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Lot 1: CHARLES DIRCK WITTENOOM, (1791 – 1843), SKETCH OF THE TOWN OF PERTH, WESTERN AUSTRALIA, c.1836 – 37, watercolour and pencil on paper

Est: $150,000 AUD - $200,000 AUDSold:
Deutscher and HackettSydney, AustraliaSeptember 20, 2017

Item Overview

Description

CHARLES DIRCK WITTENOOM, (1791 – 1843), SKETCH OF THE TOWN OF PERTH, WESTERN AUSTRALIA, c.1836 – 37, watercolour and pencil on paper

SIGNED:
bears inscription on label verso: C. D. Wittenoom / A STREET SCENE IN PERTH / … / Drawn circa 1832. / …

DIMENSIONS:
22.5 x 34.5 cm

PROVENANCE:
Captain Alfred Walter Frances Fuller, United Kingdom
Thence by descent
Mrs Estelle Fuller, United Kingdom
Sotheby’s, London, 30 January 1969, lot 93
Private collection
Christie’s, Melbourne, 3 May 1988, lot 99
Private collection, Perth

EXHIBITED:
Various displays, Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth, February 1989 – 2017
Unknown Land: Mapping and Imagining Western Australia, Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth, 17 September 2016 – 30 January 2017 (as ‘Sketch of St. George’s Terrace, Perth’)

LITERATURE:
O’Brien, J. and Statham-Drew, P., On We Go: The Wittenoom Way – The Legacy of a Colonial Chaplain, Fremantle Press, Western Australia, 2009, pp. 46 – 47 (illus.)

ESSAY:
St George’s Terrace is the main thoroughfare of Perth. Formerly cited as one of the most charming boulevards in Australia, it was utterly transformed by the mining booms of the 1960s and 1970s. After a kilometre of imposing skyscrapers, a section of colonial buildings still stands clustered around the Barrack Street precinct but these date predominantly from the years after convict labourers arrived in the 1850s. Going back even further to 1837, Charles Wittenoom stood some twenty metres back from that corner as he drew this historically important view of the young township, then known as the Swan River Colony. To the right is the entrance to what is now Barrack Street, so named for the army barracks which originally stood along the track that continues on the other side of the Terrace. In the foreground, where a mature Marri tree is depicted leaning over the road, was the residence of the artist’s brother Reverend John Burdett Wittenoom who had arrived in Perth in 1830 to take up the position as the colony’s Chaplain, a mere seven months after the Lieutenant-Governor, Captain Stirling, had arrived with the first settlers on the Parmelia.

As part of his contract, Reverend Wittenoom was given title to lot L1, ‘a narrow, deep allotment of about one acre on St George’s Terrace’,1 with Bazaar Street (now The Esplanade) as one of its boundaries. He soon bought the adjoining lot, which had a claypit. Leasing this to a brick maker in return for a tithe of 10,000 bricks, Wittenoom and his sons constructed a handsome two-storey house: ‘The bricks were made and burnt on the premises … The ‘tout ensemble’ looks exceedingly well and hath rather a genteel appearance than otherwise. It is much admired, being decidedly the most substantial and best built house in the colony’.2 He also planted a bountiful garden featuring a grove of thirteen peach trees. Wittenoom had formerly taught at Oxford University and augmented his theological duties in Perth by founding the colony’s first grammar school in 1838. He enthusiastically promoted the new colony in letters home, describing the climate as being ‘splendid and more congenial to health than any other on the face of the globe’;3 and became involved with the Children’s Friend Society, a charitable organisation based in London which found posts in the various British colonies for orphaned or abandoned children. It was this confluence of interests that led his brother Charles to travel to Perth, arriving in late December 1835.

Already known as a sketcher and newspaper man, Charles chartered a small ship (the Giraffe) from London and brought with him ten children on behalf of the Children’s Friend Society.4 Four weeks later, he took the Giraffe on to Sydney where he stayed for a few months before charting another vessel, the Isabella, for a trading journey to the Dutch East Indies. Detained for a while in Timor, the Isabella returned to Sydney then continued to Perth, arriving 23 November 1836.5 This time Charles stayed for four months and it is almost certain that he completed this drawing during that period. In the early days of the colony there had been much speculation, but also much disappointment, fuelled by ‘get-rich-quick’ settler schemes proposed in London, most of which were undermined by dismal reports from returning ships’ captains who had deposited their passengers at the then-desolate tent city of Fremantle, some miles from the actual township of Perth. If the ships had journeyed further upstream, they would have found a more attractive and well-sheltered location described by its now-displaced indigenous inhabitants as ‘Nyungar boodjar, Nyungar land … [a river landscape created by] the Waakal or Dreamtime Serpent … weaving its bulky body across the plain, curving down to a wide path in front of The City of Perth, the bloated belly of a well-fed python’.6 Recognising the true potential of the new colony, the Wittenooms sought to change the misinformation being disseminated in England.

Sketch of the Town of Perth, Western Australia, c.1836 – 37 is one of only four known drawings executed by Charles Wittenoom whilst in the colony.7 Looking east down the Terrace, he depicted the principal buildings and made a feature of native trees which had been retained along the streetscape, augmented by flourishing introduced species. Riding toward the viewer in a stylish Stanhope gig is a figure identified by previous researchers as Reverend Wittenoom (in the absence of a visible clerical collar or scarf, it would seem this accreditation is based on the figure’s sober coat, tightly buttoned on a hot summer’s day). To the left, the hill gently inclines to the natural ridgeline that Hay Street now follows. The white-washed building shown is the original soldiers’ barracks (1829 – 30) with a roofed tent featuring striped canvas added as a side annexe. In front of this is the Officers’ Barracks built between in 1833, and further along, the Military Hospital (1831) bounded by Cathedral Avenue with the adjacent gaol (c.1829) at the corner of Pier Street. Opposite the Officers’ Barracks, visible between the trunk of the Marri tree and the edge of the drawing, is the small cottage, a ‘Palmer’s Hut’,8 which was Captain Stirling’s original home.9 Subsequently promoted to Governor and Commander-in-Chief, Stirling journeyed to London for a year in August 1832 and on his return10 found the original cottage too small for his needs, so took over the new Officers’ building for his family and as a Vice-Regal headquarters until a more appropriate Government House could be built.

The scene has all the warmth of a Perth summer and the bucolic air of pastoral commerce which would have communicated a clear and positive message to potential emigrants. Further evidence is the shadows, which are cast as if on a summer’s day in England, pointing to the north whereas in Perth, naturally, they face south. The message here is clear – Perth is presented as a genteel mirror of English society. Charles left the colony on 31 March 1837, a week after his brother opened ‘the new building erected to serve as both courthouse and church’. Still standing opposite the site of the Reverend’s own house, the Old Court House is central Perth’s only survivor from these foundation days.11 On arriving in London, Charles contacted Nathaniel Ogle, a Fellow of the Geological Society who had already published a range of books.12 It is almost certain that the two men knew of each other and may have even discussed Charles’ journey beforehand, as Ogle himself had been involved in an unsuccessful earlier proposal to found a colony south of Perth with ‘nearly 1000 well-selected companions to Leschenault and La Vasse’.13 Four of Wittenoom’s drawings were translated into engravings by J. Henshall and reproduced in Ogle’s highly influential The Colony of Western Australia: A manual for emigrants 1839, a richly detailed compendium which radically altered perceptions of the colony. In the engraved translation of Sketch of the Town of Perth, Western Australia, however, Charles appears to have suggested one distinctive addition – an enhanced view of Captain Stirling’s original dwelling peeking through the lush foliage. In addition, the original image of the Reverend in his horse-drawn gig was replaced with a dray, and the various street characters were augmented with a group of four aboriginal figures in European clothing.

Of the four original drawings executed by Charles, two are in Australian collections – Sketch of the Town of Perth from Perth Water, Western Australia (The Janet Holmes à Court Collection, Perth); and View from the Court House Arthur's Head, Freemantle [sic] (State Library of New South Wales, Sydney). The third remains in private hands, whilst examples of the engravings are held by various institutions and private collectors. Sketch of the Town of Perth, Western Australia was last offered for sale in 1988 when it achieved the then-record price of $93,500 for a Western Australian colonial drawing.14 There are other artist renditions of Perth and Fremantle from the 1830s but this particular work is unique with its aspect of St George’s Terrace as it appeared in its earliest inception 180 years ago.

1. O’Brien, J. and Statham-Drew, P., On We Go: The Wittenoom way. The legacy of a colonial chaplain, Fremantle Press, Western Australia, 2009, p. 25
2. Wittenoom, J.B., letter to cousin William Jersey, 24 July 1832, quoted in O’Brien, J. and Statham-Drew, P. op. cit ., p. 26
3. ibid ., p. 26
4. ‘Shipping Intelligence’, Perth Gazette and Western Australian Journal, Western Australia, 2 January 1836, p. 626
5. ‘Shipping Intelligence’, Perth Gazette and Western Australian Journal, Western Australia, 26 November 1836, p. 804
6. Collard, l. et al., ‘Oorl Ngulluck Koorliny (Come we walk together)’, in White, T.A. (ed.), Perth: a guide for the curious, UWA Publishing, Perth, 2016, p. 35
7. A fifth drawing, Front View of the Artist’s House, 1832 (Art Gallery of Western Australia), is attributed to Reverend Wittenoom but Charles is increasingly considered to be the most probable artist.
8. See Royal Perth Hospital Heritage Society website: accessed 13 July 2017
9. On the site of the contemporary Stirling Gardens, this building has been previously mis-identified by researchers as being Reverend Wittenoom’s house, but his was well out of this drawing’s frame, some thirty metres south of the mature Marri tree.
10. Stirling landed 19 August 1833, via the James Pattison.
11. Reverend Wittenoom’s house was demolished in 1890 and replaced by the Weld Club.
12. The Royal Geographical Society was founded in 1830 and the first paper read before the original members dealt with Western Australia.
13. Battye, J.S., Western Australia: A history of its discovery to the inauguration of the Commonwealth 1924 (facsimile edition), University of Western Australia Press, Perth, 1978, p. 78. The author thanks Janet Muir of Muir Old and Rare Books, Perth, for direction to this source.
14. Christie’s, Australian Paintings, Prints & Sculpture, Melbourne, 3 May 1988, lot 99

The author thanks Melissa Harpley and Eileen Jellis, Art Gallery of Western Australia, for assistance in cataloguing this work.

ANDREW GAYNOR

Payment & Shipping

Payment

Accepted forms of payment: American Express, COD (cash on delivery), MasterCard, Personal Check, Visa, Wire Transfer

Shipping

Buyers are required to make their own arrangements for packing, handling, shipping and transit insurance for their property.

Auction Details

Important Australian & International Fine Art

by
Deutscher and Hackett
September 20, 2017, 07:00 PM AEST

Cell Block Theatre- National Art School Forbes Street, Sydney, NSW, 2010, AU

Terms

Buyer's Premium

27.0%

Bidding Increments

From:To:Increment:
$0$999$50
$1,000$1,999$100
$2,000$3,199$200
$3,200$3,799$300
$3,800$4,199$200
$4,200$4,799$300
$4,800$4,999$200
$5,000$9,999$500
$10,000$19,999$1,000
$20,000$31,999$2,000
$32,000$37,999$3,000
$38,000$41,999$2,000
$42,000$47,999$3,000
$48,000$49,999$2,000
$50,000$99,999$5,000
$100,000$199,999$10,000
$200,000$319,999$20,000
$320,000$379,999$30,000
$380,000$419,999$20,000
$420,000$479,999$30,000
$480,000$499,999$20,000
$500,000$999,999$50,000
$1,000,000+$100,000

Conditions of Auction and Sale


The terms and conditions of business set forth below are subject to amendment by verbal or written notice prior to and during the auction and sale. They constitute the entire contractual agreement with the buyer in respect to any lot offered at auction.
By bidding at auction in any manner compliant with bidding procedures, the buyer and all bidders agree to be bound by these terms and conditions and the terms of the prospective buyers and sellers guide contained in this catalogue, as amended. To the extent that an agent acts on behalf of the buyer, liability for obligations arising from these conditions of business will pass to the buyer. Multiple buyers are jointly and severally liable for obligations arising from this agreement.

DEFINITIONS

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123 119 022, its subsidiaries, officers, employees and agents.
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payable by the buyer calculated as a percentage of the hammer price.
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PRELIMINARY CONDITIONS AND DISCLAIMER

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CONDITIONS AT AUCTION

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GOODS AND SERVICES TAX

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If a buyer is classified as a "non-resident" for the purpose of GST, the buyer may be able to recover GST paid on the final purchase price if certain conditions are met.

POST-SALE CONDITIONS

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The limited warranty and the right to rescind the sale is not assignable and the buyer must have retained title to the lot without disposing of any interest in it up until the buyer notifies Deutscher and Hackett of the forgery allegations. The buyer acknowledges that it has no rights directly against Deutscher and Hackett if a lot is established to be a forgery.
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any matter arising directly or indirectly as a result of the sale.
b. Buyer breach: Deutscher and Hackett may, in addition to other remedies
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and Hackett custody as collateral or liquidated damages.
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including associated costs such as, but not limited to, legal, storage
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prospective buyers and sellers guide

1. PRIOR TO AUCTION

CATALOGUE SUBSCRIPTIONS
Catalogues can be obtained at Deutscher and Hackett offices or by online subscription (see the Catalogue Subscription Form at the back of this catalogue or online for more information go to www.deutscherandhackett.com).

PRE-SALE ESTIMATES
The price range estimated against each lot reflects the opinion of our art specialists as to the hammer price expected for the lot at auction and is informed by realised prices for comparable works as well as the particularities of each lot including condition, quality, provenance and rarity. While presale estimates are intended as a guide for
prospective buyers, lots can be sold outside of these ranges. Pre-sale estimates include GST (if any) on a lot but do not include the buyer's premium or other charges where applicable.

RESERVES
The reserve is the minimum price including GST (if any) that the vendor will accept for a lot and below which the lot will not normally be sold.

PRE-AUCTION VIEWINGS
In both Sydney and Melbourne pre-auction viewings are scheduled for several days in advance of each auction. Deutscher and Hackett specialists are available to give obligation free advice at viewings or by appointment and prospective buyers are strongly encouraged to thoroughly examine and request condition reports for potential purchases. Pre-auction viewings are open to the public and are free to attend.

SYMBOL KEY
? Unless ownership is clearly stated in the provenance, this symbol is used where a lot is offered which Deutscher and Hackett or an affiliate owns in whole or in part.
In these instances, Deutscher and Hackett has a direct financial interest in the property or means that Deutscher and Hackett has guaranteed a minimum price.
? Used to indicate lots for sale without a reserve.

EXPLANATION OF CATALOGUING PRACTICE AND TERMS
All information published in Deutscher and Hackett catalogues represent statements of opinion and should not be relied upon as fact. All dimensions are listed in centimetres, height before width and are approximate. All prices are in Australian dollars.

ARTIST'S NAMES
All reference to artists make use of common and not full names in accordance with the standards outlined in the National Gallery of Australia reference publication Australian Art: Artist's working names authority list. For instance, John Brack rather than Cecil John Brack; Roy de Maistre rather than Leroy Leveson Laurent De Maistre; Rosalie Gascoigne rather than Rosalie Norah Gascoigne.
Terms used in this catalogue have the meanings ascribed to them below:
a. NICHOLAS CHEVALIER: in the opinion of Deutscher and Hackett, a work
by the artist.
b. Attributed to NICHOLAS CHEVALIER: in the opinion of Deutscher and Hackett, probably a work by the artist, in whole or in part.
c. Circle of NICHOLAS CHEVALIER: in the opinion of Deutscher and Hackett, a work showing the influence and style of the artist and of the artist's period.
d. Studio/Workshop of NICHOLAS CHEVALIER: in the opinion of Deutscher and Hackett, a work possibly executed under the supervision of the artist.
e. School of NICHOLAS CHEVALIER: in the opinion of Deutscher and Hackett, a work by a follower or student of the artist.
f. Manner of NICHOLAS CHEVALIER: in the opinion of Deutscher and Hackett, a work created in the style, but not necessarily in the period, of the artist.
g. After NICHOLAS CHEVALIER: in the opinion of Deutscher and Hackett, a copy of a work by the artist.
h. "signed" / "dated" in the opinion of Deutscher and Hackett, the work has been signed/dated by the artist.
i. "bears signature" / "bears date" in the opinion of Deutscher and Hackett, the work has possibly been signed/dated by someone other than the artist.

PROVENANCE
Where appropriate, Deutscher and Hackett will include the known provenance, or history of ownership of lots. Non disclosure may indicate that prior owners are unknown or that the seller wishes to maintain confidentiality.

2. THE AUCTION

Auctions are open to the public and are free to attend. Deutscher and Hackett may exclude any person at any time in its discretion.

REGISTRATION
Bidders must register to bid prior to the commencement of an auction. Deutscher and Hackett may impose other obligations on the registration of bidders in its discretion.

CONDUCT OF AUCTION
Lots are offered for sale on a consecutive basis. Deutscher and Hackett will determine the conduct of the auction in its absolute discretion, including the regulation of bidding. Consecutive or responsive bids may be placed by the auctioneer on behalf of the vendor up to the reserve.

ABSENTEE OR COMMISSION BIDS AND TELEPHONE BIDS
As a courtesy service, Deutscher and Hackett will make reasonable efforts to place bids for prospective buyers in absentia provided written or verbal instructions (as indicated on absentee bid forms included at the back of this catalogue or online) are received 24 hours prior to auction. Where successful, lots will be purchased at the lowest possible bid and in the event of identical absentee bids, the bid received earliest will take precedence. Deutscher and Hackett accepts no responsibility for errors and omissions in relation to this courtesy service and reserves the right to record telephone bids.

RESERVE
Unless indicated otherwise, all lots are subject to a confidential reserve price determined by the vendor. Deutscher and Hackett or the auctioneer may place any number of bids on behalf of the vendor below the reserve price and is not obliged to identify that the bids are being placed on behalf of the vendor.

BIDDING INCREMENTS
Bidding usually opens below the listed pre-sale estimate and proceeds in the following increments (the auctioneer may vary the bidding increments at his or her discretion):

$500 - 1,000 by $50
$1,000 - 2,000 by $100
$2,000 - 3,000 by $200
$3,000 - 5,000 by $200 / $500 / $800
$5,000 - 10,000 by $500
$10,000 - 20,000 by $1,000
$20,000 - 30,000 by $2,000
$30,000 - 50,000 by $2,000 / $5,000 / $8,000
$50,000 - 100,000 by $5,000
$100,000 - 200,000 by $10,000
$200,000 - 300,000 by $20,000
$300,000 - 500,000 by $20,000 / $50,000 / $80,000
$500,000 - 1,000,000 by $50,000
$1,000,000+ by $100,000

SUCCESSFUL BIDS
The fall of the auctioneer's hammer indicates the final bid and the buyer assumes full responsibility for the lot from this time.

UNSOLD LOTS
Where a lot is unsold, the auctioneer will announce that the lot is "bought in", "passed", "withdrawn" or "returned to owner".

3. AFTER THE AUCTION

PAYMENTS
Payment must be made within seven days of the date of sale in Australian dollars by cash, cheque, direct deposit, approved credit cards or electronic funds transfer. If payment is made by credit card the price will increase by any merchant fees payable by Deutscher and Hackett (1.15% (including GST) for Visa and Mastercard and 3.10% (including GST) for American Express). In certain circumstances, extension of payment may be granted at the discretion of Deutscher and Hackett. Cleared funds will be held in an interest bearing trust account by Deutscher and Hackett until remitted to the vendor. Deutscher and Hackett will be entitled to retain any interest earned during this period. Payment by the vendor of any charge to Deutscher and Hackett is to be made within fourteen days of invoice.

PURCHASE PRICE AND BUYER'S PREMIUM
The purchase price will be the sum of the final bid price (including any GST) plus a buyer's premium set at 22% (plus GST) of the final bid price. Buyers may be liable for other charges reasonably incurred once ownership has passed.
GOODS AND SERVICES TAX
Auctions are conducted on a GST inclusive basis (where GST applies). GST is payable on some lots. A list of those lots is set out in the catalogue on page XXX. Buyers are required to pay a 10% G.S.T which sum is:
a. included in the final bid prices where buying from a GST registered vendor; and
b. included in buyer's premiums and any additional fees charged by Deutscher and Hackett.
If a buyer is classified as a "non-resident" for the purpose of GST, the buyer may be able to recover GST paid on the final purchase price if certain conditions are met.

COLLECTION
Lots paid for in full may be collected from Deutscher and Hackett premises the day after the auction occurs but lots paid for by cheque may not be collected until all funds have cleared. Proof of identification is required upon collection and lots not collected within seven days of the sale may incur costs associated with external storage and freight.

LOSS OR DAMAGE
Risk in the lot, including risk of loss or damage, will pass to the buyer on either the date payment is due, whether or not it has been made, or on collection by the buyer, whichever is earlier. The buyer is therefore encouraged to make arrangements to ensure comprehensive cover is maintained from the payment due date.

TRANSPORT AND SHIPPING
Deutscher and Hackett directly offers services including storage, hanging and display, appraisals and valuations, collection management and research and in all instances will endeavour to coordinate or advise upon shipping and handling, insurance, transport, framing and conservation at the request and expense of the client. Deutscher and Hackett does not accept liability for the acts or omissions of contracted third parties.

EXPORT
Prospective bidders are advised to enquire about export licences -- including endangered species licences and cultural heritage permits, where relevant -- prior to bidding at auction. Telephone the Maritime and Movable Heritage Unit on 02 6274 1810 for further information. The delay or denial of such a licence will not be grounds for a rescission of sale.

COPYRIGHT
The copyright in the images and illustrations contained in this catalogue may be owned by third parties and used under licence by Deutscher and Hackett. As between Deutscher and Hackett and the buyer, Deutscher and Hackett retains all rights in the images and illustrations. Deutscher and Hackett retains copyright in the text contained in this catalogue. The buyer must not reproduce or otherwise use the images, illustrations or text without prior written consent.

Shipping Terms

Buyers are required to make their own arrangements for packing, handling, shipping and transit insurance for their property.

Shipping Terms

Buyers are required to make their own arrangements for packing, handling, shipping and transit insurance for their property.

Shipping Terms

Buyers are required to make their own arrangements for packing, handling, shipping and transit insurance for their property.

Shipping Terms

Buyers are required to make their own arrangements for packing, handling, shipping and transit insurance for their property.