICAS ANTIQUITIES

WEDNESDAY 19TH FEBRUARY 2025

SPECIALIST DEPARTMENTS

Please dial +44 (0)1722 followed by the number listed below

AFRICAN & OCEANIC ART

ANTIQUITIES

Will Hobbs 339752

Georgina Way 446980

Molly O’Reilly 446980

20TH CENTURY DESIGN

Michael Jeffery 424505

Zoe Smith 446955

ASIAN ART

John Axford MRICS 424506

Alexandra Aguilar 424583

Freya Yuan­Richards 424589

Jeremy Morgan +44 (0)7812 601098

Michelle Yu 424571

Olivia Jones 424591

Nelson Chui 424591

BRITISH AND CONTINENTAL CERAMICS & GLASS

Clare Durham 424507

Hollie Morrison 446964

CHINESE PAINTINGS & CALLIGRAPHY

Freya Yuan­Richards 424589

Michelle Yu 424571

FURNITURE, WORKS OF ART & CLOCKS

Mark Yuan­Richards 411854

Neil Grenyer 446974

Jim Gale 339161

Sarah Stone 339161

Victoria Elwell 339161

JAPANESE ART

Alexandra Aguilar 424583

Olivia Jones 424591

JEWELLERY

Marielle Whiting FGA 424595

Jonathan Edwards FGAA (Consultant) 424504

Sarah Lancaster 424586

MEDALS & COINS, ARMS & ARMOUR

Ned Cowell 341469

Georgina Way 446980

Molly O’Reilly 446980

PAINTINGS

Victor Fauvelle 446961

Ed Beer 446962

Victoria Sturgeon

Heidi Easton

SILVER

Rupert Slingsby

Archie Swann

Jacob Carpenter

Becky Tilly­Trickett

VALUATIONS FOR INSURANCE & PROBATE

Jeremy Lamond MRICS FRSA 424502

Neil Grenyer 446974

Frances Woodhams

Hannah Farthing (Trainee Valuer)

CLIENT SERVICES

Ruth Pike (Client Services Manager) 424500

Sarah Bennie

Julie Langstaff

Gemma Pointer

Riin Rohtla­Szeverenyi

MARKETING

Chloe Davie 446951

ACCOUNTS

Ania Antkowiak

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

John Axford MRICS

Chairman

Natalie Milsted FCCA

Managing Director

ASSOCIATE DIRECTORS

Alexandra Aguilar

Ed Beer

Ned Cowell

Clare Durham

Victor Fauvelle

Will Hobbs

Michael Jeffery

Jeremy Lamond MRICS FRSA

Rupert Slingsby

Marielle Whiting FGA

Freya Yuan­Richards

Mark Yuan­Richards

446956

446959

446957

446957

ARTS OF AFRICA, OCEANIA AND THE AMERICAS ANTIQUITIES

WEDNESDAY 19TH FEBRUARY 2025

10.00AM

AT OUR CITY CENTRE SALEROOMS, SP1 3SU

VIEWING WILL TAKE PLACE AT OUR OLD SARUM GALLERIES

Saturday 15th February 10.00am – 1.00pm

Monday 17th February 10.00am – 4.00pm

Tuesday 18th February 10.00am – 4.00pm

Will Hobbs 01722 339752 wh@woolleys.live

Georgina Way 01722 446980 gw@woolleys.live

DIRECTIONS TO THE OLD SARUM GALLERIES

THE VIEWING OF THIS SALE WILL TAKE PLACE AT OUR OLD SARUM GALLERIES

Unit 1B, Castle Gate Business Park

Old Sarum, Salisbury, SP4 6QX

Client Parking Available

Saturday 15th February 10.00am – 1.00pm

Monday 17th February 10.00am – 4.00pm

Tuesday 18th February 10.00am – 4.00pm

THE AUCTION ON 19TH FEBRUARY WILL TAKE PLACE AT OUR CITY CENTRE SALEROOMS

51­61 Castle Street, Salisbury, SP1 3SU

BUYER’S PREMIUM

Each lot is subject to a Buyer’s Premium of 26% plus VAT

CONDITION OF LOTS

All lots in this catalogue are made of wood unless otherwise stated. The condition of lots is not stated in the catalogue descriptions. Reports on condition may be available on request. The absence of condition reports in the catalogue does not imply that the lot is free from imperfections or faults

COLLECTION OF LOTS

Please call 01722 446950 or 01722 424500 to make an appointment to collect from our warehouse, Unit 1B, Castle Gate Business Park, Old Sarum, Salisbury, SP4 6QX. Please instruct carriers accordingly and note, the warehouse is closed over weekends All accounts to be settled prior to collection

EXPORT AND CITES LICENCES

Some lots will require export or CITES licences in order to leave the UK or Europe, please refer to the department for guidance

LIVE ONLINE BIDDING – FREE OF CHARGE

bid.woolleyandwallis.co.uk

Instagram: @woolleyandwallisoceanicart @woolleyandwallissalerooms

Facebook: @woolleyandwallis

Pinterest: Woolley and Wallis

ILLUSTRATIONS

Front cover: Lot 35

Back cover: Lot 451

Catalogue £10.00 (£15.00 by post)

THE HANSJORG MAYER COLLECTION

When the book The Nagas, Hill Peoples of Northeast India was published in 1990, travelling into Nagaland was almost impossible and the information contained in it was predominately historical data, stemming largely from colonial times. The illustrations portrayed the vibrant material culture of the Nagas, many of which were located in British museums, including The Pitt Rivers Museum, Museum of Mankind and Cambridge University Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, from where the five year research project in getting the book to print was based. The majority of the following 180 lots make up a large proportion of those illustrations and form the Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

A Naga bead necklace

Konyak, Nagaland coloured glass beads, shell beads, horn spacers, fibre and ribbed brass bell pendants, with a horn clasp, 45cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 310.

£300­400

A Naga woman’s belt

Konyak, Nagaland coloured glass beads, fibre and bone end spacers with incised decoration, with a shell clasp and three shell discs with incised dot decoration, 97cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 308.

£150­250

3

A Naga bead necklace

Nagaland

coloured glass beads, fibre and bone spacers, with brass bell pendants and a metal clasp, 36cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 320.

£300­400

4

Two Naga bead necklaces

Konyak, Nagaland

coloured glass beads, resin spacers and fibre, one with a metal disc clasp and the other with an incised resin clasp, 40.5cm and 41cm long. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 310. (orange)

£200­300

5

A Naga necklace

Angami, Nagaland with three chank shells, the larger with a fibre bound carved wood support and with a band of white glass beads, the two other shells with rows of incised dots, with coloured glass and shell beads having bone spacers, the two larger ones with incised dot and linear decoration, 58cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 332.

£150­200

6

A Naga bead necklace

Konyak, Nagaland

coloured glass beads, bone spacers, fibre and brass bell pendants, with a shell clasp, 48.5cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p.320.

£300­400

7

A Naga bead necklace

Konyak, Nagaland

coloured glass beads, brass beads, bone spacers, fibre and ribbed brass bell pendants, with a shell clasp, 40cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 311.

£300­400

8

A Naga bead necklace

Konyak, Nagaland

coloured glass beads, brass beads and spacers, fibre and with ribbed brass bell pendants and a coin clasp, 29.5cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p.309.

£200­300

9

A Naga bead necklace

Konyak, Nagaland coloured glass beads, fibre, bone spacers and brass bell pendants, with a shell clasp, 41cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 320.

£200­300

A Naga necklace

Angami, Nagaland with three carved chank shells, the largest with a fibre bound carved wood support to the back, and the two smaller with incised rows of dots, and with coloured glass and shell beads, with bone spacers, one with incised linear decoration, 64cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 332.

£150­200

11

Two Naga bead necklaces

Konyak, Nagaland

coloured glass beads, shell beads, bone spacers and fibre, one with a shell clasp and the other with a metal disc clasp, 34.5cm and 39cm long. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 310, 311.

£300­400

Two Naga woman’s belts

Konyak, Nagaland

coloured glass beads, fibre and bone spacers, one with a coin clasp, 77cm and 83cm long. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 308. (yellow)

£200­300

14

A Naga bead necklace

Konyak, Nagaland

coloured glass beads, brass beads, shell beads, horn spacers and fibre, with ribbed brass bell pendants and a ceramic fragment disc clasp, 42cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 311.

£300­400

13

Two Naga woman’s belts

Konyak, Nagaland

coloured glass beads, bone spacers and fibre, each with a shell clasp with an incised dotted edge, one with brass bell pendants, 84cm and 87cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 308.

£200­300

15

Five Naga shell and bead necklaces Ao, Nagaland cut shell with carnelian and glass beads, strung on cloth or fibre, 20.5cm, 32cm, 37cm, 37.5cm and 50cm long. (5)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 324. (3)

£150­250

Seven Naga bead necklaces

Nagaland shell beads, carnelian and glass beads, 38cm, 39.5cm, 41.5cm, 48.5cm, 51cm 52.5cm and 53cm long. (7)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 327. £150­250

18

Three Naga necklaces

Nagaland chank shells, coloured glass and shell beads, 37.5cm 53cm and 53.5cm long, and a Naga chank shell neck ornament, with string, 33cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 307, 326. (thirteen shells, shell and red beads)

£150­250 16

17

Two Naga bead necklaces

Nagaland shell, carnelian and glass beads, one with two silver coloured metal zigzag mounts, 59.5cm and 45cm long. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 326. £150­250

20

Two Naga necklaces

Angami, Nagaland

one with a single carved chank shell, with incised dot and linear decoration, with blue glass, shell and carnelian beads, 44.5cm long, and the other with a double shell pendant, having incised dot decoration and with a bound bone support to the back and with coloured glass and shells beads, 34cm long. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 330.

£150­250

22

19

Two Naga necklaces Nagaland chank shell, coloured glass, shell and carnelian beads, one with a double shell pendant with a cloth bound wood support and two brass bell pendants, 68cm long, the other with a single large shell and two cut slithers, one with incised dot decoration, 60cm long and a Naga chank shell neck ornament with fibre and cloth, 41cm long. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 326, 331, 332. £150­250

21 20

Three Naga men’s boar’s tusk torques Nagaland bound with natural and dyed leaf fibre and with square cut shells, two with carnelian beads, one inscribed NAGA, ASSAM and another 77138, 18.5cm, 19cm and 19.5cm wide. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 218.

£150­250

21

Two Naga necklaces

Angami, Nagaland carved chank shells, coloured glass, shell and carnelian beads, the double shell pendant with a fabric bound bone support, 67cm long, the other with two shell slithers with incised dot decoration, one with a brass wire repair, 56cm long. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 330, 331.

£150­250

Three Naga necklaces

Angami, Nagaland

shell and coloured glass beads, fibre and bone, two with carnelian beads, 34cm, 39cm and 41cm long. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 328, 330. (two with carnelian beads)

£150­250

25

Three Naga necklaces

Angami, Nagaland

shell, coloured glass beads, fibre and bone spacers, two with carnelian beads and one with incised dot and linear decoration to two of the bone spacers, 33cm, 39cm and 44cm long. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 328, 331.

£150­250

24

Two Naga necklaces and a belt

Angami, Nagaland

shell, coloured glass and carnelian beads, with fibre and bone, the belt spacers with incised linear and dot decoration, the belt 76cm long, the necklaces 40cm and 30cm long. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 328. (belt and smaller necklace)

£150­250

26

Three Naga necklaces

Tangkhul, Nagaland

shell beads and spacers with coloured glass beads and fibre, 34cm, 39cm and 43cm long. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 329. £150­250

27

A Naga bead necklace

Konyak, Nagaland

coloured glass and shell beads, horn spacers, brass bell pendants, two large shell discs and a shell button clasp, 38cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 311.

£200­300

28

Two Naga child’s bead necklaces

Konyak, Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, with brass bell pendants, one with brass spacers and a shell clasp, 30cm wide, and the other with bone spacers, 34.5cm wide, and two Naga bead head ornaments, 28cm and 33cm wide. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 309. (necklaces and fawn head ornament)

£150­250

29

Two Naga bead necklaces

Konyak, Nagaland

coloured glass beads, fibre and brass bell pendants, one with brass spacers and five shells, including the clasp, 31cm long, and the other with bone spacers and a shell clasp, 26cm long. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 309. (brass spacers)

£300­500

30

Two Naga bead necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads, fibre, shell and brass bell pendants, one with bone spacers, 35cm long, and the other with brass spacers, 27cm long. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p.

£300­500

321. (bone spacers)

31

Three Naga bead necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads with shell, one with carnelian beads, two with bone spacers and two with brass bell pendants, 30cm, 33cm and 34cm long. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 321.

£300­500

33

A Naga carnelian necklace Ao, Nagaland with two blue glass beads and brass bell shape pendants, 39cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

32

Two Naga bead necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, one Konyak with bone spacers, brass bell pendants and a shell clasp, 36cm, long and the other Tangkhul, with aluminium spacers, 43cm long. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 320, 329.

£300­500

34

A Naga carnelian necklace Ao, Nagaland with brass bell pendants and a shell toggle, 34cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 324.

£200­300

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 324. £200­300

35

A Naga woman’s large necklace Ao, Nagaland graduated carnelian beads, bone spacers, brass bell pendants, shell and fibre, 68cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 325. £1,500­2,000

Three Naga bead necklaces

Ao, Nagaland oval glass ‘carnelian’ beads with brass bell pendants and two with blue glass beads, 25cm, 30cm and 32cm long. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 324. (two longer)

£400­600

38

Seven Naga necklaces

Nagaland

including three Ao, with orange and blue glass beads, one with a shell pendant, 21cm, 41cm and 49.5cm long, another Sangtam with brass bells and a shell pendant, 47cm long, an orange glass bead and brass spiral disc pendant necklace, probably Burmese Naga, 27cm long and two with metal tubes, having either coins or glass beads, 35cm and 38cm long. (7)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 258, 323. (bells and glass beads)

£200­300

37

Two Mizoran necklaces

North East India / Myanmar amber, resin and glass, 39cm and 39.5cm long. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£150­250

39

Four Naga necklaces

Nagaland

coloured and clear glass beads, one with brass bell pendants, 32cm, 43cm, 50cm and 71cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£150­250

40

40

Six Naga glass bead necklaces

Nagaland including one with orange strands and five multi coloured bands, 49cm long, another green, clear and opaque with black and white larger beads, 35cm long, and four with brass pendants; two buffalo heads, a horn and a tapered heirloom pendant, 36cm, 34.5cm, 34cm and 31.5cm long. (6)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£150­250

41

Five Naga beaded necklaces Ao, Nagaland coloured and clear glass beads and fibre, the five strand necklace with brass and bone spacers, 22cm, 28cm, 29.5cm, 37.5cm and 40.5cm, and a Naga orange glass bead multi strand necklace, 49cm long. (6)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 322. (three Ao necklaces)

£250­350

42

Four Naga beaded necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, with multi strands and geometric panels, three with coin fasteners and one with a button, 78cm, 80cm, 82cm and 84cm long, a Naga three coloured bead necklace, with a button fastener, 92cm long, two Naga beaded panels, one hung with brass implements and bells and the other with coloured wool pompoms, 19.5cm and 20.5cm long, and a Naga beaded belt, 95cm long. (8)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 307.

£200­300

41

43

A Naga necklace / waistband

Konyak, Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, with four shells, one with an incised dot border, and with six wood ornaments with woven fibre and layers of natural and dyed hair, suspended with glass beads and a group of nine cast brass bells, on glass and brass bead strands, with fibre and a bone support, 80cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 307. £200­300

44

A Naga bead necklace

Nagaland red, blue and white glass beads, cloth and fibre, 30cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 307.

£200­300

45

Two Naga shell and bead chest ornaments Nagaland

cowrie shells, composite, glass and shell beads with fibre, 52cm and 60cm long. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£200­300

46

Three Naga multi strand bead necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, two with coin clasps and one with a button,

48cm (2) and 50cm long. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 315, 319.

£300­500

47

Three Naga multi strand bead necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, two with coin clasps and one with a metal button,

65cm, 68.5cm and 70cm long. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 315, 319.

£300­500

48

A Naga bead necklace Nagaland white, red, blue and teal glass beads, cloth and fibre, 33cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 307.

£200­300

49

A Naga beaded over­skirt probably Sema, Nagaland coloured glass beads, brass beads and fibre, 34cm long, 37cm wide.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 306.

£150­200

50

Three Naga multi strand bead necklaces Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, two with coin clasps and one a metal button,

47cm, 50.5cm and 55cm long. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 319. (orange/blue/red, multi coloured)

£300­500

51

Four Naga bead necklaces Nagaland

coloured glass beads, two with coin clasps, one with a metal disc and one with a shell button, 65.5cm, 67.5cm, 74cm and 80.5cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 312, 313.

£200­300

53

Four Naga multi strand bead necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, with coin or metal disc clasps, 48cm, 63.5cm, 65cm and 68cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 316, 317 (2), 318.

£300­500

Four Naga multi strand bead necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, with differing clasps, including a plastic button, a metal disc, a coin and shell, 54cm, 66cm, 67cm and 105cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 314, 316, 318. (red, green, orange.)

£300­500

54

A pair of Naga ear ornaments

Ao, Nagaland glass, 4.7cm wide, and a matched pair of Naga glass ear ornaments, 4.6cm and 4.8cm wide. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 322.

£300­500

55

Four Naga multi strand bead necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre with metal disc and coin clasps, 55.5cm, 52cm, 54cm and 57cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 316, 317, 318.

£300­500

56

Five Naga bead necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, one with bone spacers, 39.5cm, 40cm, 41cm, 44cm and 45cm long. (5)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 312, 313.

£200­300

57

Five Naga head ornaments

Nagaland

with pairs of shell discs, four united with coloured glass bead bands and one with fibre, three pairs of the shells with incised dot borders, 30cm ­ 38.5cm wide. (5)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 233. (the four with beads)

£300­400

58

Four Naga multi strand bead necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, one with a coin clasp and another with a cut metal clasp, 31cm, 57.5cm, 66cm and 67cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 316, 318. (turquoise and orange)

£300­500

59

59

Four Naga multi strand bead necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, one with cut edge cowrie shells and three with metal disc or coin clasps, 33cm, 51cm (2) and 55cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 316 (the two blue necklaces)

£300­500

60

Three Naga multi strand bead necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, with coin clasps, 50cm, 52.5cm and 53cm long. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 315, 319. (blue/white, red/orange/black)

£300­500

62

Three pairs of Naga bracelets

Tangkhul, Nagaland brass with dot decoration of chevrons, lines and scrolls, one of the smaller pair with remains of pitch to the inside, 10cm, 11.5cm and 11.6cm long. (6)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 263.

£400­600

61

Six Naga armbands

Konyak, Nagaland

brass including a pair of and a single flat spiral, all with incised linear and lozenge decoration, 15cm and 15.8cm, 13cm long, two spiral; one fibre strung, 11.5cm and 18cm long, and sixteen linear and lozenge decorated graduated bands on a bamboo frame, 16cm long. (6)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 261.

£300­500

62

63

Two pairs of Naga bracelets Nagaland brass, including Manipur, with facets and incised dot scroll decoration, 8.5cm wide, and Tangkhul, waisted with tapered ends, having incised lozenge decoration, 10.2cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 262, 263.

£150­250

64

Two pairs of Naga bracelets Nagaland brass, including Tangkhul, waisted with tapered ends and incised lozenge decoration, 8.6cm long and Manipur, with facets and trumpet ends, with incised dot scroll decoration, 8.2cm wide. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 262, 263.

£150­250

66

Four Naga multi strand bead necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, three with coin clasps and one tied with a shell, 40cm, 49cm, 60cm and 69.5cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 316, 317 (2) (blues and green)

£300­500

65

Four Naga bead necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, one with a metal disc clasp, 35cm, 42cm, 45cm and 67cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 312, 313.

£200­300

66

67

Four Naga multi strand bead necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, two with coin clasps and one with a resin clasp, 39cm, 57cm, 61cm and 68cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 316, 317, 318. (blues and black)

£300­500

68

Four Naga multi strand bead necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, two with coin clasps and one with a metal clasp, 32cm, 51cm, 68cm and 72cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 316 (2), 317, 318.

£300­500

69

70

Three Naga bead necklaces

Nagaland

69

Three Naga multi strand bead necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, two with coin clasps, 25.5cm, 44cm and 47cm long. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 315, 318, 319.

£300­500

coloured glass beads, fibre and large shell disc, including two Sangtam with yellow beads, 55cm, 54cm and 45cm long. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 323. (two Sangtam)

£200­300

72

Two pairs of Naga ear ornaments

Konyak, Nagaland brass, coloured glass beads and bell pendants, 14cm and 18cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 233.

£150­250

Twelve Naga ear ornaments

Nagaland conch shell, with incised dot decoration, nine depicting stylised figures and three with dot borders, eight with wood/reed pegs, fibre and a glass bead, one with a bone peg, bamboo plug, glass bead and fibre and one with fibre and a glass bead, the largest 8.5cm high. (12)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 232.

£300­400

73

A Naga torque

Nagaland carved wood with five protruding heads, the ends with woven cane, 28.5cm wide.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 194.

£100­200

74

Six Naga cast brass wristlets

Konyak, Nagaland with chevron rope, linear and dot decoration, 6.9cm, 7cm, 7.6cm, 8cm (2), 8.2cm long. (6)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 261.

£300­400

75

Seven Naga heirloom arm ornaments

Nagaland brass and copper alloys, including three with spikes and four with folded over flared ends, 9.4cm, 9.5cm, 11.5cm, 12cm (2) cm wide. (7)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 265. (three spikes, two larger bands)

£200­300

76

Five Naga heirloom arm ornaments

Nagaland brass and metal alloy, including a matched pair with six oval protrusions and twin spiral motifs, 8.5cm wide, a pair, comprising of four bands, each with two oval protrusions, fibre bound, 10.5cm wide, and a single, with four oval protrusions, 10.2cm wide. (5)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 265.

£200­300

77

Six Naga bracelets

Nagaland

including five Tangkhul, three with waisted tapered ends and incised linear decoration, the other two with dot decoration, 8.5cm, 8.7cm, 9.2cm and10cm (2) long, and the sixth Manipur, with trumpet ends and with incised dot scroll decoration, 9cm wide. (6)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 262, 263.

£150­250

78

A pair of Naga bracelets

Manipur, Nagaland

bronze, faceted with trumpet shape ends and with incised dot scroll decoration, 9.5cm and 9.8cm wide. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 262.

£150­250

Four Naga bangles

Nagaland

brass and bronze, including one with two hornbills and panels of double spiral motifs, 8.4cm wide, another cast protruding heads and a bird, with two suspension loops, 9cm diameter, another with two buffalo heads, 9cm diameter, and the fourth plain with a central rib, with remains of pitch to the inside, 7.8cm wide. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£150­200

80

Sixteen Naga arm ornaments

Nagaland

brass and aluminium, including a spiral with trumpet shape ends with incised dot scroll decoration, 18.5cm long, a tapered spiral, 10.7cm long, five with cut or cast protrusions, the widest 10.2cm, six open brass bangles with incised linear chevron decoration, the widest 7.9cm, three plain aluminium open bangles, the widest 8.6cm, and five brass ear ornaments. (21)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 260, 261, 262.

£200­300

Four Naga zoomorphic handles

Nagaland

cast brass with animal finials, including a bird on a nest, 12.3cm wide, a stag, 8cm wide, two elephants, 9.5cm wide and a hornbill, 6cm wide. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£150­250 79

83

Two Naga warrior’s torques

Nagaland

cast brass, each with two head and nine spiral decorated disc protusions, 17.8cm and 18cm wide. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 259. (worn torque)

£150­250

82

A Naga warrior’s torque

Nagaland

cast brass, with two head and eleven cross end protrusions, 17cm wide.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 259.

£150­250

85

Five Naga head chest ornaments

Nagaland

brass, including a single head from an Indian box lid, 9.3cm high, another single, 7.2cm and a double 6.6cm wide, all with fibre, a triple, 10.5cm wide and a quintuple, 13.8cm, both with coloured glass beads. (5)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£200­300

84

Five Naga head chest ornaments

Nagaland

brass, including a single from an Indian box lid with yellow glass beads, 9cm high, another single with coloured glass beads, 7cm high, a double head, 8.5cm wide, a triple head with shell and coloured glass beads, 12.8cm wide, and a quadruple with yellow glass beads, 11.7cm wide. (5)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 253, 254. (double, triple and quadruple)

£200­300

87

Two Naga warrior’s torques Nagaland cast brass, one with two head and nine sprial decorated disc protrusions, 21.2cm wide, and the other with eleven spiral decorated disc protrusions,18.5cm wide. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 259 (eleven discs)

£150­250

86

A Naga warrior’s torque Nagaland cast brass, with two head and nine disc protrusions, having spiral decoration, 20cm wide.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 259.

£200­300

88

Two Naga carved head ornaments

Konyak, Nagaland including a single head, pierced at the sides for attachment, 7.5cm high, and a double head, with metal loops in the top for attachment, 6.5cm high. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 192.

£200­300

89

Two Naga carved head ornaments

Konyak, Nagaland including a single head, pierced at the sides for attachment, 7.5cm high, and a double head with polychrome decoration and pierced through the bar back and the top of each head for attachment, 5.5cm high. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 192.

£200­300

90

Three Naga carved wood head ornaments

Konyak, Nagaland

one with painted tattoo decoration, pierced for attachment, 6.5cm high, another with inset blue glass bead eyes and painted highlights, 5.8cm high, and the third with scorched highlights, 6.5cm high. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 191, 194.

£300­500

92

91

Three Naga carved wood head ornaments

Konyak, Nagaland

one with painted tattoo decoration, 8.2cm, the other two with a red/brown stain, 7.5cm and 7.6cm high, all with attachment piercings. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 194.

£300­500

92

Two Naga warrior’s torques Nagaland cast brass, one with two head and nine spiral decorated disc protrusions, 17.2cm wide and the other with two head and nine cross end protrusions, 16.5cm wide. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£150­250

93

A Naga warrior’s torque Nagaland cast brass, with three head and eight disc protrusions, having spiral decoration, 19cm wide.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 259.

£200­300

A Naga carved wood head ornament

Konyak, Nagaland with an orange pigment, inset clear glass eyes and with coloured glass beads and dyed wool pompom earrings, 8cn high, 12cm high, including earrings.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 192.

Five Naga brass head chest ornaments

Nagaland and India

four with coloured glass beads, including two single heads, 9.4cm and 4.8cm high, a double head, 8.3cm wide, a triple head, 7.7cm wide, and a sextuple head, 15.5cm wide. (5)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 254. (Indian large single head)

£200­300

95

Five Naga brass head chest ornaments Nagaland

including an Indian box lid with green glass beads, 9cm high, a single head with string, 7cm high, a double head with attachment loops, 6.5cm wide, a triple head with orange glass beads, 11.5cm wide and a quintuple head with yellow and blue glass beads, 13.2cm wide. (5)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 253. (quintuple heads)

£200­300

£150­250 97

A Naga carved wood head ornament

Konyak, Nagaland with carved linear tattoo decoration and the left ear with a coloured glass bead tassel, the back with a pierced loop for attachment, 6.2cm high, 12.5cm high, including the beads.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 193.

£300­400

98

Five Naga head chest ornaments

Nagaland

brass and brass alloy, three with coloured glass beads, including a single from an Indian box cover, 8.5cm high, a smaller single, probably Burma Naga, 5.7cm high, a double, 9cm wide, a triple, 10.4cm wide and a quintuple, with wool tassels, 15.2cm wide. (5)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 254, 258. (both singles)

£300­500

100

Two Naga carved wood head ornaments

Nagaland with painted and stippled decoration, with glass beads and bound fibre ear ornaments, the backs and sides of each head pierced for attachment, 7.5cm and 8.3cm high. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 191.

£300­500

99

Four Naga brass head chest ornaments

Nagaland and India

including a large single, from an Indian box lid with coloured glass beads, 8.7cm high, another single, probably Burmese Naga, 6.7cm high, a double with coloured glass beads, 8.5cm wide, and a triple, 10cm wide. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 253, 258. (triple, small single)

£200­300

101

Two Naga carved wood head ornaments

Nagaland with black pigment tattoo decoration, the larger with red pigment and both pierced to the sides for attachment, 9cm and 11.5cm high. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 191. (larger)

£300­500

102

Three Naga carved wood head ornaments Konyak, Nagaland

two with attachment piercings to the back and the third with a fibre loop, 6.2cm, 6.5cm and 8.5cm high. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 193. (the two larger)

£300­500

103

Three Naga carved wood heads Nagaland

one with glass beads and bound fibre ear ornaments, 9cm high, another with bared teeth, 8.5cm high, both pierced at the sides and the third with an open mouth and pierced at the top for attachment, 5.6cm high. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 191, 193. (two larger heads)

£300­500

104

Three Naga carved wood head ornaments Konyak, Nagaland

one with punched dot tattoo decoration and pierced ears, 10cm high, another with remains of resin to the eyes and pierced to the top sides for attachment, 9cm high, and the third with dot tattoo decoration, glass beads and a tuft of hair to the crown, 13cm high. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 193, 194. (unadorned tattoo and lighter colour)

£250­350

105

Three Naga necklaces

Nagaland / Burma with coloured glass beads, one with six brass head pendants, 41.5cm long, another with two head pendants, 18.5cm long, and the third with a brass male figure, 13.5cm long, and a Naga brass figural pendant, 9.5cm high. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 258. (two head pendant necklaces, smaller figural pendant)

£200­300

106

Four Naga brass head chest ornaments

Nagaland with coloured glass beads and three with wool tassels, including a single head with scarifications, 8.6cm high, a double head, 9cm wide, a triple head, 11.7cm wide and a quadruple head with two seated figures, 12.8cm wide. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 332. (triple and quadruple)

£300­500

107

A Naga head chest ornament Nagaland brass with scarifications and tusk­like ear ornaments, with orange and red glass beads, 8.5cm high.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£300­500

A Naga double ‘fish tail’ chest ornament Nagaland brass, with three heads to the top and a pair of attachment loops, with fibre, 17.5cm high, a Naga brass ‘fish tail’ chest ornament, with orange glass beads, 16.5cm high, and a Naga brass conch shell chest ornament, with two short strands of coloured glass beads, 14.5cm high. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£200­300

111

A Naga beaded necklace Konyak, Nagaland coloured glass beads, fibre and cloth, 38.5cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 307.

£200­300

108

Five Naga torques Nagaland

brass, including three cast with two head and nine disc protrusions, 17cm, 17.6cm and 18.5cm wide, another with eleven disc protrusions, 18.5cm wide and a plain torque, 14.5cm wide. (5)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£150­250

110

Four Naga brass pendants Nagaland with coloured glass beads, including three ‘fish tail’, one with three heads and with circle and linear decoration, 16cm long, and two doubles, 9cm and 12cm long, and a chank shell design with a zig­zag border, 13.2cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 257. (large double)

£200­300

113

Three Naga hairpins

Konyak, Nagaland

carved wood, one with two relief carved figures, each holding a head, with a tuft of dyed hair, 22cm long, another with ten relief carved heads and a cut tuft of hair, 34cm long, and the third carved three relief heads to each end and side, 26.6cm long. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

112

Two Naga carved wood human skulls

Konyak, Nagaland the smaller with a smooth patina, 9cm and 15cm long, and a monkey skull, 12cm long. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 191, 193. (monkey and larger skull)

£300­500

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 215.

£200­300

115

Three Naga hairpins

Konyak, Nagaland

Provenance

114

A Naga hair ornament

Konyak, Nagaland

carved a central stylised head issuing two busts, one male with painted facial tattoos and a female with a painted parted coiffure, the back with the remains of printed number 1016, 32.5cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£150­250

carved wood, one modelled as a right hand, 29.5cm long, another with twelve relief carved heads and a tuft of dyed hair, 22.7cm, and the third, carved fourteen relief heads and with a tuft of hair, 23.8cm long. (3)

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 215.

£200

116

A Naga body cloth

Nagaland with ninety­six rectangles of red dyed dog hair and twelve circles of cowrie shells, the fringed ends with cowrie shells, 115cm x 154cm.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 296.

£150­200

117

A Naga body cloth

Nagaland with remains of red dyed dog hair panels and with cowrie shell circles and a stylised figure, 101cm x 142cm.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 297.

£150­200

117

118

A Naga body cloth rongsusu

Ao, Nagaland

strip woven with five rows of red dyed cotton, the ends with tufts of natural and red dyed goat hair with applied cowrie shells, 98cm x 194 cm.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 278.

This cloth can only be worn by a man who has done the full series of Feasts of Merit and whose father and grandfather have done likewise.

£200­300

119

A Naga body cloth

Nagaland with sixty­three squares of red dyed dog hair and twenty circles of cowrie shells, 112cm x 151cm.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£150­200

120

A Naga body cloth

Nagaland with sixty­three squares of red dyed dog hair and twenty circles of cowrie shells, a stylised figure and a double row to the corner, 102cm x 160cm.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£200­300

121

A Naga body cloth

Ao, Nagaland wool with a central cotton band, painted cockerels, tigers, lions, bison, elephants, long tail birds, stars and heads, 112cm x 193cm, and an Ao body cloth, with a central band with remains of painted geometric decoration, 129cm x 169cm. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 274, 279.

£150­250

122

Four Naga body cloths

Angami, Nagaland

strip woven with supplementary­weft geometric panels, one end with a fringe and the other with a coloured cotton edging, the largest 116cm x 197cm, and a Angami woman’s skirt, 63cm x 120cm. (5)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

cf. Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 285.

£150­250

123

Nine Naga skirts

Nagaland

strip woven with supplementary­weft and embroidery, including one Tangkhul with black and white strips, 57.5cm x 141cm. (9)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 304. (black and white Tangkhul)

£150­250

124

Ten Naga sashes

Nagaland

strip woven with embroidered decoration, two including figures and four with applied cowrie shells, the longest 202.5cm, six Naga shoulder bags; two Kerami, Burma, a Naga body cloth, a Naga woman’s skirt, with cowrie shells, an apron panel, with embroidered figures and applied buttons, a shirt and a panel. (21)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 299 (Kerami bags)

£200­300

125

Seven Naga body cloths

Nagaland

including Kabui, with supplementary­weft to the end and side borders, 81cm x 51cm, Zemi, with woven chevrons and tassles to the inner borders, 102cm x 141cm, Tangkhul, with chequer stripes, 82cm, x 213cm, Ao, indigo with thin stripes, 57cm x 176cm, two white with four black stripes and a central red stripe with red cotton to the ends, 96cm x 153cm and 70cm x 138cm, one natural with thin black stripes and remains of nine rows of seeds?, 135cm x 176cm, and a Tangkhul women’s skirt, with chevrons on white bands, 58cm x 136cm, and a Kabui embroidered sash, 38cm x 198cm. (9)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 282, 284, 299, 304.

£200­300

126

Five Naga body cloths

Nagaland including two Tangkhul, 96cm x 142cm and 104cm x 135cm, another probably Lhota, one with a green ground and the fitth, black with red and green stripes, and an Indian cloth, embroidered peacocks with a tassle end with reed tubes. (6)

£100­200

127

Seven Naga textiles

Nagaland

including a Lhota warrior’s ceremonial body cloth, 136cm x 172cm, an Ao woman’s skirt, 70cm x 133cm, a Lhota man’s body cloth, 94cm x 182cm, a Lhota woman’s skirt, 57cm x 125cm, an Angami woman’s skirt, 90cm x 139cm, a Sema woman’s skirt, 48.5cm x 105cm, a Sema man’s body cloth, 93cm x 146cm, and a Garo Trade strip woven strip, Assam, 11.5cm x 239.5cm long. (8)

Provenance

C. R. Stonor, UK. (each piece with a hand written identification label)

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 277, 279, 291, 303, 305.

£200­300

128

Five Naga cloths

Nagaland

including two Tangkhul body cloths, 82cm x 148cm and 128cm x 185cm, two with a central blue strip, one embroidered and one with a black ground with red and green stripes and a supplementary weft end, and an Indian cloth, embroidered rows of elephants, peacocks and various symbols, 118cm x 193cm. (6)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 282. (two Tangkhul body cloths)

£150­250

129

Two pairs of Naga leggings

Nagaland

natural and red dyed cane with orchid stem geometric decoration, one pair with ties and cotton pom­poms, 26cm and 31cm long, a pair of Naga arm bands, fibre and coloured glass beads, 9cm wide and two Naga cane and cut cowrie shell arm bands, 13cm wide. (8)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 271. (armbands)

£150­250

A Naga man’s apron

Nagaland

cloth with stitched rows of cut edge cowrie shells, the top with a wood baton and the back with reed staves, 51cm high, 37cm wide.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

cf. Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 273.

£150­200

130

Nine Naga cowrie shell armbands

Nagaland cane, fibre and cut cowrie shells, including three pairs and a matched pair, the longest 17cm, and a single with plaited bands of red dyed cane and orchid stem. (9)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 271.

£200­300

132

A Naga man’s apron

Nagaland

cloth and fibre with rows of stitched cut edge cowrie shells, with a metal disc having a central boss with a red cotton tuft, the apron 47cm long, 21cm wide. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

cf. Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 273

£200­300

133

A Naga dao holder Ao, Nagaland the pierced wood block with incised linear and stamped circle decoration, later inscribed LUNGSA Nov 1979 and with a typed label Tribe: AO, Village: Lungsa, Dao case 1979, with a cotton and wool belt, the holder 18cm long, a Naga wood dao holder with fibre binding and strap with a bamboo toggle, 40cm long, and a Naga bark and reed belt, 28cm wide. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 245. (block dao holder)

£200­300

135

A Naga man’s apron

Nagaland

cloth with a wooden baton through the top and stitched rows of cut edge cowrie shells, with a brass disc having a central spike with red wool, 44cm high, 31.5cm wide.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

cf. Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 273.

£200­300

134

Two Naga belts with dao holders

Nagaland

cloth and resin with fibre and hair, one with applied cut cowrie shells and carved linear decoration to the holder, 27cm high, and the other with Job’s Tear seeds and a plain holder, 29.5cm high. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 245. £400­600

136

An Angami man’s ceremonial dress

Nagaland

comprising a pair of woven rattan leggings, natural and red dyed with yellow orchid stem decoration, 28cm long, a chest ornament, with a wood panel applied black and red dyed hair with rows of cut edge cowrie shells, with a cloth, hair and cowrie shell mounted strap, 80cm long, a pair of arm bands, with cloth, hair and Job’s Tears seeds, 18cm long, a pair of cotton and wool sashes, 186cm long and an ear ornament, of a metal cone with beetle wings, Job’s Tears seeds and red dyed hair, with a reed mount, 23cm long. (8)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 236.

£300­400

137

A Naga man’s headdress

Tangkhul, Nagaland with a woven fibre cap having two bands with metal spikes for the cotton bound reed tubes with large tail feathers of a Great Indian Hornbill and smaller chicken feathers, above an applied circular metal bossed disc and flanked by two discs with applied red kafferboom seeds and white Job’s Tears seeds and horse hair, with a conforming U shape face ornament, 153cm high, 90cm wide, with a wood feather box and cover, 55cm long. Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 229.

£1,000­1,500

138

A Naga bridal headdress

Manipur, Nagaland brass, fibre bound with four protrusions each hung with a tapered panel, the main frame with two bamboo sticks, bound ribbons of Job’s Tears seeds and beetle wings, 33cm wide, and a Naga belt, woven fibre with brass plate, orchid stem, dyed cane and cowrie shells, 26cm high. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 260.

£300­400

139

A Naga woman’s bridal headdress

Tangkhul, Nagaland brass, of an arched band, each end hung with graduated coils, each terminating with a bell, 125cm high.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 229.

£300­500

140

Two Naga hats

Nagaland

cane, one with stripes of red and yellow cane, with an attached crest of dyed red and black hair, with two feathers, 24cm high, and the other with panels of red dyed cane and yellow orchid stem decoration, with an attached crest of red dyed hair, 23.5cm high. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 225.

£300­400

141

Three Naga hats

Nagaland cane with panels of red and yellow cane, 24cm, 23cm and 18cm high. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 225.

£300­400

142

A Naga hat Nagaland

cane with horizontal stripes in red, yellow and dark brown, with a band of fur and a pair of woven cane mounted boar’s tusks, 22cm high.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 224.

£200­300

144

A Naga pipe Nagaland

the bowl carved as a head with elliptical eyes, a large pointed nose and bared teeth, the back with a leaping animal and another to the stem, and with a brass plate to the top of the stem, the end with a plaited cane band, 22cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 335.

£300­500

143

A Naga hat Nagaland

cane with finely woven red dyed cane and yellow orchid stem decoration, with a band of fur and a pair of woven cane mounted boar’s tusks, 23cm high.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 224.

£200­300

145

A Naga pipe Nagaland

the bowl carved as a head with crescent eyes and an open mouth with tongue, with a metal liner, the stem carved with two figures sitting back to back, one with raised arms and with their hands to the open jaw of a sitting amimal, with a bamboo mouthpiece, 25.5cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£500­800

146

A Naga hat Nagaland cane with red dyed leaf fibre and yellow orchid stem decoration, mounted with a pair of horns with natural and dyed hair tufts, and the base with two pairs of fibre and resin bound boar’s tusks, 24cm high.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 224.

£150­250

148

Two Naga pipes and two Naga pipe bowls Nagaland

one with scorched decoration to the footed flared cylindrical bowl and with a thin bamboo stem, 22cm, another with a trumpet shape bowl and dyed cane and orchid stem binding, with an engraved bamboo mouthpiece and a with an attached needle, 23.5cm long, a faceted conical bowl with dyed cane and orchid stem binding, 10.5cm long, and a tapered conical bowl with a scroll tail, the underside inset a Victoria Empress copper coin, and inset a cast brass stem with bands of concentric circles and lines, 9.5cm long, all inscribed Naga Assam. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 335.

£300­500

147

A Naga hat Nagaland cane, with finely woven red dyed cane and yellow orchid stem, with a crest of red dyed hair, a pair of woven cane mounted boar’s tusks and a pair of mounted horn slithers with applied hair, 28cm high.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 225.

£300­400

149

A Naga pipe Nagaland

the bowl carved as a head, with elliptical eyes and an open mouth with tongue, the stem carved five graduated half figures with their heads tilted up, the end with a cane binding, 16cm long, and another Naga pipe, with a carved head bowl and six heads to the stem, 20cm long. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 335.

£400­500

150

Three Naga hats

Nagaland

woven cane, including one with yellow and red dyed stripe decoration and four dark brown lozenges to each side, with an applied dyed hair crest, 25cm high, another with a band of red dyed hair, 12.5cm high, and the third with a front panel of yellow orchid stem, 26cm high, and a Naga hair circlet with a fibre frame, 27cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£300­400

151

Two Naga hats

Nagaland

cane with yellow orchid stem, red and black stripes, one with a red dyed hair applied crest, and the other with a two tone hair applied crest, 21cm and 24.5cm high. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 224. (two tone crest)

£200­300

152

A Naga hat

Nagaland

cane with yellow orchid stem, the front and back with a pair of cane bound boar’s tusks, the sides with a red dyed hair tuft and the top with a fur band and two fibre spikes, previously with feathers, 31cm high.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 224.

£150­250

153

Three Naga baskets

Nagaland cane, including one with a single monkey head skull, fibre tassels and a woven and patterned strap, the basket 23cm wide, another with two carved wood human heads, three monkey skulls and horn pendants, with a woven and geometric decorated strap, 19.7cm wide, and the third with the remains of a fur panel, a pair of woven cane mounted boar’s tusks, glass beads and fibre tassels, with a woven and geometric decorated strap, 20cm wide. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 189.

£200­300

155

A Naga panji container

Nagaland of horn shape with applied dyed hair tails, with a bound rattan loop and a cotton sash, 40cm high, and a Naga panji basket with dyed hair tail, with dyed red cane and yellow orchid stem, 37cm long and a group of panji in a basket, 39cm long. (3)

Panji are sharpened bamboo spikes stuck in the ground to impede the progress of one’s enemies.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 238.

£300

154

Two Naga head­taker’s baskets

Konyak, Nagaland one with a band of fur, three monkey skulls and a horn with mounted dyed hair, the basket 36.2cm high, and the other with three monkey skulls and two horns, one pierced and inset hair, with a woven cotton strap, 26cm high. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 188.

£150­250

156

Three Naga panji baskets

Nagaland with cane hoops, one with a yellow orchid stem and dyed hair band and with applied dyed red and black hair, 55cm long, another with a pair of boar’s tusks and applied hair, 78cm long, and the third, plain containting numerous panjis, 43cm high, and a bound group of panjis in a basket, 27cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 238. (two baskets)

£200­300

157

A Naga standing female figure

Probably Konyak, Nagaland with her hands raised to her jaw, 73.5cm high, on a wooden base. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 213.

£400­600

158

Seven Naga heirloom ornaments

Nagaland including a bronze arm cuff, with spiral decoration and button protrusions, 11cm long, a bronze footed bowl with a flared rim, 11.5cm diameter, two bronze pendants, waisted with a band of lozenges and end protrusions, 14.5cm and 15.5cm long, a brass alloy bell, 5cm high, a shell and glass bead necklace, with a brass bell pendant, 35.5cm long and a glass bead and metal pendant necklace, with a shell boss, 40cm long. (7)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 267. (bowl, longer pendant, two necklaces)

£300­400

159

A Naga large carrying basket

Nagaland rattan and bamboo, with a forehead carrying strap, 45cm high, and three smaller Naga baskets, 39cm, 24cm and 18cm high. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 340. (large basket)

£200­300

160

A Naga oliphant

Nagaland horn, with pierced mouthpiece and at either end for a plaited fibre strap, 57.5cm long, A Burma powder horn, with stopper and painted decoration, 34.5cm long and a shell trumpet, 20cm long. (3)

£150­200

161

A Naga drinking horn

Nagaland mithun horn with fine fibre binding and a handle, 29.5cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£200­300

162

A Naga drinking horn

Nagaland mithun horn with fine fibre binding and a handle, 41cm long.

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£300­400

163

Various Naga animal horns including buffalo, cow and goat, two pairs on part of a skull and six boar’s tusks. (22)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£100­200

164

A Naga drinking horn

Nagaland mithun horn, with fine fibre binding and a handle, the open end with a native repair, 47cm long.

Provenance

£400­600 160

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

166

Three Naga hip ornaments

Konyak

including one with a wood body, bound with natural and dyed hair with fibre, mounted with four horns and with a hair tail, with a pair of fibre belt panels with rows of applied cut edge cowrie shells, with a bone bar, 71cm wide, 79cm long, another with a pair of carved human head finials, each with a single horn ear ornament, the body with rattan, woven cloth and glass beads and a hair tail, 80cm long and the third with a pair of horns above two small relief heads and inset dyed hair tufts and a hair tail, 66cm long. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 241.

£600­800

165

Five Naga hip ornaments

Konyak, Nagaland coloured glass beads, fibre and dyed hair, one with metal beads and two with bone spacers, 100cm, 103cm, 112cm, 115cm and 121cm long. (5)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 307.

£250­350

166

167

A Naga beaded belt

Konyak, Nagaland woven cloth with bands of coloured glass beads, applied shell discs and with tassels having bone spacers, 80.5cm long, and four Naga men’s sashes, woven cotton with died red hair fringes, three with yellow orchid stems, 153cm, 154cm, 178cm and 179cm long. (5)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 235, 306. (Three sashes, beaded belt)

£200­300

168

Three Naga ceremonial shields

Nagaland

woven rattan, one with an applied hide figure and a mask, with red dyed tufts of hair and three hair bound finials, 205cm high, another with six hide heads and red dyed hair, with a finial, the shield 141cm high and the third, with the remains of a hide mask, 136.5cm high. (3)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection

cf. Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 250.

£250­350

170

A Naga sash

Nagaland

169

Two Naga ceremonial shields

Nagaland

woven rattan, one with a hide mounted front and a fibre bound staff with applied tufts of hair, the shield, 167cm high, the other with twelve applied cut hide masks with inset tufts of red dyed hair, with a hair bound finial, 182cm high. (2)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

cf. Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps 250-251.

£300­500

embroidered cloth with five cast brass bells and coloured glass beads, 108cm long, a Naga double carved head chest ornament, hung with a pair of Janus heads, fibre and hair pendants, 21cm long, two Naga brass link chains, 35cm and 80.5cm long, a Naga coiled brass bead necklace, 32.5cm long, three pairs of Naga metal disc bells, another brass with a horn tapper, two Naga woven fibre armbands, another with applied cowrie shells, a Naga brass buffalo head pendant, a Naga brass bell on a red glass bead necklace, three brass disc pendants and a pair of metal rattle anklets. (23)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 260. (chains)

£300­400

171

A Naga food dish Nagaland on twin supports and a rectangular base, 23.5cm diameter, three bamboo vessels, a ladle, two spoons, a bamboo pipe, two knives, a horn container, a brass ‘heirloom’ bell with three attached bells, seven cane models of storage and carrying baskets and two gourds, a bamboo drinking vessel, with scorched decoration and a handle, nine containers and covers, two dishes, a hip basket, a scraper and a pottery pipe bowl. (qty)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 339, 340.

£100­200

172

Ten Naga spears

Nagaland

wood, six with goat hair, two with woven red rattan and yellow orchid stem, four with metal blades, the longest 198.5cm, and a rifle and a bow. (12)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

cf. Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 249.

£150­200

173

Ten Naga spears

Nagaland

wood with dyed and natural goat hair, six with metal blades and five with metal end tips, the longest 243cm. (10)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

cf. Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 249.

£200­300

174

174

Ten Naga spears

Nagaland

wood, red dyed goat hair, nine with metal blades, three with incised decoration and four with metal end tips, the longest 251cm. (10)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

cf. Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 249.

£400­600

175

Nine Naga spears

Nagaland

wood with dyed and natural goat hair, with fibre and seven metal blades, one stamped MA 7718, and six metal end tips, the longest 189cm. (9)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

cf. Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 248.

£300­500

176

Six Naga spears

Nagaland

wood with goat hair and rattan binding, five with metal blades, stamped MA 7744, MA 7775, MA 7875, MA 7877, MA 7879, three with incised decoration, five shafts painted numerals, 17/ 310, 17 / 311, 17 / 445, 17 / 446, 17 / 447, the longest 184.5cm. (6)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

cf. Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 249.

£250­350

176
175

177

Four Naga knives daos Nagaland with iron blades and rattan bound wood handles with inset dyed hair, 69cm, 74.6cm, 80cm and 80.5cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 246, 247.

£200­300

178

Five Naga knives daos Nagaland with iron blades, three with rattan bound wood handles, one having inset dyed hair and two with integral blades and handles, with incised decoration and one with an inset wood handle, 57.5cm, 59cm, 60cm, 64cm, and 70cm long. (5)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

£150­200

179

Four Naga knives daos Nagaland with iron blades and wood handles, three rattan bound and with inset dyed hair and the fourth with an integral handle to the blade and with incised linear chevron decoration, 58cm, 63.7cm, 70.6cm and 76cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. p. 246. (two with tapered blades)

£150­200

180

Four Naga knives daos Nagaland with iron blades and rattan bound wood handles with inset dyed hair, 54.5cm, 73cm, 75cm and 79.6cm long. (4)

Provenance

Hansjorg Mayer Collection.

Published

Julian Jacobs, The Nagas; Hill People of Northeast India, 1990. pps. 246, 247.

£200­300

THE ZBYSZEK PLOCKI COLLECTION (PART II)

181

A pair of Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria

male and female, the male wearing a glass bead bracelet, 25.4cm and 25.6cm high. (2)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£300­400

183

A pair of Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria with differing crested coiffures, pierced ears, linear scarifications to the face, left forearm and legs and with a ribbed waistband, wearing glass beads, 26.7cm and 27.4cm high. (2)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£300­400

182

Two Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria

male and female, the male with a cap and an apron, 23.4 and 23.7cm high. (2)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

184

A pair of Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria

male and female, with filed front teeth and platform sandals, the male with a cap and an Islamic neck amulet tirah, the female with a crested coiffure and side locks, 27.5cm and 28.2cm high. (2)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£300­400

185

A Yoruba female Ibeji figure

Nigeria with a pointed coiffure having a ring top, metal pin eyes, neck amulet with a tied knot to the back and with a waist band, wearing glass beads and brass bands, 29.5cm high.

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£300­400

186

A Yoruba male Ibeji figure

Nigeria with a pointed open coiffure and wearing a string a blue and red glass beads, 26.2cm high.

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

187

A Yoruba female Ibeji figure

Nigeria with a multi pointed coiffure and with metal pin eyes, 24.5cm high.

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

188

A Yoruba male Ibeji figure

Baba Magba, Igbomina, Nigeria with pierced ears and wearing blue glass beads, 27.5cm high.

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£150­200

189

A Yoruba male Ibeji figure

Nigeria with a fine coiffure, pierced ears, facial scarifications and lower eye lashes, with gripped hands and prominent thumbs, wearing striped shorts with a tasselled belt, 25.5cm high.

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£300­400

190

A Yoruba female Ibeji figure

Nigeria with inset ebonised pupils and wearing a bead waistband, 27cm high.

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£250­350

191

Four Yoruba female Ibeji figures

Nigeria wearing glass beads, 26.2cm, 27cm, 29.2cm and 29.7cm high. (4)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£300­400

192

Four Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria including two males and two females, wearing glass beads and nut shell discs, 23.5cm, 25.3cm, 25.5cm, 27.8cm. (4)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£400­600

193

Two Yoruba male Ibeji figures

Nigeria with linear and chevron decorated caps, wearing glass beads, cowrie shells and a metal band, 28.5cm and 28.6cm high. (2)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£500­700

195

A pair of Yoruba female Ibeji figures

Nigeria with ribbed and notched coiffures, wearing beads, 23.8cm and 24.4cm high. (2)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

194

Two Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria including a male, with an Islamic tirah neck amulet and a female, wearing glass beads, nut shell discs and cowrie shell strands, 31cm and 30.8cm high. (2)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£300­400

196

A pair of Yoruba male Ibeji figures

Nigeria wearing glass beads, 30.4cm and 31cm high. (2)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£300­400

197

Two pairs of Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria

including a pair of males with bird like topped coiffures and with square bases, and a male and female wearing Islamic tirah neck amulets, 25.5cm and 29cm high. (4)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£250­350

199

Four Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria

including three males and a female, three with Islamic tirah neck amulets and one with linear body scarifications, 28.8cm, 29cm, 31cm and 31.5cm high. (4)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

198

Two pairs of Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria including a pair males with glass beads, and a male and a female, with linear scarifications to the abdomens, 20cm and 21.2cm high. (4)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

200

Four Yoruba female Ibeji figures

Nigeria

three wearing beads, 26cm, 26.4cm, 26.7cm and 29cm high. (4)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£300­400

201

A Ghana eagle coffin by Paa Joe Carpentry Works, Teshie, Accra, circa 2000 with folding wings to the removable lid and with painted decoration, standing on a railed base 151cm high, 286cm long.

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£500­700

A Lobala zoomorphic slit drum, Democratic Republic of the Congo the body with carved linear and diamond shaped decoration on four curved legs and a long neck to a horned head and with a slightly curved tail, 225cm long, 58.5cm high.

Provenance

Jean-Francois Blondeau, Galerie Sigui, Angers. Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£800­1,200

203

A Jos bed

Nigeria

the shaped top on four tapered feet, 141cm long, 20.5cm high.

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£300­500

204

A Yoruba ile ori lid house of the head

Nigeria

cloth, cowrie shells, leather, mirror and wood, 22cm high, and a Yoruba ile ori container and cover, leather and cowrie shells, with inscribed collection number M12. LAB.6242/N, 14.8cm high. (3)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£100­150

205

A Yoruba shrine bowl arugba shango

Nigeria

the seated woman with a lip plug and raised arms supporting a covered bowl, relief carved two masks and a shango wand, the base with a male figure, holding a drum and a woman with a sash, with a earth ground and with blue and white pigment decoration, 92cm high. (2)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£300­400

206

A Yoruba gelede mask Nigeria

wearing a cap with bows, with pierced eyes and a short beard, with blue and white pigment, 20cm high, on a stand. (2)

Provenance

Anne and Jacques Kerchache, Paris. Christie’s, Paris, Art Oceanien, Africain et d’Amerique du Nord, 14 June 2011, lot 131.

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£600­800

207

A Yoruba divination bowl agere ifa Nigeria

carved with two female figural supports, one with each hand on a head and the other supporting the bowl, 18cm high, and a Yoruba offering bowl maternal figure, 21cm high. (2)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£150­250

208

A Yoruba divination board opon ifa Nigeria

the raised border relief carved male and female figures, an eshu mask, interlaced snakes, a bird, a mudfish and a turtle, 46cm diameter.

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£150­200

209

A Yoruba divination board opon ifa Nigeria the raised border relief carved animals and figures, including musicians, hunters and a priest, with a V shape edge, 44cm diameter.

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£500­700

210

Five Yoruba divination heads ikin ifa Nigeria bone, one with inset ebonised dots to the forehead and one pupil, 5.6cm, 5.9cm, 6.2cm, 6.5cm and 6.7cm high. (5)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£150­200

211

Six Yoruba divination boards opon ifa Nigeria

including one square with relief carved figures, animals and birds, 34cm x 36.5cm, the other five carved the face of Eshu, 28.5cm, 29cm, 24.7cm, 18.2cm and 10cm wide. (6)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£300­500

210

212

A collection of Ashanti goldweights

Ghana brass, including geometrics, a box and cover, two shields, two fly whisks, two fans, a sword, two coiled snakes, three trumpets, two knotted ropes, two pipes, two axes, a knife, a rifle and a double bell. (82)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

213

A Yoruba Shango staff Nigeria

carved as a kneeling woman holding a club in each hand and with a thunder­axe headdress, wearing a red and pink glass bead necklace, 24cm high, and a Yoruba Shango shrine figure, carved as a kneeling woman, with an axe crest, 31.5cm high, on a stand. (3)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£150­200

212

214

Two Yoruba Ibeji figures

Oyo, Nigeria

male and female, with glass beads, 24.2cm and 25.5cm high. (2)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

216

A pair of Yoruba male Ibeji figures Nigeria wearing glass beads, 23cm and 24.5cm high. (2)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

215

A pair of Yoruba Ibeji figures Nigeria

male and female, with carved zig­zag scarifications to the abdomen and with nut shell bands, 23.6cm high. (2)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

217

A pair of Yoruba male Ibeji figures Nigeria with differing coiffures and one with scarifications across the chest, 24.5cm high. (2)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

218

A Yoruba large male Ibeji figure

Nigeria with a quadripartite ribbed coiffure and bangles, 37.8cm high.

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£400­600

219

A pair of Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria male and female, with inset pin eyes and filed front teeth, the male with a cap and the female with a crested coiffure and chevron scarifications to the temples, both wearing glass beads, cowrie shells and a brass band, 32.7cm and 33.2cm high. (2)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£300­400

220

A pair Yoruba female Ibeji figures

Nigeria with carved scarifications to the lower abdomen, 24cm high, and three Yoruba Ibeji figures, a female and two males, 25.5cm, 26.5cm and 27.5cm high. (5)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£300­500

221

Two Yoruba male Ibeji figures

Nigeria one with glass beads, 26.3cm and 27.6cm high. (2)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£150­250

222

Four Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria

including three males and one female, three with beads and/or bangles, 24cm, 25.8cm, 27cm and 28cm high. (4)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£300­400

223

Four Yoruba Ibeji figures Nigeria

including three females and a male, two with a single strand of glass beads, 23.5cm, 24.5cm, 28.5cm, 31.2cm on a fixed base. (4)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

224

Four Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria

including three males, one with an Islamic tirah neck amulet and wearing glass beads and a metal band, and a female wearing beads and a band, 25cm, 25.5cm, 27.8cm and 28.5cm high. (4)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£250­350

225

Four Yoruba Ibeji figures Nigeria

including two males and two females, the males wearing glass beads, 24.5cm (2), 27.5cm and 29.8cm high. (4)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£600­800

226

Two pairs of Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria

including a Gbongan, Oyo male pair with chequer linear carving to the chests, and a female pair with nut shell and glass beads and aluminium bands, 25cm and 27cm high. (4)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

Published

Gbongan pair - George Chemeche, Ibeji, The Cult of Yoruba Twins, 2003, p. 137, no. 90.

£300­500

228

Two pairs of Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria

male and female, one pair with glass beads, 24cm and 25cm high. (4)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

227

A pair of Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria

male and female, with metal pin eyes and the female with a pierced coiffure, 26.5cm high, and a matched pair of Yoruba Ibeji male figures, 25cm high. (4)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£250­350

229

Two pairs of Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria

including a female pair, with carved Islamic tirah neck amulets and waistbands, with beads and shells, 31cm high, and a male and female, with differing coiffures, 29.5cm high. (4)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

230

Three Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria

including two females and a male, all wearing glass beads and two with metal bands, 23.5cm, 24cm and 27cm high. (3)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£350­450

231

Three Yoruba male Ibeji figures

Nigeria

one with glass beads and metal bands, 22.5cm, 23.5cm and 25.5cm high. (3)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£350­450

232

Three Yoruba male Ibeji figures

Nigeria

one with scarifications to the chest, arms and back and the other two with scarifications around the navel, 25cm, 28.5cm and 28.8cm high. (3)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£350­450

233

Three Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria including two males, one with large diaper decorated neck amulets, metal pins eyes and beads, and a female, with beads, 24.5cm, 25.5cm and 26cm high. (3)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

234

Three Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria

including two females, wearing glass beads, and a male, 23cm, 28.4cm, 28.9cm. (3)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

235

Three Yoruba female Ibeji figures

Nigeria one with glass beads and brass bands, another with a single strand of beads, 25.7cm, 28.1cm and 29.5cm high. (3)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

236

Five Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria

including three males and two females, four with beads, 25.8cm, 27.9cm, 28.1cm, 30.3cm and 33.5cm high. (5)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£300­400

237

Four Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria including a pair of males, one with glass beads, a male with an Islamic neck amulet tirah, and a female with beads, 21.3cm, 21.9cm, 22.3cm and 22.9cm high. (4)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£50­100

238

Four Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria

including two males and two females, three with glass beads, one having metal bands, 25cm, 26.4cm, 27.8cm and 28.1cm. (4)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

239

Four Yoruba Ibeji figures

Nigeria

including two males and two females, two with beads, 28.4cm, 30cm, 31cm and 32cm high. (4)

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£400­600

240

A Zulu snuff gourd South Africa with applied copper and brass wire decoration, with a wood stopper, 10cm wide.

£300­400

241

A San ostrich egg South Africa with incised stylised decoration and an animal head, 15cm high.

£300­400

242

Two Ngombe flask stoppers

Democratic Republic of the Congo with double hour glass and banded finials, 20.5cm and 26cm long, on stands, a Kamba spoon, 26.5cm and a Hemba spoon, 30.5cm long. (6)

£150­200

243

An Igbo currency armband Nigeria brass, 26cm long, on a stand. (3)

£150­200

244

A Nupe stool Nigeria with a carved top and on eleven tapered legs, 36cm high.

£150­250

246

A Yaka zoomorphic headrest Democratic Republic of the Congo with inset brass pin eyes, 17.8cm high.

£400­600

245

A Duala stool Cameroon with a dished seat and carved birds and fish below, 31.5cm high, 48.5cm wide.

£150­200

247

A Kambata headrest Ethiopia with incised linear decoration, 20.5cm high, and a Shona headrest, with a wire repair to the top, 13.5cm high. (2)

£200­300

248

A Lobi bird

Burkina Faso

with carved decoration to the wings and back, 20cm long, on a stand,

a cockerel by G. W. E. Manassah, Kaduna (Nigeria, N.P.), metal, fibre and resin, typed on the base, 32.5cm high, a carved lion, with inset bone eyes and teeth and a hair brow, 70cm long, a Dogon door lock, modelled as a crocodile, 42cm long, a model crocodile, 51cm long, and a model owl, 9cm high. (7)

£200­300

250

A Zulu milk pail

Nkandla, South Africa

with a pair of lug handles and three relief lozenges to either side, 37cm high,

a South African tripod milk pail, with burnished highlights and a fibre loop through one of the lug handles, 34cm high, a hardwood mortar, 24cm high and a Massim double bowl, 31.5cm long. (4)

£100­200

252

Two South African pots

Shona and Venda

pottery, with incised decoration, 13cm and 14.5cm high, a Zimbabwe basket container with a metal cover, 19cm high, two African wood containers, four rattles and a Polynesian club, 47.5cm long. (11)

£100­200

249

Four Ivory Coast catapults

Baule and Guro

one figural and three with masks, one Janus, 17cm, on a stand, 19cm, 19.2cm and 22cm long. (5)

£100­200

251

A Kamba standing Maasai female figure

Kenya wearing an aluminium neck ring, 36.5cm high, a Maasai warrior, 31.5cm, a Makonde kneeling female figure, 19.5cm high, and three East African busts, 13.5cm, 16cm and 23cm high. (6)

£100­200

253

A collection of West African brass artefacts including three Benin figures, 19cm and 19.5cm high, two bells, one with a clapper, 7.5cm and 11cm high, a padlock, modelled as a cow, with a glass bead eye, 8.5cm high, a container, modelled as a fish, 19cm long, an iron animal with fibre and hide, 10.7cm high, an iron lizard, 28cm long, a Senufo ring, on a stand, an Akan head on a perspex base, and five bangles. (17)

£150­200

254

Three African masks including Bambara, Dan and Lega, with pigment to the face and an integral handle to the back, 23cm, 27cm, and 29.5cm high. (3)

£100­200

255

Two Dan passport masks Ivory Coast 11.6cm and 6.7cm high. (2)

£200­300

256

Four African figures including two Mossi dolls, one with a leather covered body and with applied shells to the crest, 32.3cm and 34.5cm high, a Yaka figure, 32.8cm high, on a base and a Dogon figure, 45.5cm high, on a metal base. (6)

£150­200

257

An Ethiopian clay lip plate 8.3cm diameter, a collection of brass, bronze and aluminium bangles and earrings, a Nigerian brass equestrian group and various beadwork bracelets and necklaces. (qty)

Provenance

Dr John Ash, ornithologist, Fordingbridge, UK.

£100­150

258

A Gabon standing female figure with an ebonised finish, 27.5cm high, a Fante doll, with beads, 29.5cm high, and a Hemba half figure, with a head recess, fibre and fur, 21.3cm high. (3)

£150­200

259

An Akan comb Ghana with pierced and incised decoration with white pigment fill, 17.6cm long, and a Baule comb, with incised decoration, 15cm long. (2)

256
257

260

A Yoruba divination tapper iroke ifa

Nigeria the finial carved a kneeling female figure, 40.5cm long.

£300­500

261

A Zulu pipe

South Africa the bowl inlaid pewter stars and toothed V shapes, with a metal liner and a carved horn mouthpiece, 22.5cm long, and a smaller Zulu pipe, with copper wire and coloured glass beads, 18.5cm long. (2)

£250­350

262

A Kuba cup

Democratic Republic of the Congo cephalomorphic, with a spreading base, 19.8cm high, and an Akan pottery head, 9cm high, on a stand. (3)

£150­250

263

A Bembe seated figure

Democratic Republic of the Congo

24.2cm high, and two West African combs, with standing figure finials, 30.5cm and 31.5cm long. (3)

£150­200

264

A Yoruba male Ibeji figure

Nigeria with a quadruple lobed coiffure and carved chevron pubic area, 27.8cm high.

£150­200

265

A Benin head of an Oba cast bronze, with an ornate headdress and high neck ring, 29.5cm high.

Provenance

Frank Dalvin, London.

£100­200

266

A Hausa writing / prayer board

Nigeria with a leather bound handle and inscribed Quranic text and grids of text to either side, 54.5cm high, and two North African writing boards, with an attachment hole to the top, one inscribed text and images to either side, 59.7cm high, and the other decorated a mihrab with Quranic text, 39cm high. (3)

£200­300

268

269

A Baga standing male figure

268

A Kusu power figure

Democratic Republic of the Congo

the top of the head with a charge of an inset cloth secured with wooden pegs, with a linear incised coiffure, slit eyes above cheek scarifications and pouting lips, the swollen belly with further incised scarifications, and with the hands either side, 27cm high, on a base. (2)

Provenance

Private Collection, Barcelona, Spain. Jo de Buck, Brussels.

Exhibited

Paris Tribal, 2020.

£500­800

Guinea with a chevron and linear carved coiffure and a pair of horns, with raised arms and hands to the chin, with bent knees, 52cm high, on a base.

Provenance

Sotheby’s, London, Important African, Oceanic and Indian Sculpture, 15 November 1965, lot 100. Frank Dalvin, London.

267

An Islamic writing board

Africa with text to both sides, 50.6cm high, with a metal mount. (2)

£100­200

See AHDRC database - Object ao-0055837-001.

£200­300

270

A Senufo door Ivory Coast with a relief carved reptile, 154cm high, 56cm wide.

£200­300

271

An Igbo Ikenga figure Nigeria of a head with a pair of horns, 35.5cm high, an Ibibio marionette, with articulated arms, 45cm high, a Baule standing male figure, with a carved animal mask to the back of the head, 39cm high and a Ubangi monopodia female figure, 59.5cm high. (4)

Provenance

£150­250

272

Frank Dalvin, London.

A Nigerian caryatid stool the top with an incised chevron edge above a male and female support, the female with keloids to the face and scarifications to the abdomen, 45.5cm high.

Provenance

Frank Dalvin, London.

£100­200

273

A Benin seated figure holding a fan and with his right foot resting on his left knee, with stippled, carved and stamped decoration, 47cm high.

£200­300

274

An Ethiopian processional cross 15th century bronze, the interlaced openwork design framing nine small crosses, with four further to the edges and the terminals with snake­like forms issuing from further crosses, the shaft with snake­like brackets, with incised and punched decoration, 24cm high, 14.5cm wide.

Provenance

Sam Fogg, London.

Private Collection, London.

cf. The Walters Art Museum, Baltimore, accession numbers 54.2894 and 54.2942.

The snake-like forms seen at the terminals and the brackets are believed to refer to the brazen snake of Moses as described in the Book of Numbers (21:4-9). In the wake of a devastating plague of poisonous snakes, God instructed the Israelites to erect a brass serpent on a pole. Gazing upon this object was believed to cure those bitten, Christians interpreted the brazen serpent as a prefiguration of the redemptive Cross of Christ.

£3,000­5,000

275

An Ethiopian hand cross silver coloured metal, with a central pierced cross to interlaced terminals, with incised textured and circle decoration, the square shaft with inscribed indistinct script to an applied tablet and pierced terminal, 26.5cm long.

Provenance

Private Collection, London.

£1,000­2,000

276

An Ethiopian processional cross 19th century bronze, the pierced circular design with stamped circle, dot and notch decoration, with a central pattee cross and four further within the frame and thirteen to the edges and terminals, with two fabric loops and a pinned faceted tapered socket, 38.9cm long.

Provenance

Private Collection, London.

£600­1,000

277

An Ethiopian processional cross silvered brass, with a pierced grid of nine crosses with semi­circles to the edges and with cross terminals, with incised linear and dot decoration, joined to a knopped and pierced tapered socket, 22cm long.

Provenance

Private Collection, London.

£500­800

278

An Ethiopian processional cross 19th century brass, with a central pattee cross within a quatrafoil to an interlaced border, the edges with open cross symbols, birds and a cross to the top, with incised linear, arch, circle and dot decoration, with a pinned knoped socket, 35.5cm long.

Provenance

Private Collection, London.

£600­1,000

279

A Fante doll Ghana with square scarifications to the body and incised geometric designs to the sides and back of the elongated head, the top with two recesses, 30.2cm high.

£400­600

280

A Chamba standing figure

Nigeria with incised linear decoration to the head and with a long beard, 43cm high, on a base.

Provenance

Galerie Flak, Paris.

Published Mumuye, Galerie Flak, 2006, p. 139.

£300­500

278

281

An Ashanti kente cloth

Ghana

cotton, of twenty two strips, with a blue ground having linear and geometric designs, 321cm x 214cm.

£150­250

282

A Kente cloth

Ghana cotton, of twelve stripes with geometric designs, 228cm x 100cm.

£100­200

283

A Yoruba stencilled adire eleko cloth

Nigeria with Adam and Eve, George VI and a head and shoulder portrait, 163x 183cm, four Nigerian indigo dyed cloths, another starch­resist, with all­over panel decoration, a Yoruba lace weave cloth and a striped tunic. (8)

£150­200

284

Six Kuba cloths

Democratic Republic of the Congo

raffia and cut raffia, with geometric designs, one with an image of a building with a mask, 66cm x 60cm, 56cm x 56cm, 54cm x 55cm, 57cm x 50cm, 60cm x 52cm, 56cm x 59cm. (6)

£200­300

285

A Guro mask

Ivory Coast

modelled as an antelope with narrow crescent eyes and a lozenge to the forehead with a central ridge of beads, with all­over carved linear lozenge decoration, 50cm high, on a stand. (2)

£1,000­1,500

286

An Igala / Ibgo mask

Nigeria

with a tiered coiffure having a knop final with a brass bell, above the remains of part pigmented knotted fibre, the face with deep grooves, painted black with an encrusted patina, 46cm high.

£500­600

287

A Baule mask

Ivory Coast with a crested coiffure with rosettes, facial scarifications and an open mouth, with stained and painted decoration, the back with a mouth bar, 39cm high,

a We mask, with an applied fur coiffure, three bells and fibre, the open mouth with inset teeth, 27cm high, a Nepal mask, with an encrusted patina and remains of a wax seal, 25.5cm high and a kifwebe mask, 27.5cm high. (4)

£200­300

288

A Mumuye figure

Nigeria with a crested coiffure, the right arm and lower section missing, 42cm high, on a base.

with a copy of Mumuye, Galerie Flak, 2006. (2)

Provenance

Galerie Flak, Paris.

Published Mumuye, Galerie Flak, 2006, p.139 and p.145, no. 25

£300­500

289

Look

Zimbabwe stylised dreaming figure, red jasper stone, signed LOOK, 18.2cm high.

£100­200

290

A Maasai shield

Kenya hide, with white, red and black pigment decoration, the back with a bound wood rib and handle, 112.8cm high.

£400­600

291

Six Dinka spears

Sudan

five with leaf shaped metal blades with barbs and a twist below, the wooden shafts with coiled metal counter balances, the sixth with a tailed blade above barbs, 145.5cm ­ 155cm long, with a stand. (7)

£200­300

292

A Zulu knobkerrie

South Africa with metal studs to the spherical head and a metal collar to the top of the shaft, 92.5cm long.

£100­200

293

A Zulu spear

South Africa the finned tip with part black staining and inscribed Kaffir Chiefs Spear Natal, Mr Hughes., above an open ribbed section, 188.2cm, long.

£400­500

294

A Zulu knobkerrie

South Africa the off centre spherical head with a cylindrical shaft, 63cm long, a Zulu knobkerrie, 79.5cm, and a Zulu club, 76.5cm long. (3)

£300­400

295

A Maasai shield

Kenya hide, with pigment decoration to the front, the back with a wood rib and handle, 105cm long.

Provenance

Sir Guy Campbell, 1910 - 1993. Served in the Camel Corps of the Sudan Defence Force and later commanded the Kenya Regiment.

£300­400

296

An African staff with a baluster finial and bifurcated base, 175.5cm long, a shaped club, with a tapered stepped head, 93.5cm long and a Polynesian barbed spear, with tapa bindings, 108.5cm long. (3)

£100­200

297

Seven East African staffs including four with carved shafts and finials of antelope, a man’s head and a disc,

89cm ­ 94.2cm, a Kamba half figure, 92cm long, a Makonde head, 137cm long and a Luguru standing female figure, with burnished highlights, and a pointed tip, 146cm

£200­300

298

Four Zulu knobkerries

South Africa

two plain, 85.5cm and 85.8cm long, one with brass wirework and incised notches, 76.2cm long, and the fourth, previously with two bands of wire, 72cm long,

a Zulu staff, with two entwined snakes, 86.5cm long and a South African staff with a part ribbed ovoid finial, 90.3cm long. (6)

£200­300

299

λ 299

A Zulu knobkerrie

South Africa

rhinoceros horn, with an ovoid head above two ribbed bands and a tapered shaft, the end pierced for attachment, 50.5cm long, 209 grams.

Provenance

Fred North, London.

£600­800

300

A Ndebele apron

South Africa

hide with coloured glass beads, 57cm long, and a beaded bag, with geometric patterns and a pair of doves each side, one with a text, 22cm wide. (2)

£150­200

301

A collection of Xhosa beadwork

South Africa

including a skirt, with leather, mother of pearl buttons and three pouch pendants, 62cm wide, seven waist bands and five neck ornaments and another of seeds, and a cotton skirt with beads and mother of pearl buttons. (15)

Provenance

Philip Mayer, anthropologist (1910 - 1995)

£300­400

A Shona dagger bakatwa

Zimbabwe with a part blackened iron blade, the diamond knop handle and loop front scabbard with brass wire binding, 36.5cm long. (2)

Provenance

Acquired by the present owner in 1975 from Norma Chickowore, Johannesburg.

£400­600

303

Zacheus Olowonubi Oloruntoba Nigeria (1919 ­ 2014)

Untitled ink and dyes on muslin, signed Z. I C. Oloruntoba NW3/1146 Abebi Ibadan and dated -19-59-, 148cm x 64cm.

£800­1,200

304

A Tuareg counterweight ornament

Niger brass, copper and silver coloured metal, with incised decoration, 33cm long.

£200­300

305

A Turkoman amulet necklace silver coloured metal, carnelian, gilt and glass beads, 38cm long.

£150­200

306

A small collection of African trade bead necklaces glass, stone, agate, brass and pastic discs, and a graduated horn bead necklace, five wood bead rosary’s, a Pende mask amulet necklace with cowrie shells and beads, and a Maasai goat charm, with a bone pendant and leather strap. (22)

£150­200

307

A collection of African glass trade bead necklaces and bracelets and various glass, silver coloured metal and copal amber beads. (qty)

£150­200

309

Tribal Art catalogues including Christie's, Sotheby's and Woolley and Wallis, and Asian Art catalogues, as above and Lempertz. (a lot)

£100­200

308
Portier, A. et Poncetton, F. Les Arts Sauvages Afrique
Editions Albert Morance, 1956, with fifty plates.
£100­150
307

310

Three large photographs portraying Bedouin’s Ilford Limited, mounted on card and titled.

1. Hungry Eyes, watching a Slave girl baking the Famous Bedouin­Bread, No. 61., 36.4cm x 49.5cm.

2. Duhiya, A Typical Bedouin girl ­ of the noble class, No. 8., 62.2cm x 50.5cm.

3. Farwa, Mnahi’s wife, A Typical Slave Woman, No. 40., 62.5cm x 50.2cm.

Inscribed to the reverses with titles and further descriptions. (3)

£300­400

311

Three copal amber bead necklaces

37.5cm, 38cm and 40cm long. (3)

£400­600

313

Eight agate bead necklaces including one with metal beads, one with shell and another with lapiz lazuli. (8)

£200­300

λ

314

A Moroccan necklace coral, copal, carnelian, glass and silver coloured metal beads, 18cm long, and four faux amber beaded necklaces, 16cm, 21cm, 21.5cm and 48cm long. (5)

£300­400

315

A Moroccan coral necklace with silver coloured metal beads and faux amber beads, 54cm long, and two single strand coral necklaces, 31cm long. (3)

£200­300

312

Three copal amber bead necklaces

29cm, 37cm and 41cm long. (3)

£300­400

316

A Bedouin necklace with coins, glass and silver coloured metal beads, 44cm long, a Turkish silver coloured metal necklace, hung with coins, 40cm long, and a cast mount chatalaine, with reclining female terms and a cherub head, inset a Lvitpold Prinz Regent V. Bayern coin, the mounts stamped 800, 16.5cm long. (3)

£300­400

317

An Indian necklace

silver coloured metal, coral beads and coins, the back of the amulet with applied makers name in script, 47cm long, a Turkoman necklace, gilded silver coloured metal, carnelian and glass, 44cm long, a Turkoman necklace, silver coloured metal, with a shaped pendant and linked coins, 40cm long. (3)

£300­400

λ

318

A Bedouin neck collar

silver coloured metal, with flexible bands and two clasps, 21.5cm diameter, a gorget and flower head pendant necklace, the S clasp stamped SS, 42cm long, and a Beduoin chatalain, with coral beads and four miniature tools, 58.5cm long. (3)

£300­400

319

A Tunisian rhianna chain necklace

silver coloured metal, with a hand of Fatima and two hilal pendants, 54cm long, a wood bead necklace with three hilal pendants, 41cm long, a Bedouin necklace, with bell pendants, a crescent and a Marie Theresa thaler, 38cm long, and a Bedouin pendant necklace, 40cm long. (4)

£150­250

λ 320

Three coral necklaces with silver coloured metal beads, pendants and hirz amulets, 36cm, 45cm and 51cm long. (3)

£250­350

λ 321

A Kazak necklace with coral, glass and silver coloured metal beads and a triangular pendant, with triangles of dots decoration, 48.5cm long, a silver coloured metal plaited necklace, one side with sliding bead set florets and smaller spacers and a central three part pendant, with florets, with traces of gilding, 61cm long and an Indian metal necklace, with floret decoration, the backs previously with pins, 34cm long. (3)

£200­300

λ 322

A stick coral necklace with silver coloured metal beads, 42.5cm long, and a silver coloured metal, coral and carnelian necklace with lapiz lazuli and turquoise, the clasp with spade shape plaque marked HAB REGD, 48cm long. (2)

£300­400

λ 323

Nine silver coloured metal necklaces one with a Chinese clip, pierced decorated a figure and animals within a foliate border, stamped mark to the back, 32cm long, a tenth with coral beads and two bracelets. (12)

£200­300

λ 324

A Berber necklace

with amber, coral and green stone beads, with graduated metal circular pendants with incised spiral decoration, 40cm long,

a Somali copal and silver coloured metal bead necklace, 49cm long, and an African dot and linear decorated bone disc and silver coloured metal necklace, with a button clasp, 51cm long. (3)

£200­300

λ 325

A Berber necklace

Morocco

coral, amber, silver coloured metal beads and an enamelled hirz pendant, 82cm long.

£200­300

λ 326

Three African necklaces

including one with coral, glass and silver coloured metal beads, with shell discs, 38.5cm long, another with coral and silver coloured metal, 41cm long, and the third with silver coloured metal beads having a coin pendant, 29cm long. (3)

£200­300

327

Two Moroccan bead necklaces moulded glass, 34cm and 34.5cm long, and eleven glass beads, as a small bracelet. (3)

£150­250

328

A ‘Dogon sun’ pendant

Mali

bronze, with leather and a cowrie shell, 7cm, diameter, a vertebrae necklace, with a bell and a bracelet with brass beads, two bone and bead neacklaces and a leather bead necklace with a boar’s tusk pendant. (6)

£150­200

λ 329

Four coral necklaces

including Uzbek with black glass beads, silver coloured metal beads and a bead mounted hirz amulet, 34.5cm long, a single strand of stick beads, 36cm long, another with three strands of sticks, 34cm long and the fourth with graduated spheres, 28cm long. (4)

£250­350

λ 331

Five necklaces

including a long string of shell beads with a hog tusk pendant, 81.5cm long, a string of pointed coral beads, 42.5cm long, a string of wood and bone beads, 37cm long, a string of animal teeth with a seed, 37cm long and a string of shell beads, 34cm long. (5)

£300­400

332

Five shell necklaces the longest 52cm. (5)

£300­400

333

Two cowrie shell necklaces one Mali with red glass beads and a brass ‘sun’ pendant, 31cm and the other Middle Eastern, with three metal bell like pendants, 43cm long. (2)

£200­300

A Nepal wedding necklace

fibre with numerous pendants with silver coloured metal and brass mounts, including shells, seeds, teeth, tusks, claws, glass and coins, 64cm long, and a Tibetan pendant, silver coloured metal, copper, turquoise and coral, 5.2cm wide, on a tube link chain. (2)

£300­400

λ 330

334

Three Naga necklaces

Nagaland coloured glass beads, one with brass bell shape pendants, 34cm, 36cm and 37cm long, and a Naga bead head band, 49cm long. (4)

£100­200

335

Four Naga shell bead necklaces Nagaland including two with conch pendants with incised faces, 38cm and 41cm long, another with dot incised figures and spirals to three of the beads and with engraved silver coloured metal mounts, 27cm long, and the fourth with glass beads, 33cm long. (4)

£150­250

336

Two Naga necklaces Nagaland coloured glass beads, one with horn and bone spacers, and the other with bone spacers and brass bell pendants, 36.5cm and 30cm long. (2)

£150­200

337

A Naga necklace Nagaland coloured glass beads, cloth and fibre, 40cm long.

£150­200

338

Six Naga pendant necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass and shell beads and fibre, two shell chank pendants, 40.5cm and 46cm, and four brass including a zebu head, 25cm, a double ‘fish tail’, 35cm, a double ‘fish tail’ with three heads, 45cm and a ‘fish tail’ with a head, 36cm long. (6)

£300­400

339

Four Naga necklaces

Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, 25.5cm, 34cm, 35cm and 36.5cm long. (4)

£200­300

340

Five Nepal / Tibet necklaces

coloured glass, carved bone, carnelian, stone, shell and metal beads, one with three shell pendants, 32.5cm, 33cm, 37cm, 50.5cm and 51cm long, and a bead bracelet with a carved bone mask. (6)

£200­300

342

Twenty seven glass bead necklaces the longest 58cm. (27)

£200­300

344

A collection of bead necklaces amber, resin and metal, the longest 91cm. (23)

£300­400

341

Six Naga necklaces Nagaland

coloured glass beads and fibre, with coin, button and metal disc clasps, 56.5cm, 57.5cm, 62cm, 66cm, 68.5cm and 82.5cm long. (6)

£300­400

343

Twelve trade bead necklaces stone and glass. (12)

£150­250

λ 345

Eighteen coral necklaces two with metal mounts. (18)

£300­400

A Solomon Islands head band

Melanesia

fibre, animal teeth, turtleshell and coloured glass beads, 114cm long.

£200­300

347

Six African trade bead necklaces coloured glass including chevrons, 33cm, 35.5cm, 36cm (2), 40cm and 40.5cm long. (6)

£400­500

348

Thirteen African trade bead necklaces glass, one with a carved wood janus whistle pendant, 44cm long, and an Egyptian faience bead necklace. (14)

£250­350 349

350

£300­400

£400­600

A large collection of beaded necklaces including, glass, silver coloured metal, quartz, malachite, turquoise and cloisonne. (qty)
A collection of glass bead necklaces Africa and India. (qty)

λ 351

An Omani ‘digg’ necklace with silver coloured metal mounts, two hirz amulets with gilded mounts, two coral beads and a central gilded pendant, 33.5cm long, 30cm wide.

£200­300

λ 353

Seven Middle Eastern necklaces

silver coloured metal, including a large pendant, inset coloured glass and stamped Bourré, 36.5cm long, two with coral beads, one with a tear drop shape amulet with a onyx inset, a fruit shape amulet embossed strawberries, 35cm long, one with a pair of plaques, embossed peacocks, and another with a disc pendant. (7)

£300­400

355

352

A Tibetan amulet necklace jantar silver coloured metal with embossed foliate decoration and woven chains, 53cm long, and an Eastern silver coloured metal facet bead necklace, 54cm long. (2)

£120­180

354

A collection of eleven necklaces including one with carnelian and silver coloured metal pear shape pendants, 23cm long, an Egyptian zar amulet necklace, with a medallion engraved a figure wearing a fez and flanked by two fish, the reverse inscribed Arabic text, hung with faceted carnelian and silver coloured beads, 39cm long, one with coin pendants, 27cm long, two with hirz amulets, 22cm and 30cm, one with a silver coloured metal shell pendant, 29cm long, one with three silver coloured metal twin hirz amulets with groups of spheres, 21cm long, one with heart shape pendants, coins and tools, 27.5cm long, a Tibetan ‘tooth’ amulet, 8.3cm long, a silver coloured metal chain, 49cm long, a triple chain with a gilded clasp, 75cm long and five chokers. (16)

£300­400

Four African glass bead necklaces

including Hausa, with multi strand beads, copper coils and dyed wool, two Kenyan multi strands and Turkana, with leather and metal pendants, 59cm long, and a Nigerian beaded leather panel neck ornament, with a brass boss and cowrie shells. (5)

£200­300

356

Twelve manilla currency bangles silver coloured metal, 6cm wide. (12)

£100­150

357

A Bhutan woman’s dress kira wool, strip woven hothra jalo with stamped tigma symbols, with remains of blue cotton to the top and bottom of the back, 125cm long, 245cm wide.

£200­300

359

Dolpo strip weave blankets Nepal wool, woven with natural dye stripes, and with a tassel end, 164cm x 102cm, 165cm x 103cm and 174cm x 132cm. (3)

£150­250

358

A Dolpo blanket Tibet wool, strip woven with natural dyed triple lines in black, yellow and red, 112cm x 208cm.

£100­200

360

Dolpo strip woven blankets wool, with dyed linear decoration, 121cm x 154cm, 108cm x 163cm, 90cm x 156cm and 84cm x 123cm. (4)

£150­200

Three
Four

361

A Dolpo blanket

Tibet wool, strip woven with natural dyes, 142cm x 218cm.

£150­200

362

Three Tibetan lady’s aprons wool, strip woven with stripes, each of four panels, 85cm x 93cm, 91cm x 91cm and 81cm x 92cm. (3)

£100­200

363

Three Bhutan aprons wool, strip woven hothra jalo with stamped tigma symbols, the larger with a waxed cloth edging and the two four part aprons with a cotton edging, 71cm x 112cm, 86cm x 84cm and 78cm x 93cm. (3)

£200­300

364

Four Bhutan waist sashes / belts kera cotton and silk, with supplementary­weft brocaded designs, one with tassels at both ends, the other three at one end, 185cm x 30cm, 182cm x 34cm, 162cm x 19cm and 180cm x 20cm. (4)

£100­200

366

A Tibetan Lama’s ritual dance dress

cotton, with red dye and applied bands in natural and blue, 135cm long, 163cm wide.

£150­200

367

Two Tibetan Lama’s ceremonial dancing robes

cotton, one dyed dark blue with applique dyed strips, including yellow and patches, the other light blue with natural strips, 138cm long, 165cm wide and 134cm long, 200cm wide. (2)

£150­200

365

A Tibetan Lama’s ceremonial dancing robe cotton, with natural dyes, 146cm long, 175cm wide.

£150­200

368

A Tibetan rug wool, the centre with three foliage medallions and conforming spandrels, with a linked swastika border, 176cm x 80cm.

£100­200

371

A Bhutan Royal wrapped dress kira

unusual wool and silk, strip woven with stripes and supplementary­weft brocading of repetitive geometric designs, 258cm x 137cm.

£400­600

369

Two Tibetan rugs wool, one with stars motifs to the centre and with a key border, 147cm x 85cm, and the other with a central medallion and foliage sprays to a foliate border, 153cm x 92cm. (2)

£150­250

372

Two Magar jackets Nepal felted wool, the lighter with an inside pocket, 78cm and 68cm long, and a Magar shoulder bag and a Magar rain cape. (4)

£100­200

A rare Bhutan High Lama’s fine wool shawl dyed with madder, constructed in rows of overlapping panels, 311cm x 153cm.

£200­300

373

A Bhutan woman’s dress kira wool, strip woven with organic and synthetic dye stripes hothra, 130cm x 229cm, a Bhutan strip woven cloth, with red, black, yellow and natural stripes, 265cm x 122cm and a Bhutan kira, cotton with supplementarywarp patterns, 230cm x 125cm. (3)

£150­200

374

An Indian ceremonial horse carved rearing with a bridle and bells, a saddle with a recess for a rider, and with applied button protrusions, a girdle with foliate decoration and remains of pigment, mounted on a single support and square base, 102cm long, 121cm high.

£300­400

375

An Indian silvered brass betel nut box jali cut with floral engraved decoration and vacant shield cartouches, the hinged cover revealing a double lidded compartmented lift out tray and two lids below with six compartments, 19.4cm wide.

£150­200

376

An Indian bronze ganesh cast reclining on a crescent moon and clouds, 7.8cm high.

£150­200

377

Two Naga belts Nagaland

one with a dao holder carved a relief skull and inset hair tufts, flanked by four carved monkey skulls, with a bone toggle, 86cm long and the other, bark with applied bone panels and two carved skulls, with glass beads and a bone toggle, 85cm long. (2)

£200­300

100

378

Five Indian hunting scenes gouache on paper, depicting two hunters, one on an elephant, persuing tigers, with panels of text either end, gilt highlights and pen drawings of animals and birds to the borders, the reverse with line of text, approximately 26.5cm x 15cm. (5)

£200­300

379

Five paintings of Emperor Jahangir and his Queen India, 19th century gouache, ink and gold, each depicting intimate scenes within a palace garden landscape, including one with two female attendants offering wine; the two dancing whilst a small bird drinks from the cup held by the Emperor; both seated with the Queen offering her hand to his nose; the Emperor supporting the Queen whilst offering a drink; the two embracing; each with two lines of text above and below and bordered with foliage and further text, the reverse with a panel of annotated text, approximately 24.5cm x 17cm. (5)

£400­500

381

A Thai buddha head 19th / 20th century stone, 29cm high, on a plinth. (2)

£100­200

380

Nine Indian ‘composite animal’ paintings gouache with heightening in white, depicting the outlines of lions, camels, antelopes, oxen and a horse, all filled with naked male and female figures, with panels of identical text either end and to the reverses, mounted, approximately 10cm x 16.5cm. (9)

£200­300

Four Indian kamasutra paintings each depicting a male and female in various poses, including two pen and watercolour, 18cm x 12cm and 16cm x 12cm, and two gouache, one with a panel of text above and gilt borders, 16.4cm x 9.5cm and 11cm x 17.5cm, all mounted. (4)

£150­200

381
382

Twenty­two Indo Persian pictures gouache and gilt on paper, with panels of text above and below, depicting hunting scenes, eighteen with two scenes and four with six scenes of mainly figures in various pursuits in landscapes, the text relates to the life of Alexander and Dara, the reverses with full panels of text, approximately 29.5cm x 19.5cm, mounted. (22)

£400­600

384

A Pitcairn Island flying fish by Pervis Young with inset eyes and teeth and with applied wings, stamped MADE BY PERVIS YOUNG, SOUVENIR FROM PITCAIRN ISLAND, on a stand, 40.5cm long, 22cm high.

£100­200

385

A Massim stool

Trobriand Islands, Papua New Guinea carved a fish and an animal support, with carved decoration, 47cm high.

£150­200

386

Three Solomon Islands standing figures Melanesia

female, male and a child, with inset shell eyes, nose sticks and fibre loin cloths, 155cm, 144cm and 104.5cm high. (3)

£400­600

387

Ruki Fame

Papua New Guinea, 20th century Crucifixion, brass with inscribed collection number Lab. 7719., 108cm high.

Provenance

Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£200­300

388

A Massim post figure Trobriand Islands, Papua New Guinea seated with arms supporting the chin, 122.5cm high.

£150­200

389

A Vanuatu axe Melanesia

the iron trade blade stamped a B with a six pointed star and a 2, on a wood shaft with a disc and pointed terminal, 89cm long.

£400­500

390

A Fiji dance club gugu Melanesia

the angled head with carved linear and zigzag decoration and a stylised butterfly fish, the handle with a knop terminal, 83.5cm long.

£250­350

391

A Malaita Island club supe Solomon Islands, Melanesia with a cross medial ribbed blade above zigzag carving and a tapered handle to a fish tail terminal, with a collection sticker MHMC­169, 85.5cm long, with a wall mount. (2)

£300­400

392

A Massim club Trobriand Islands with carved scroll decoration to the top part of the blade, 74.5cm long.

Provenance

Frank Hurley, Australia, (1885 - 1962) photographer, filmmaker, adventurer. Hurley worked on Shackleton’s Antarctic expedition of 1914 - 1917, photographing the Endurance whilst being marooned with the rest of the crew. In the 1920s he mounted various expeditions to Papua New Guinea, which involved film making and collecting on behalf of the Australian museum and himself. He stored a number of artefacts in a log cabin at Whale Beach, which became an exotic setting for Sydney’s glitterati attending raucous parties there in the 1930s. Selling the property after the war, he left the contents of the cabin which were kept by the new owners, who moved to London in 1959.

£300­400

397

A Samoa tapa fragment Polynesia barkcloth with painted geometric and leaf decoration, 41cm x 60cm, framed and glazed.

£80­120

A Solomon Islands kap kap pendant

Melanesia

shell and carved turtleshell, representing fish and a frigate bird, with plaited fibre, 13.5cm diameter

£300­500

λ 394

A Solomon Islands kap kap pendant

Melanesia

shell and carved turtleshell, with plaited fibre, 15.5cm diameter

£300­500

395

Two Solomon Islands currency rings

Melanesia shell, 11cm and 11.5cm diameter. (2)

£150­250

396

An unusual carved dog head

Oceanic, possibly a canoe prow with scroll ears, inset shell eyes and with a long muzzle, with black staining and the top encrusted, 26cm long.

£200­300

398

A Polynesia tapa beater with carved flutes along three sides, 33.5cm long, with a wall mount. (2)

£150­200

397

A Kenyah­Dayak shield

Indonesia the front painted masks of an udoq monster and applied rows of hair, the back painted mythical beasts and with an integral handle, rattan binding, 130.5cm high.

Provenance

Collected by Rob Powell in December 1913, and sent to his brother in law Herbert Hayes and thence by descent. Sold with a copy of correspondance relating to the acquiring of the shield.

£3,000­4,000

400

A Solomon Islands parrying shield qauata Melanesia the curved blade with a medial ridge terminating in a W, to a tapered shaft with socket and knoped tapering terminal, 123.5cm long, with a wall mount.

(2)

£400­600

401

An Asmat spear Irian Jaya, Indonesia with a stepped tip above a pierced and carved panel and a tapered shaft, 186.5cm long.

£250­350 402

A Tolai paddle club New Britain, Melanesia the tapered blade relief carved a stylised mask, with concentric eyes and an open mouth with bared teeth and spear head either side, with remains of red pigment to the underside, 197cm long.

£800­1,200

403

A Fiji club sali Melanesia with a spurred head and carved diaper blade with two pairs of lines, the shaft with a flared butt, 96.5cm long.

£300­400

404

An Arawe shield New Britain, Melanesia of three rounded boards carved with eight pairs of spirals, with black and white pigment decoration, bound with rattan, the back with an integral handle and painted with linear and scroll decoration, 130.5cm high.

Provenance

David Usborne Collection, London.

£300­400

405

A Fiji club sali Melanesia the blade with a carved scale­like pattern with lines and chevrons, with a medial ridge and a spur, the shaft with a button butt, 104.8cm long.

£500­600

406

An Aboriginal shovel Australia with a leaf shape blade having a cut out section to one side, possibly later to be used as a club, with a flattened handle having a knop terminal, 109cm long.

cf. James Edge-Partington. Ethnographical Album of the Pacific Islands, 1996, p.354. no.s 17 and 18.

£500­700

407

An Abelam carved figure Papua New Guinea standing with a pair of hornbills to his hips and another pair to the top, the base with a mask, with red, white, black and yellow pigment, 175cm high.

£600­800

409

A Papuan Gulf drum

Papua New Guinea of tapering cylindrical form with carved scroll decoration and eyes to the jaws, with black, red and white natural pigments, 94cm long.

Provenance

David Usborne Collection, London.

£150­200

410

An Abelam board

Papua New Guinea carved an ancestor head surmounted with two birds, with pigment decoration, 123cm high.

Provenance Zbyszek Plocki Collection, London.

£150­250

408

A Bianing headdress

New Britain, Papua New Guinea wood, fibre and tapa with red and black pigment decoration, the peaked cap with a bird surmount, having outstretched wings, 73cm high.

Collected in Gaulim in 1977.

£300­500

An Abelam male figure Papua New Guinea standing with an arched crest, a pierced nose and a pointed protrusion from the neck, wearing armbands and with his hands on his hips, to a pointed base, with black, red, yellow and white pigment, 127cm high, on a stand. (2)

Provenance

Julius Carlebach, New York. Gallery d’Hautbarr, New York. Private Collection, UK, purchased from the above in May 1969.

£4,000­6,000

412

A Kalinga shield

Luzon Island, Philippines with a central diamond shape boss flanked by arches, with three prongs above and two below, the back with an integral handle, stained black and with remains of rattan bindings, the front with collection sticker D335 and the back with a label inscribed Transport “Burford. Capt. W. R. Graham. Pay Dept, U. S. Am?., c/o Dept O M, U. S. A..., New York, N.Y., 123cm high.

Provenance

Christie’s, London, Tribal Art, 1 December 1993, lot 124.

David Usborne Collection, London.

£300­400

413

A Fiji throwing club, i ula tavatava

Melanasia with a lobed head and domed finial, the grip with zig­zag carved decoration and pierced for attachment, 41.7cm long.

£300­400

414

A Sepik River needle

Papua New Guinea carved an ancestor figure holding his forked tongue and with a pointed terminal, 21.8cm long.

£150­250

415

A Solomon Islands currency belt

Melanesia shell discs, fibre and shell ‘teeth’, 106cm long.

£150­250

Provenance

Julius Carlebach, New York. Gallery d’Hautbarr, New York.

Private Collection, UK, purchased from the above in May 1969.

£1,000­1,500

A Kwoma female figure Washkuk Hills, Papua New Guinea relief carved on a panel with scorching and red and white pigment, 118cm high, mounted in a base.

417

A Maori beater

New Zealand

bone, of oval form with a conforming handle, having a squared edge attachment hole and a carved tiki mask terminal, 27.9cm long.

£600­800

418

A Maori ear pendant kurukuru

New Zealand

nephrite, pierced for attachment, 8cm long.

£300­500

419

A Maori hand club wahaika paraoa

New Zealand

bone, with a carved tiki below the inner curve, with its tongue sticking out and hands on abdomen and thigh, the terminal with a tiki head and squared attachment hole, 34cm long, with a wall mount. (2)

£1,500­2,000

420

A Maori hand club mere pounamu

New Zealand

nephrite, of flattened spatulate form with a ribbed terminal and pierced for attachment, 37cm long, with a wall mount. (2)

£800­1,200

421

An Aboriginal club Australia with a swollen head and with fine carved grooves to the whole, with a textured grip and pointed terminal, 62.5cm long.

422

A Maori staff tewhatewha New Zealand with a short curved blade pierced at the base, and a tapered shaft having ring knops towards the terminal, 103.5cm long.

£500­700

£200­300 423

423

A Maori walking stick New Zealand carved a seated tiki and two kneeling tiki figures, with inset haliotis eyes, and bands of linear and notch carving, the pear shape handle with a metal plaque inscribed J.L. LD. N.Z. 1903, 93.7cm long, with a wall mount. (2)

£400­600

424

An Aboriginal axe Australia with a large stone blade attached to a wooden shaft with fibre and gum binding, 80cm long.

£200­300

425

An Aboriginal narrow shield Australia with carved linear geometric decoration with white pigment and with scorched crosses, the faceted back with an integral handle, 102cm long.

£800­1,200

426

An Aboriginal club Murray River, Australia with lines of zig­zag carving to the navette shaped head and with a carved textured grip, 67cm long.

£600­800

427

A Plains drum

Lakota, North America, early 20th century bentwood with hide, painted a green/yellow ground and decorated a deer, a buffalo and two turtles, with fibre binding and crossed wires with a fabric grip, 42cm diameter.

£600­800

428

A Haida model totem pole Northwest Coast of North America carved a standing figure with a whale issuing from his mouth and with a eagle on his head, with painted decoration, 36cm high.

£250­350

429

A Northwest Coast charm bone, carved both sides as a seated figure, 10.5cm high.

Provenance

Frank Dalvin, London.

£100­200

430

Five Inuit birds

Arctic soapstone, all with incised numbers and symbols to the bases, one perched on a rock signed Lucassie Amm, 14cm high, one with a pierced beak and incised feathers, signed Davidie Opick, Bel. Isl., 10cm high. (5)

£300­500

431

Five Inuit carvings

Arctic

soapstone, including a seal with pup, signed Jusi Sivuarapil, 18.5cm long, a loon, with incised detailling and numbers to the base with a Canada Eskimo Art sticker, 16cm long, a salmon, inscribed E91549, 16.8cm long, a seal with incised symbols, 15.7cm long, and a narwhal, on a base, both signed Jootah 913, 13cm long. (6)

£300­500

λ 432

A Thule standing figure

Alaska

marine ivory, with lowered arms and the hands on the lower abdomen, 6cm high.

£400­600 λ 433

A Thule torso

Alaska

marine ivory, carved with the head tilting upwards, 4.5cm high.

£300­400

λ 434

A Thule standing figure

Alaska

marine ivory, with the left arm across the abdomen, 5.4cm high.

£300­400

435

A Thule standing figure

Alaska

bone, with straight arms and hands to the sides of the lower abdomen, 9cm high.

£300­400

439

A Mexican mask with carved hair, moustache and beard, and with polychrome painted decoration, 22.5cm high

a Bali mask, with an applied hair moustache, 19.5cm high, and an Indian mask, with a cobra surmount, 33.5cm high. (3)

£150­200

436

Two Guerrero masks

Mexico, early 20th century repousse copper with polychrome decoration, representing an armadillo and a peacock, the backs part fabric lined and with a chin rest, 51cm and 42cm high. (2)

Provenance

Liberty, London, Masks for Dreams, April 1991.

£500­700

437

A Java elephant mask

Indonesia with painted decoration, 19cm high, a Tibetan dharmpala mask, with painted decoration, 34.5cm high, and two Veracruz masks, with painted decoration, one depicting an owl, 23cm high, and the other, an open jaw animal, 40cm long. (4)

£200­300

438

Three Mexican masks including two wooden, one with carved hair, moustache and beard, and polychrome decoration, 34.5cm high, the other with a painted moustache and beard, 19cm high, and the third, resin and cloth with polychrome decoration and an applied animal hair, 40cm long. (3)

£200­300

440

Four Java theatre masks

Indonesia

with red and black painted decoration and one with gold coloured paint, 17cm, 19.5cm, 21cm and 22cm high. (4)

£300­500

439

441

A pair of Dayak standing figures Indonesia male and female, with painted tattoos and highlights, the male holding a shield and wearing a fabric loin cloth, 56cm and 59.5cm high, on fixed bases. (2)

£150­200

442

A Veracruz head

Mexico, circa 200 ­ 600 AD pottery, with the remains of a fringed headdress and disc ear ornaments, with an open mouth and bitumen highlights, 17.8cm high.

Provenance

Dr Carlos Carrillo Collection, New York.

Royal Athena Galleries, New York. November 1987.

£300­500

443

A Colima standing female figure Mexico, circa 600 BC ­ 200 AD pottery, with painted stripe decoration, 20.1cm high, and a Chimu pottery stirrup spout vessel, with a perched bird, 21cm high. (2)

£250­300

444

A collection of twenty six Peruvian blades and arrowheads stone and quartz, the longest 13cm, mounted and framed.

Provenance

Olive Dorey (nee Thomas) from her father who was in Peru circa 1910.

£200­300

445

A Nazca style whistle Peru pottery, modelled as a bird, with painted decoration, 11.5cm high, a Nazca style pottery vessel, decorated lizards, a spider and a monkey, 11cm diameter, two Mexican pottery masks, 8.2cm and 9cm high, a standing pottery figure, 17.5cm high, and a two Mexican papier mache masks, 19cm and 20cm high. (7)

£100­200

441
443
442

446

A Mexican mask aventurine, in Olmec style with recessed eyes and an open mouth, the back with suspension holes, 15.5cm high.

Provenance

Adolphe Stoclet Collection, 1871 - 1949. In Palais Stoclet, Brussels in 1913.

Published

George A Salles and Daisy Lion-Goldschmidt. Adolphe Stoclet Collection (part I), Brussels, 1956, pp. 494 - 495.

£2,000­3,000

447

A Quimbaya seated figure

Colombia, circa 800 ­ 1200 AD pottery, with a pierced head and chest, the nose with a pierced septum and with remains of horizontal painted lines to the face, the right arm and hand raised and left arm resting on the thigh, 29cm high, on a supported base. (2)

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£400­600

448

A Zacatecas seated female urn figure

Mexico, circa 100 ­ 500 AD hollow pottery, with pierced eyes, mouth and ear spools, with painted and resist decoration, 41.5cm high, on a perspex base. (2)

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£500­800

449

A Guanacaste footed vessel

Nicoya, Costa Rica, circa 1000 ­ 1500 AD pottery, of ovoid form, painted two large serpents below borders of step and scroll designs, 24.5cm high.

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£400­600

450

A Guanacaste footed vessel

Nicoya, Costa Rica, circa 1000 ­ 1500 AD pottery, of ovoid form and painted a border of heads above vacant panels and two borders of a recumbent animal, 23.5cm high.

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£300­400

452

A Veracruz head

Mexico, circa 400 ­ 700 AD pottery, with a spiked head band, an open mouth and an ear ring to the right ear, with bitumen to the eyes and brows, 16.5cm high, a Veracruz pottery head, smiling and wearing a tall headdress with a side tassel, 21cm high, and a Colombia pottery head, with an open mouth and piecred ears, 12.5cm high, all on stands. (6)

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£400­600

451

A Chancay figural vessel

Peru, circa 1100 ­ 1400 AD pottery, with a ribbed and notched headdress and a pair of large ear spools and holding the remains of a vessel, with a cream coloured slip and bichrome decoration, 45cm high, on a perspex ring. (2)

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£700­900

£400­600 451

453

Three Pre­Columbian standing figures pottery, including a Jama Coaque female, wearing a headdress and necklace, 17.5cm, high, on a base, a Chupicuaro figure with a boss to the headdress, 13.5cm high, on a stand, a Colima female figure, wearing a headdress, necklace and arm bands, 13.5cm high, on a stand, and a Mexican glazed pottery figure, 14cm high, on a stand. (8)

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

454

A Chimu figural vessel

Peru, circa 1100 ­ 1400 AD blackware pottery, of ovoid form with a head to the neck and bent arms to the body, wearing a neck ornament, 26cm high, on a stand. (2)

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (19462024)

£150­200

455

A Moche dipper vessel

Peru, circa 100 ­ 600 AD pottery, with a compressed circular bowl and a tapered handle with a man’s head terminal, having an open mouth and wearing a head scarf, 29.5cm long, on a stand. (2)

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (19462024)

£300­500

456

Three Maya cylindrical vessels

Mexico, circa 250 ­ 900 AD pottery, two with painted decoration and the third with a slightly flared rim and ribbon sgraffito decoration, 21cm, 16cm and 13cm high. (3)

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£600­800

458

Two Nicoya footed vessels

Costa Rica, circa 1000 ­ 1400 AD pottery, of waisted form with a band of incised geometric decoration, the smaller with a relief face and the larger with two low relief arched panels, 12.2cm and 20cm high. (2)

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£200

457

A Chavin vessel

Peru, circa 600 ­ 200 BC pottery of flared cylindrical form, the front with nine raised bosses, flanked by raised press moulded lines, 23.2cm high.

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£400­600

459

A Chorrera head fragment

Ecuador, circa 300 BC ­ 600 AD with a swept back coiffure with incised plumes and further symbols to the cheeks, 10.2cm high, a Mexican pottery head, 10cm high, on a stand, a Costa Rica pottery jaguar head, 9cm high, and a Nayarit seated figure in a arched building, 7.5cm high. (4)

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£300­400

462

A Moche dipper vessel

Peru, circa 500 ­ 1500 AD black earthenware, with an ovoid body and a tapered terminal handle, 26.5cm long, on a perspex stand, a Maya black earthenware cylinder vase, circa 250 ­ 900 AD, with incised spiral decoration, 19cm high, and a Chavin earthenware vessel, modelled as a fish, 13.5cm high. (3)

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£200­300

464

A Narino bowl

Colombia, circa 800 ­1500 AD pottery, painted two birds to the centre and bands of birds and lines above, 18.6cm diameter, a Chancay pottery two handled ovoid vessel, 16cm high, on a perpex stand, a Mexican pottery bowl, with bird features, 13.2cm long, a Mexican pottery bowl, with painted geometric decoration, 30cm diameter and a Peru pottery crescent shape vessel, 17.6cm high. (6)

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£300­400

460

An Atlantic Watershed Region tripod vessel Costa Rica, circa 300 ­ 700 AD pottery with a standing male figure support, wearing body armour and an animal mask, two pierced conical supports, the body with three incised panels, 13cm high.

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£300­400

461

A Calima double spout stirrup vessel

Colombia pottery, modelled with a figure lying on their back supporting their head with their hands, with incised decoration and remains of painted decoration, 21cm high.

£150­250

463

Three Ban Chiang pottery vessels

Thailand, circa 1000 ­ 300 BC including a bowl with a flat rim, linear scratch decoration and red pigment lines under the rim, 13.5cm wide, a bowl with a flared rim and linear scratch decoration, 19.5cm wide and an ovoid jar with a shoulder girdle and linear scratch decoration, 21.6cm high. (3)

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£200­300

465

An Amlash style zoomorphic vessel pottery, modelled as a bull, with a loop hanldle and a head spout, 22.2cm high, and an Egyptian Isis and Horus group, not ancient, 12.8cm high. (2)

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£100­200

466

An Inuit mother and child group

Arctic steatite, the kneeling mother with a carrying strap across her forehead, supporting a child on her back, 29cm high, mounted on a base. (2)

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£300­400

467

A Lega mask

Democratic Republic of the Congo with almond shape slit eyes and punched circle decoration, with white pigment and burnished highlights, 29.5cm high.

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£300­500

468

A Baule mask

Ivory Coast with a quintuple lobed coiffure, facial scarifications, with black, red and white painted decoration, 35.5cm high.

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£300­500

466
468

469

A Bambara monkey mask Mali with an encrusted patina, 22.5cm high.

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£200­300

470

A Yoruba gelede mask Nigeria with remains of pigment, 37cm long, and an Igbo mask, with painted decoration, 45cm long. (2)

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£200­300

471

An Igbo mask Nigeria with brown and black staining, 26.5cm high.

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£150­250

472

Two Spanish fuitwood Ox yokes one with carved decoration, 108.5cm and 116cm wide. (2)

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£250­350

471
470 469

473

A Cypriot bichrome ware amphora circa 750 ­ 475 BC pottery, with a piriform body having a pair of upturned handles and a slighlty flared neck, decorated lines, concentric circles and dashes, 34cm high.

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£300­500

475

A Roman Samian ware dish circa 1st ­ 2nd century AD terracotta, stamped to the centre rACkot.M.s, with a flared rim and ring foot, 17.5cm diameter.

Provenance

Thomas Scoular Campbell (c.1880s - 1966) and thence by descent.

£120­160

474

An Amlash spouted vessel probably circa 1000 ­ 800 BC earthenware with an encrusted patina, with incised lines to the base of the neck, a ring handle and a channeled spout, 25.3cm high.

Provenance

From the estate of the late Eldred Trewvella “Bill” Bennette. London and Dorset. (1946 - 2024)

£300­500

476

A set of three Egyptian Grand Tour graduated gilt metal pyramids early 20th century each decorated pharoah’s, sphinx and pyramids under the sun, 4cm, 5cm and 6cm wide. (3)

Provenance

Thomas Scoular Campbell (c.1880s - 1966) and thence by descent.

£150­250

ARTS OF AFRICA, OCEANIA & THE AMERICAS

TUESDAY 16TH SEPTEMBER 2025

An Aboriginal parrying shield

Australia 85cm long

Estimate £4,000 ­ 6,000*

ENQUIRIES

Will Hobbs +44 (0)1722 339752 | wh@woolleys.live

*Visit woolleyandwallis.co.uk/buying for additional charges on final hammer price

AUCTION INFORMATION

OPENING HOURS

City Centre Salerooms

Monday to Friday 9am – 5pm

Old Sarum Galleries

Monday to Friday 9am – 5pm

VIEWING

All our auctions are on view at least two days prior to the sale and details will be found in the relevant catalogues.

REGISTERING WITH US

All first time buyers need to register with us.

To register, you will need to provide two forms of identification:

1. a passport or photographic driving licence

2. a utility bill or document showing your name and address

You can register in person or by contacting client services on 01722 424500 or emailing id@woolleys.live

You will be asked to show your documents or email copies.

PLEASE NOTE: Registering with our website, or any third party website, does not automatically register you to bid with us.

BIDDING AT AUCTION

See below for the different options for bidding. Please note that you may be asked to provide two forms of identification, even if you have bid with us before, in order that we are compliant with Money Laundering Regulations.

BIDDING IN THE ROOM

To bid at auction you will need a paddle number. This can be obtained from client services either during the view or on the day of the sale.

COMMISSION BIDDING

If you are unable to attend the sale you can leave a commission bid. This will be executed on your behalf by the auctioneer who will purchase the lot as cheaply as possible bearing in mind any reserve price and other bids.

TELEPHONE BIDDING

It is usually possible to bid on the telephone by prior arrangement with client services

LIVE ONLINE BIDDING

Live online bidding is now available free of charge for most of our auctions via bid.woolleyandwallis.co.uk, enabling you to take part in the bidding from anywhere in the world live as it happens.

BUYER’S PREMIUM

The Buyer shall pay the hammer price together with a premium thereon of 26% plus VAT @20% (totalling 31.2% inclusive) on the first £500,000 and 20% plus VAT @20% (24% inclusive) thereafter.

CONDITION REPORTS

The relevant department will be pleased to give condition reports on any lot, where practical. All weights and measures given in the catalogue should be regarded as approximate.

The colours printed in the catalogue are not necessarily true.

SALE RESULTS

These will be posted on our website shortly after the sale.

PACKING AND SHIPPING

Woolley & Wallis do not offer a packing and despatch service but the following are carriers in our area.

Alban Shipping +44 (0)1582 493099 info@albanshipping.co.uk www.albanshipping.co.uk

Kimdan Ltd +44 (0)7973 389436 andy@kimdan.co.uk

Mailboxes +44 (0)1962 622133 info@mbewinchester.co.uk www.mbe.co.uk/winchester

ZIXIS Fine Art Limited +44 (0)7873 981026 zixisfineart@163.com www.zixisfineart.co.uk

Please note that we cannot be held responsible for any damage or loss to items once they are in the hands of a carrier.

EXPORTING YOUR PROPERTY FROM THE UK

If you are exporting your property, import taxes, customs duties and other fees may apply at the country of destination. It is also your responsibility to ensure that your shipment can be lawfully imported to the destination country.

Please note that due to the withdrawal of the Retail Export Scheme by HMRC, we are unable to provide VAT refund documentation (C88) for hand­carried exports.

In order to qualify for a VAT refund, your lots must be exported by a shipper and valid export documentation must be provided.

PAYMENT AND CLEARANCE

Payment is due immediately after the auction in pounds sterling. If you are a first time buyer we will need your name, address and bank details and will require funds to be cleared before purchases can be released.

The following methods of payment may be made:

Bacs, debit and credit cards

Wire transfers should be sent to:

Lloyds Bank plc, Blue Boar Row, Salisbury SP1 1DB.

Account no. 00957707

Sort code 30­97­41

IBAN no. GB20LOYD30974100957707

BIC code LOYDGB21063

Debit and Credit cards: Visa, Mastercard, Amex or Union Pay.

Where practical, payment can be made and purchases collected during the auction.

We reserve the right to add storage charges to all lots not collected within 30 calendar days of the sale. This will include a handling fee of £20 (+ VAT) per consignment and a storage charge of £2 (+ VAT) per lot per day. No goods will be allowed to be collected until these charges have been paid.

LOT SYMBOLS

VAT

Lots marked with an dagger (†) are subject to VAT on the hammer price. Lots marked with an omega (Ω) have been temporarily imported from outside the EU and are subject to VAT at 5% on the hammer price and the buyer’s premium. In online catalogues, the Sales Tax % column indicates the rate of VAT on hammer price.

CITES REGULATIONS

Please note that lots marked λ may be subject to CITES Regulations when exported.

The CITES Regulations may be found at www.defra.gov.uk/ahvlaen/imports­exports/cites/

ARTIST’S RESALE RIGHT / DROIT DE SUITE

Lots marked with a Φ symbol are potentially subject to a levy.

Droit de Suite is a royalty payable to a qualifying artist or the artist’s heirs each time a work is resold during the artist’s lifetime and up to a period of 70 years after the artist’s death.

Royalties are calculated on a sliding percentage scale based on the hammer price excluding the buyer’s premium. The royalty does not apply to lots selling below £1,000 and the maximum royalty payable on any single lot is £12,500.

Droit de Suite, which is not subject to VAT, will be added to the buyer’s purchase price and then passed on to the relevant collecting agency.

Royalties for Droit de Suite are as follows:

4% Up to £50,000

3%

1%

0.5%

£50,000.01 ­ 200,000

£200,000.01 ­ 350,000

£350,000.01 ­ 500,000

0.25% In excess of £500,000

Up to a maximum levy of £12,500

FIREARMS

Lots marked Ƒ in the catalogue, or by any other means identified as controlled firearms, are subject to the UK firearms/shotgun licencing regime, and should only be viewed/purchased by individuals with appropriate licences. It is the responsibility of the bidders to ensure that they are legally authorised to acquire the lot that they are bidding for. In the event that such a lot is successfully bid for by an individual who is not authorised to possess it, that individual will be required to pay for it, but will not be allowed to take physical possession of it. The auctioneers will re­offer the lot on behalf of the buyer in a future auction; or may accept instructions to dispose of it by some other legal means, at their discretion.

INFORMATION FOR BUYERS

1 . Introduction. The following informative notes are intended to assist Buyers, particularly those inexperienced or new to our salerooms. All sales are conducted on our printed Conditions of Sale which are readily available for inspection and normally accompany catalogues. Our staff will be happy to help you if there is anything you do not fully understand.

2. Agency. As auctioneers we usually contract as agents for the seller whose identity, for reasons of confidentiality, is not normally disclosed. Accordingly if you buy your primary contract is with the seller.

3. Estimates. Estimates are designed to help buyers gauge what sort of sum might be involved for the purchase of a particular lot. The lower estimate may represent the reserve price and certainly will not be below it. Estimates do not include the Buyer’s Premium or VAT (where chargeable). Estimates are prepared some time before the sale and may be altered by announcement before the sale. They are in no sense definitive.

4. The purchase price. The Buyer shall pay the hammer price together with a premium thereon of 26% plus VAT @20% (totalling 31.2% inclusive) on the first £500,000 and 20% plus VAT @20% (24%) inclusive thereafter.

5. VAT. (†) indicates that VAT at the current standard rate is payable by the purchaser on the hammer price as well as being an element in the buyer’s premium. This imposition of VAT is likely to be because the seller is registered for VAT within the European Union and is not operating the Dealers Margin Scheme or because VAT is due at 20% on importation into the UK. The omega symbol (Ω) indicates that the lot has been imported from outside the European Union and the present position is that these lots are liable to a reduced rate of VAT (5%) on the gross lot price (i.e. both the hammer price and the buyer’s premium). Lots which appear without either of the above symbols indicate that no VAT is payable on the hammer price. This is because such lots are sold using the Auctioneers’ Margin Scheme and it should be noted that the VAT included within the Premium is not recoverable as input tax.

6. We are, primarily, agents for the seller. We are dependent on information provided by the seller and whilst we may inspect lots and act reasonably in taking a general view about them we are normally unable to carry out a detailed or any examination of lots in order to ascertain their condition in the way in which it would be wise for a buyer to do. Intending buyers have ample opportunity for inspection of goods and, therefore, accept responsibility for inspecting and investigating lots in which they may be interested. Please note carefully the exclusion of liability for the condition of lots contained in the Conditions of Sale. Neither the seller nor we, as the auctioneers, accept any responsibility for their condition. In particular, mechanical objects of any age are not guaranteed to be in working order. However, in so far as we have examined the goods and make a representation about their condition, we shall be liable for any defect which that examination ought to have revealed to the auctioneer but which would not have been revealed to the buyer had the buyer examined the goods. Additionally, in specified circumstances lots misdescribed because they are ‘deliberate forgeries’ may be returned and repayment made. There is a 3 week time limit. (The expression ‘deliberate forgery’ is defined in our Conditions of Sale).

7. Electrical goods. These are sold as ‘antiques’ only and if bought for use must be checked over for compliance with safety regulations by a qualified electrician first.

8. Export of goods. Buyers intending to export goods should ascertain (a) whether an export licence is required for the goods to leave the U.K. and (b) whether there is any specific prohibition on importing the goods in question into the destination country because, e.g. they may contain prohibited materials such as ivory. Charges may be applicable for export licences. Ask us if you need help. The denial of any permit or licence shall not justify cancellation or rescission of the sale contract or any delay in payment.

9. Bidding. Bidders will be required to register before the sale commences and lots will be invoiced to the name and address on the registration form. Some form of identification will be required if you are unknown to us. Please enquire in advance about our arrangements for telephone bidding.

10. Commission bidding. Commission bids may be left with the auctioneers indicating the maximum amount to be bid excluding buyers’ premium. They will be executed as cheaply as possible having regard to the reserve (if any) and competing bids. If two buyers submit identical commission bids the auctioneers may prefer the first bid received. Please enquire in advance about our arrangements for the leaving of commission bids by telephone.

11. Methods of Payment. As a general rule any cheques tendered will need to be cleared before removal of the goods is permitted. Please discuss with client services in advance of the sale if other methods of payment are envisaged.

12. Collection and storage. Please note what the Conditions of Sale state about collection and storage. It is important that goods are paid for and collected promptly. Any delay may involve the buyer in paying storage charges.

TERMS OF CONSIGNMENT FOR SELLERS

1. Interpretation. In these Terms the words ‘you’, ‘yours’, etc. refer to the Seller and if the consignment of goods to us is made by an agent we assume that the Seller has authorised the consignment and that the consignor has the Seller’s authority to contract. Similarly the words ‘we’, ‘us’, etc. refer to the Auctioneers.

2. Commission is charged to sellers at the following rates: 15% + VAT on each lot sold for up to £999, 10% + VAT on each lot realising £1,000 and above.

3. Removal costs. Items for sale must be consigned to the sale room by any stated deadline and at your expense. We may be able to assist you with this process but any liability incurred to a carrier for haulage charges is solely your responsibility.

4. Loss and damage waiver. We are not regulated by the FSA for the provision of insurance to clients. However, we for our own protection assume liability for property consigned to us at lower pre­sale estimate. To justify accepting liability, we make a charge of 1.5% of the hammer price plus VAT or, if unsold, our mid estimate of the hammer price. If the owner of goods consigned instructs us in writing not to take such action, they then remain at owner’s risk unless and until the property in them passes to the Buyer or they are collected by or on behalf of the owner, and clause 4 is inapplicable.

5. Illustrations. The cost of any illustrations is borne by you. If we consider that the lot should be illustrated your permission will usually be asked first. The copyright in respect of such illustrations shall be the property of us, the auctioneers, as is the text of the catalogue.

6. Minimum bids and our discretion. Goods may be offered subject to a reserve agreed between us before the sale in accordance with clause 7.

7. We may sell lots below the reserve provided we account to you for the same sale proceeds as you would have received had the reserve been the hammer price. If you specifically give us ‘discretion’ we may accept a bid of up to 10% below the formal reserve.

Reserves.

(a) You are entitled to place prior to the auction a reserve on any lot consigned, being the minimum hammer price at which that lot may be sold. Reserves must be reasonable and we may decline to offer goods which in our opinion would be subject to an unreasonably high reserve (in which case goods carry the storage and insurance charges stipulated in these Terms of Consignment).

(b) A reserve once set cannot be changed except with our consent.

(c) Where a reserve has been placed only we may bid on your behalf and only up to the reserve (if any) and you may in no circumstances bid personally.

8. Electrical items. These are subject to detailed statutory safety controls. Where such items are accepted for sale you accept responsibility for the cost of testing by external contractors. Goods not certified as safe by an electrician (unless antiques) will not be accepted for sale. They must be removed at your expense on your being notified. We reserve the right to dispose of unsafe goods as refuse, at your expense.

9. Soft furnishings. The sale of soft furnishings is strictly regulated by statute law in the interests of fire safety. Goods found to infringe safety regulations will not be offered and must be removed at your expense. We reserve the right to dispose of unsafe goods as refuse, at your expense. The rights of disposal referred to in clause 8 and 9 are subject to the provisions of The Torts (Interference with Goods) Act 1977, Schedule 1, a copy of which is available for inspection on request.

10. Descriptions. Please assist us with accurate information as to the provenance etc. of goods where this is relevant. There is strict liability for the accuracy of descriptions under modern consumer legislation and in some circumstances responsibility lies with sellers if inaccuracies occur. We will assume that you have approved the catalogue description of your lots unless informed to the contrary. Where we are obliged to return the price to the buyer when the lot is a deliberate forgery under Condition 15 of the Conditions of Sale and we have accounted to you for the proceeds of sale you agree to reimburse us the sale proceeds. The liability to reimburse the sale proceeds shall not arise where you are acting reasonably and honestly and are unaware of the forgery but we are or ought to have been aware of it.

11. Unsold and withdrawn items. If an item is unsold it may with your consent be reoffered at a future sale. Where in our opinion an item is unsaleable you must collect such items from the saleroom promptly on being so informed. Otherwise, storage charges may be incurred. We reserve the right to charge for storage in these circumstances at a reasonable daily rate.

12. Withdrawn and bought in items. These are liable to incur a charge of up to 10% plus VAT of the reserve or low estimate on being bought in or withdrawn after being catalogued.

13. Conditions of Sale. You agree that all goods will be sold on our Conditions of Sale. In particular you undertake that you have the right to sell the goods either as owner or agent for the owner. You undertake to compensate us and any buyer or third party for all losses liabilities and expenses incurred in respect of and as a result of any breach of this undertaking.

14. Authority to deduct commission and expenses and retain premium and interest.

(a) You authorise us to deduct commission at the stated rate and all expenses incurred for your account from the hammer price and consent to our right to retain beneficially the premium paid by the buyer in accordance with our Conditions of Sale and any interest earned on the sale proceeds until the date of settlement.

(b) You authorise us in our discretion to negotiate a sale by private treaty not later than the close of business on the day of the sale in the case of lots unsold at auction, in which case the same charges will be payable as if such lots had been sold at auction and so far as appropriate these terms apply.

15. Warehousing. We disclaim all liability for goods delivered to our saleroom without sufficient sale instructions and reserve the right to make minimum warehousing charge of £2 per lot per day. Unsold lots are subject to the same charges if you do not remove them within a reasonable time of notification. If not removed within three weeks we reserve the right to sell them and defray charges from any net proceeds of sale or at your expense to consign them to the local authority for disposal.

16. Settlement. Subject to our normal trading conditions, payment will be made by BACS or cheque 5 weeks after the sale unless the buyer has not paid for the goods. In this case no settlement will then be made but we will take your instructions in the light of our Conditions of Sale. You authorise any sums owed by you to us on other transactions to be deducted from the sale proceeds. You must note the liability to reimburse the proceeds of sale to us as under the circumstances provided for in Condition 10 above. You should therefore bear this potential liability in mind before parting with the proceeds of sale until the expiry of 28 days from the date of sale.

CONDITIONS OF SALE

Woolley & Wallis Salisbury Salerooms Ltd carries on business with bidders, buyers and all those present in the auction room prior to or in connection with a sale on the following General Conditions and on such other terms, conditions and notices as may be referred to herein.

1. DEFINITIONS

In these Conditions:

(a) ‘auctioneer’ means Woolley & Wallis Salisbury Salerooms Ltd or its authorised auctioneer, as appropriate;

(b) ‘deliberate forgery’ means an imitation made with the intention of deceiving as to authorship, origin, date, age, period, culture or source but which is unequivocally described in the catalogue as being the work of a particular creator and which at the date of the sale had a value materially less than it would have had if it had been in accordance with the description;

(c) ‘hammer price’ means the level of bidding reached (at or above any reserve) when the auctioneer brings down the hammer;

(d) ‘terms of consignment’ means the stipulated terms and rates of commission on which Woolley & Wallis Salisbury Salerooms Ltd accepts instructions from sellers or their agents;

(e) ‘total amount due’ means the hammer price in respect of the lot sold together with any premium, Value Added Tax chargeable and any additional charges payable by a defaulting buyer under these Conditions;

(f) ‘sale proceeds’ means the net amount due to the seller, being the hammer price of the lot sold less commission at the stated rate, Value Added Tax chargeable and any other amounts due to us by the seller in whatever capacity and however arising.

(g) ‘‘You’, ‘Your’, etc. refer to the buyer as identified in Condition 2.

(h) The singular includes the plural and vice versa as appropriate.

2. BIDDING PROCEDURES AND THE BUYER

(a) Bidders are required to register their particulars before bidding and to satisfy any security arrangements before entering the auction room to view or bid;

(b) the maker of the highest bid accepted by the auctioneer conducting the sale shall be the buyer at the hammer price and any dispute about a bid shall be settled at the auctioneer’s absolute discretion by reoffering the Lot during the course of the auction or otherwise. The auctioneer shall act reasonably in exercising this discretion.

(c) Bidders shall be deemed to act as principals.

(d) Our right to bid on behalf of the seller is expressly reserved up to the amount of any reserve and the right to refuse any bid is also reserved.

3. INCREMENTS

Bidding increments shall be at the auctioneer’s sole discretion.

4. THE PURCHASE PRICE

The Buyer shall pay the hammer price together with a premium thereon of 26% plus VAT @20% (totalling 31.2% inclusive) on the first £500,000 and 20% plus VAT @20% (24%) inclusive thereafter.

5. VALUE ADDED TAX

Value Added Tax on the hammer price is imposed by law on all items affixed with a † or Ω. Value Added Tax is charged at the appropriate rate prevailing by law at the date of sale and is payable by buyers of relevant lots. (Please refer to ‘Information for Buyers’ for a brief explanation of the VAT position).

6. PAYMENT

(a) Immediately a lot is sold you will:

(i) give to us, if requested, proof of identity, and

(ii) pay to us the total amount due in pounds sterling

(b) Any payments by you to us may be applied by us towards any sums owing from you to us on any account whatever without regard to any directions of you or your agent, whether express or implied.

(c) In line with new legislation we reserve the right to investigate and identify the source of any funds received by us. The completion of the sale of a Lot will be postponed or cancelled at our discretion if further time is needed for investigation, or if you are in breach of your warranties as a buyer, or if we consider the sale to be unlawful or in any way cause liabilities or be detrimental to either Woolley and Wallis or the Seller.

7. TITLE AND COLLECTION OF PURCHASES

(a) The ownership of any Lots purchased shall not pass to you until you have made payment in full to us of the total amount due.

(b) You shall at your own risk and expense collect any lots that you have purchased and paid for from our premises not later than 3 working days following the day of the auction or upon the clearance of any cheque used for payment (if later) after which you shall be responsible for any collection, storage and insurance charges.

(c) No purchase may be collected and we shall not release any lot to you or your agent until it has been paid for.

8. REMEDIES FOR NON­PAYMENT OR FAILURE TO COLLECT PURCHASES

(a) If any Lot is not paid for in full and taken away in accordance with these Conditions or if there is any other breach of these Conditions, we, as agent for the seller and on our own behalf, shall at our absolute discretion and without prejudice to any other rights we may have, be entitled to exercise one or more of the following rights and remedies:

(i) to proceed against you for damages for breach of contract;

(ii) to rescind the sale of that lot and/or any other lots sold by us to you;

(iii) to resell the lot (by auction or private treaty) in which case you shall be responsible for any resulting deficiency in the total amount due (after crediting any part payment and adding any resale costs). Any surplus so arising shall belong to the seller;

(iv) to remove, store and insure the lot at your expense and, in the case of storage, either at our premises or elsewhere;

(v) to charge interest at a rate not exceeding 1.5% per month on the total amount due to the extent it remains unpaid for more than 3 working days after the sale;

(vi) to retain that or any other lot sold to you until you pay the total amount due;

(vii) to reject or ignore bids from you or your agent at future auctions or to impose conditions before any such bids shall be accepted;

(viii) to apply any proceeds of sale of other Lots due or in future becoming due to you towards the settlement of the total amount due and to exercise a lien (that is a right to retain possession of any of your property in our possession for any purpose until the debt due is satisfied.

(b) We shall, as agent for the seller and on our own behalf pursue these rights and remedies only so far as is reasonable to make appropriate recovery in respect of breach of these conditions

9. THIRD PARTY LIABILITY

All members of the public on our premises are there at their own risk and must note the lay­out of the accommodation and security arrangements. Accordingly neither the auctioneer nor our employees or agents shall incur liability for death or personal injury (except as required by law by reason of our negligence) or similarly for the safety of the property of persons visiting prior to or at a sale.

10. COMMISSION BIDS

Whilst prospective buyers are strongly advised to attend the auction and are always responsible for any decision to bid for a particular lot and shall be assumed to have carefully inspected and satisfied themselves as to its condition, we will if so instructed clearly and in writing execute bids on their behalf. Neither the auctioneer nor our employees or agents shall be responsible for any failure to do so save where such failure is unreasonable. Where two or more commission bids at the same level are recorded we reserve the right in our absolute discretion to prefer the first bid so made.

11. WARRANTY OF TITLE AND AVAILABILITY

The seller warrants to the auctioneer and you that the seller is the true owner of the property consigned or is properly authorised by the true owner to consign it for sale and is able to transfer good and marketable title to the property free from any third party claims.

12. AGENCY

The auctioneer normally acts as agent only and disclaims any responsibility for default by sellers or buyers.

13. TERMS OF SALE

The seller acknowledges that lots are sold subject to the stipulations of these Conditions in their entirety and on the Terms of Consignment as notified to the consignor at the time of the entry of the lot.

14. DESCRIPTIONS AND CONDITION

(a) Whilst we seek to describe lots accurately, it may be impractical for us to carry out exhaustive due diligence on each lot. Prospective buyers are given ample opportunities to view and inspect before any sale and they (and any independent experts on their behalf) must satisfy themselves as to the accuracy of any description applied to a lot. Prospective buyers also bid on the understanding that, inevitably, representations or statements by us as to authorship, genuineness, origin, date, age, provenance, condition or estimated selling price involve matters of opinion. We undertake that any such opinion shall be honestly and reasonably held and accept liability for opinions given negligently or fraudulently. Subject to the foregoing neither we the auctioneer nor our employees or agents nor the seller accept liability for the correctness of such opinions and all conditions and warranties, whether relating to description, condition or quality of lots, express, implied or statutory, are hereby excluded. This Condition is subject to the next following Condition concerning deliberate forgeries and applies save as provided for in paragraph 6 ‘information to buyers’.

(b) Private treaty sales made under these Conditions are deemed to be sales by auction for purposes of consumer legislation.

15. FORGERIES

Notwithstanding the preceding Condition, any lot which proves to be a deliberate forgery (as defined) may be returned to us by you within 21 days of the auction provided it is in the same condition as when bought, and is accompanied by particulars identifying it from the relevant catalogue description and a written statement of defects. If we are satisfied from the evidence presented that the lot is a deliberate forgery we shall refund the money paid by you for the lot including any buyer’s premium provided that (1) if the catalogue description reflected the accepted view of scholars and experts as at the date of sale or (2) you personally are not able to transfer a good and marketable title to us, you shall have no rights under this condition. The right of return provided by this Condition is additional to any right or remedy provided by law or by these Conditions of Sale.

GENERAL

16. We shall have the right at our discretion, to refuse admission to our premises or attendance at our auctions by any person.

17. (a) Any right to compensation for losses liabilities and expenses incurred in respect of and as a result of any breach of these Conditions and any exclusions provided by them shall be available to the seller and/or the auctioneer as appropriate.

(b) Such rights and exclusions shall extend to and be deemed to be for the benefit of employees and agents of the seller and/or the auctioneer who may themselves enforce them.

18. Any notice to any buyer, seller, bidder or viewer may be given by first class mail or Swiftmail in which case it shall be deemed to have been received by the addressee 48 hours after posting.

19. Special terms may be used in catalogue descriptions of particular classes of items in which case the descriptions must be interpreted in accordance with any glossary appearing in the catalogue.

20. Any indulgence extended to bidders buyers or sellers by us notwithstanding the strict terms of these Conditions or of the Terms of Consignment shall affect the position at the relevant time only and in respect of that particular concession only; in all other respects these Conditions shall be construed as having full force and effect.

21. English law applies to the interpretation of these Conditions.

22. Prior written consent must be sought by the buyer or any other party for the use of any images, illustrations and written materials produced by or for Woolley & Wallis relating to a lot or sale, including the contents of a catalogue. Copyright for any of the aforementioned will remain the property of Woolley & Wallis, subject to the provisions of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. Woolley & Wallis and the seller make no representations or warranties that the buyer of a lot will acquire any copyright or other reproduction rights to it.

PAINTINGS, DRAWINGS, LITHOGRAPHS, ENGRAVINGS AND PRINTS

In accordance with long standing practice in Fine Art Sale Rooms certain terms used in descriptions in the Catalogue have the meanings ascribed to them in the glossary below.

GLOSSARY

Any statement as to authorship, attribution, origin, date, age, provenance and condition is a statement of opinion and is not to be taken as a statement of fact. The Company reserves the right, in forming their opinion, to consult and rely upon any expect or authority considered by them to be reliable.

(a) Edward Lear: In our opinion a work by the artist. (When the artist’s forename(s) is not known, a series of asterisks, followed by the surname of the artist, whether preceded by an initial or not, indicates that in our opinion the work is by the artist named.

(b) Attributed to Edward Lear: In our opinion probably a work by the artist but less certainly as to authorship is expressed than in the preceding category.

(c) Studio of Edward Lear: In our opinion a work by an unknown hand in the studio of the artist which may be or may not have been executed under the artist’s direction.

(d) Circle of Edward Lear: In our opinion a work by an as yet unidentified but distinct hand, closely associated with the named artist but not necessarily his pupil.

(e) Style of ...; Follower of Edward Lear: In our opinion a work by a painter working in the artist’s style, contemporary or nearly contemporary, but not necessarily his pupil.

(f) Manner of Edward Lear: In our opinion a work in the style of the artist and of a later date.

(g) After Edward Lear: In our opinion a copy of a known work of the artist.

(h) The term signed and/or dated and/or inscribed means that in our opinion the signature and/or date and/or inscription are from the hand of the artist.

(i) The term bears a signature and/or date and/or inscription means that in our opinion the signature and/or date and/or inscription have been added by another hand.

(j) Dimensions are given height before width.

(k) Pictures are framed unless otherwise stated.

BOOK AUCTIONS

If, on collation, any named item in this catalogue proves defective in text or illustration, the lot may be returned within 14 days of the sale with the defects stated in writing. This proviso shall not apply to defects stated in the catalogue or announced at the time of sale; nor to the absence of blanks, half titles, tissue guards or advertisements, damage in respect of bindings, stains, spotting, marginal tears or other defects not affecting completeness of text or illustration; nor to drawings, autographs, letters or manuscripts, signed photographs, music, atlases, maps or periodicals; nor to books not identified by title; nor to books sold not subject to return.

ARTIST’S RESALE RIGHT / DROIT DE SUITE

Droit de Suite is a royalty payable to a qualifying artist or the artist’s heirs each time a work is resold during the artist’s lifetime and up to a period of 70 years after the artist’s death.

Royalties are calculated on a sliding percentage scale based on the hammer price excluding the buyer’s premium. The royalty does not apply to lots selling below £1,000 and the maximum royalty payable on any single lot is £12,500.

Droit de Suite, which is not subject to VAT, will be added to the buyer’s purchase price and then passed on to the relevant collecting agency by the auctioneer.

Royalties for Droit de Suite are as follows:

4% Up to £50,000

3% £50,000.01 ­ 200,000

1% £200,000.01 ­ 350,000

0.5% £350,000.01 ­ 500,000

0.25% In excess of £500,000

Up to a maximum levy of £12,500

Lots marked with a Φ symbol are potentially subject to the levy.

PRIVACY NOTICE FOR CUSTOMERS

WHAT THIS PRIVACY NOTICE DOES

This privacy notice (Notice) explains how Woolley and Wallis Salisbury Salerooms Limited (us, we, our, Woolley & Wallis), processes the personal data of users of our auction and valuation services (Services) and includes buyers, bidders and sellers of auction items as well as prospective users of our Services (you, your). It also explains your rights in relation to the personal data we hold about you.

This Notice is effective from May 2018. We may change this Notice from time to time. Any significant changes will be notified to you.

DATA CONTROLLER AND CONTACT DETAILS

Woolley and Wallis is the data controller of your personal data and is subject to the Data Protection Act 2018 (DPA) and the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).

If you have any questions about how we use your personal data, whom we share it with, or if you wish to exercise any of the rights set out in this Notice, please contact us using the following details:

• By post – Privacy Officer, Woolley and Wallis Salisbury Salerooms, 51­61 Castle Street, Salisbury, SP1 3SU.

• By email – privacyofficer@woolleys.live

• By telephone – +44 (0)1722 424599

HOW WE COLLECT YOUR PERSONAL DATA

We collect your personal data from the following sources: From you when you:

• interact with us before entering into a contract with us, for example when you express your interest in our Services;

• instruct us to provide Services to you, sign contractual documentation and provide information in connection with those instructions;

• communicate with us by post, telephone, email or via our website, for example in order to make enquiries or register for an online account;

• in various other ways as you interact with us during your time as a user (or potential user) of our Services, for the various purposes set out below.

From third parties such as:

• other auction houses and individuals and organisations in the auctioneering trade whom we may contact to check background details about you;

• the­saleroom.com who enable live online bidding and provide us with the name, contact details, the last four digits of registered payment cards and transaction history (in relation to activity on the­saleroom.com) of individuals who register for one of our auctions (please see the­saleroom.com’s privacy policy for further information). We also receive names, contact details, sale details and payment details (the amount and date paid) from realex payments (the­saleroom.com’s payment provider);

• sage pay who process payments on our behalf and who provide us with your name, contact details and payment details (only the last four digits of your payment card are provided);

• shipping companies whom you hire to collect items you purchased from us.

THE CATEGORIES OF PERSONAL DATA WE COLLECT

We may collect the following personal data about you:

• your name and contact details including address, telephone and email address;

• your image, as captured by CCTV, if you attend our premises;

• personal identification documents, including copies of government­issued identification such as passport and driving license which are required to register bidders (or when we need to verify a seller’s details);

• account details and other information relating to your transactions/dealings with us and your use of our Services;

• payment details such as credit card and bank account details;

• credit and payment history (where you open an account with us as a buyer or bidder);

• information on your collecting preferences and aspirations, and your collections, acquisitions and disposals; and

• other information that you provide to us, for example, when you have a comment/complaint, submit a question, take part in a survey or where you express an interest in receiving marketing material or request further information.

We may also process special categories of personal data, including information concerning your health and medical conditions (for example, disability), where relevant to the provision of our Services.

THE BASIS FOR PROCESSING YOUR DATA, HOW WE USE THAT DATA AND WITH WHOM WE SHARE THAT DATA

WHERE

WE HAVE A CONTRACTUAL RELATIONSHIP WITH YOU

We will process your personal data because it is necessary for the performance of a contract with you (for example, a contract to use our Services) or in order to take steps at your request prior to entering into a contract. In this respect, we use your personal data for the following:

• to interact with you before you enter into a contract with us, such as when you express your interest in our Services (for example, to send you information about our Services or answer enquiries about our Services);

• once you have engaged us and entered into a contract, to provide you with the Services set out in any contractual documents.

In this respect we will provide your data to our third party suppliers or subcontractors as necessary whom we engage to help us perform our Services or who assist us in conducting our business, such as our IT suppliers, data storage providers, and valuation companies.

LEGITIMATE INTERESTS

We may also process your personal data because it is necessary for our or a third party’s legitimate interests. Our legitimate interests include our commercial interests. In this respect, we may use your personal data for the following:

• to monitor and evaluate the performance and effectiveness of our Services, including by training our staff or monitoring their performance;

• to deal with any concerns or feedback you may have in the performance of the Services;

• for our internal business record keeping and processes;

• to seek advice on our rights and obligations, including obtaining legal advice;

• to contact you for marketing purposes. If you do not wish to receive such information, please let us know now or at any time in the future, and your details will be removed from our marketing list. We will not provide your personal data to third party organisations to use for their own marketing purposes;

• to customise our website and marketing communications in line with your particular interests or preferences;

• to collect money owed to us or our consignors;

• to carry out background and credit checks in relation to bidders and buyers.

In this respect we will provide your data to the following:

• our professional advisors;

• the­saleroom.com;

• debt collection agencies;

• third parties who assist us with our marketing;

• our website and email management software provider.

LEGAL OBLIGATIONS

We may also process your Personal Data for our compliance with our legal obligations.

In this respect, we may use your Personal Data for the following:

• to meet our compliance and regulatory obligations, such as our tax reporting requirements or to carry out identity checks;

• in order to assist with investigations (including criminal investigations) carried out by competent authorities;

In this respect we will provide your data to the following:

• external auditors;

• the police and other competent authorities, including HMRC;

CONSENT

We may also process your Personal Data where we have your specific consent to do so (for example, where we have your agreement to include information about you (as a seller) in sale marketing materials) or where we have sought and obtained your consent to send you direct marketing by email, or for the use of cookies on our website. If you have given your consent and you wish to withdraw it, please contact us using the contact details set out above.

Please note that where our processing of your personal data relies on your consent and where you then withdraw that consent, we may not be able to provide all or some aspects of our Services to you and/or it may affect the provision of our Services.

SPECIAL CATEGORIES OF PERSONAL DATA

We process special categories of personal data for the following reasons:

• if it is necessary to protect your or another person’s vital interests (for example, where you have a life­threatening accident or illness and we have to process your personal data to ensure you receive appropriate medical attention);

• if it is necessary for the establishment, exercise or defence of legal claims (for example, to protect and defend our rights, and/or the rights of our customers);

We may process information relating to your health where we have your explicit consent to do so (for example, when you provide information about your access requirements prior to attending one of our events).

INTERNATIONAL TRANSFERS OF DATA

We transfer names and addresses on our Asian mailing list to a printing company in Hong Kong to distribute our auction catalogues and promotional material. In these circumstances, your personal data will be transferred subject to standard data protection clauses (adopted by the European Commission) and included in our contract with the printing company.

We share your data collected for marketing purposes and through our website with our website and email management software provider who are based in Jersey. In these circumstances, your personal data is transferred to them subject to an Adequacy Decision made by the European Commission in respect of Jersey.

PROFILING

We may use your geographical location to target our communications and advertising and promotions to you. If you do not wish us to do this, then please contact us using the details provided above.

HOW LONG YOUR INFORMATION IS KEPT

We will retain your personal data for as long as we are providing you with the Services referred to in any contractual document, and for as long as is required for legal, regulatory, fraud prevention and our legitimate business purposes after the termination of your account/agreement with us, or if your application for a particular Service is declined or abandoned.

In particular:

• in relation to CCTV images taken when you attend our premises, we will retain these for a few months;

• in relation to personal data relating to the transactions you have entered into with us as part of the provision of our Services, we will retain that data for period of seven years after that transaction has concluded in case any legal claims arise out of the provision of those Services;

• we will retain your details on our marketing database until you inform us that you no longer wish to receive our marketing communications. However, where you do unsubscribe from our marketing communications we will keep your details on a suppression list to ensure that we do not send you information you have asked not to receive;

• in relation to personal data relating to the provenance of works, we may retain that data indefinitely in our legitimate interests and the legitimate interests of the wider art market in maintaining the integrity of that market.

YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS

Under the DPA you have the following rights:

• to obtain access to, and copies of, the personal data that we hold about you;

• to require that we cease processing your personal data if the processing is causing you damage or distress;

• to require us not to send you marketing communications.

• to require us to correct the personal data we hold about you if it is incorrect;

• to require us to erase your personal data;

• to require us to restrict our data processing activities (and, where our processing is based on your consent, you may withdraw that consent, without affecting the lawfulness of our processing based on consent before its withdrawal);

• to receive from us the personal data we hold about you which you have provided to us, in a reasonable format specified by you, including for the purpose of you transmitting that personal data to another data controller;

• to object, on grounds relating to your particular situation, to any of our particular processing activities where you feel this has a disproportionate impact on your rights.

Please note that the above rights are not absolute, and we may be entitled to refuse requests where exceptions apply

If you are not satisfied with how we are processing your personal data, you can raise a concern with the Information Commissioner. You can also find out more about your rights under data protection legislation from the Information Commissioner’s Office website available at: www.ico.org.uk

VALUATIONS

Valuations are a core part of our business and are usually carried out by a senior specialist or directors. Accuracy, speed and above all confidentiality are paramount.

INSURANCE VALUATIONS

Written valuations for insurance can vary from a single item to a large estate. Before starting we discuss the various options available so that the valuation is specifically tailored to individual client’s needs.

For valuations of an entire house contents an itemised bound valuation is produced and can be accompanied by photographs when required. In addition to providing an inventory, written valuations can prevent painful arguments with a loss adjuster in the event of a claim.

Woolley & Wallis valuations are accepted by all leading insurance companies.

PROBATE VALUATIONS

We offer a speedy and professional service for executors and trustees and provide bound valuations for probate and duplicate copies when required. Since security is often a consideration, we can usually arrange for a house to be cleared and sent for auction, our Valuations Department ensures that executors are informed of which sales are involved and the results thereof.

We also carry out valuations for Family Division, Capital Gains Tax, and Private Treaty Sales.

Contact Jeremy Lamond +44 (0)1722 424502 | valuations@woolleys.live

FREE AUCTION VALUATIONS

Free verbal valuations of items for sale are available by appointment. Please email valuations@woolleys.live or call +44 (0)1722 424500

ENTRIES ARE CURRENTLY BEING ACCEPTED FOR OUR 2025 AUCTIONS

2025 AUCTION CALENDAR

JANUARY

29th & 30th Fine Jewellery

FEBRUARY

4th & 5th Silver & Objects of Vertu

5th Fine Pottery & Porcelain

6th The Sir Bruno Welby Collection of Porcelain

19th Arts of Africa, Oceania & the Americas

MARCH

5th Old Masters, British & European Paintings

19th Clarice Cliff, Art Deco & Design

APRIL

9th & 10th Furniture, Works of Art & Clocks

15th & 16th Fine Jewellery

29th British and Continental Ceramics & Glass

30th Silver & Objects of Vertu (Day One)

MAY

1st Silver & Objects of Vertu (Day Two)

20th & 21st Asian Art, Chinese Paintings & Japanese Works of Art

Dates may be subject to change

A Yombe power figure

Democratic Republic of the Congo SOLD FOR £6,930*

+44 (0) 1722 424500 info@woolleys.live

51­61 Castle Street, Salisbury, SP1 3SU www.woolleyandwallis.co.uk

*Price includes buyer’s premium

Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.