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Eleanor Coade Sold at Auction Prices

Sculptor, b. 1733 - d. 1821

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      • Eleanor Coade (1733-1821) – attributed
        Nov. 30, 2022

        Eleanor Coade (1733-1821) – attributed

        Est: €900 -

        Eleanor Coade (1733-1821) - attributed, life size garden sculpture of a classical half nude Venus looking and turned to the side in folded clothes on round base, on fluted and richly decorated round base with pearl band and acanthus leaves on octagonal base coade stone white coloured weathered, parts missing, partly with stamped numbers and inscriptions, British, late 18th/early 19th century, total heigth 250 cm, sculpture only 150 cm, base only 100 cm

        Deutsch Auktionen
      • Eleanor Coade (1733-1821)
        Sep. 27, 2022

        Eleanor Coade (1733-1821)

        Est: €1,800 - €3,600

        Eleanor Coade (1733-1821), Life size garden sculpture of a classical half nude venus looking and turned to the side in falted clothes on round base. On fluted and richly decorated round base with pearl band and acanthus leaves on octagonal base coade stone white coloured weathered ,parts missing partly with stamped numbers and inscriptions british, late 18/early 19th century total heigth 250cm, sculpture only 150cm base 100cm

        Deutsch Auktionen
      • A fine Coade stone figure of Sybil late 18th
        May. 20, 2008

        A fine Coade stone figure of Sybil late 18th

        Est: £15,000 - £25,000

        A fine Coade stone figure of Sybil late 18th century 112cm.; 44ins high on 19th century wooden plinth 76cm.; 30ins high (plinth not shown) Eleanor Coade (d.1821) opened her Lambeth Manufactory for ceramic artificial stone in 1769, and appointed the sculptor John Bacon as its manager two years later. She was employed by all the leading late 18th Century architects. From about 1777 she began her engraved designs, which were published in 1784 in a catalogue of over 700 items entitled A Descriptive Catalogue of Coade's Artificial Stone Manufactory. Then in 1799, the year she entered into partnership with her cousin John Sealey, she issued a handbook of her Pedlar's Lane exhibition Gallery. The firm became Coade and Sealey from this date and following Sealey's death in 1813, it reverted to Coade and in 1821 with the death of the younger Eleanor Coade, control of the firm passed to William Croggan, who died in 1835, following bankruptcy. Coade's manufactures resembling a fine-grained natural stone, have always been famed for their durability.

        Summers Place Auctions
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