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Bust of a young Roman

workshop of John Besnier (fl.1681)

Category

Art / Sculpture

Date

c. 1670 - 1672

Materials

Lead, Sandstone

Measurements

780 mm (H)425 mm (W)

Place of origin

London

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Collection

Ham House, Surrey

NT 1140362

Summary

A lead portrait bust of a young Roman, wearing armour and over this a cloak. One of thirty-eight lead busts made for the garden walls of Ham House in 1671-72, perhaps in the workshop of John Besnier, thirty-six of which survive in niches on the walls and on the north façade of the house.

Full description

A lead portrait bust of a young Roman, wearing armour, with a square-necked corselet, over which is a cloak, fastened at the right shoulder with a circular brooch. He has short hair with a prominent fringe, and looks ahead. Mounted on a plinth, and placed on a sandstone console carved with an escutcheon, from which depends a stylised flower. The bust may depict a Roman Emperor, although his features are not distinctive enough for him to be identified. He is one of two busts of the same model at Ham (the other is NT 1140341) and may have originally formed part of a sequence of the Twelve Caesars. One of thirty-six lead busts displayed in oval niches in the garden walls and on the north façade of Ham House, probably installed in 1671-72, and recorded in the 1679 inventory of Ham House. The entire series was probably arranged in its present positions along the garden walls and on the north front of Ham House by the 6th Earl of Dysart, as part of improvements undertaken between 1798 and 1803. The busts may well, like other sculpture at Ham House, have been made in the workshops of the Besnier family, perhaps by John Besnier, who received a commission for lead statuary from the Duke of Ormonde in 1681. For a fuller discussion of the garden wall busts and their history and attribution, see NT 1140333. Jeremy Warren January 2022

Provenance

Probably made and installed in 1671-72, to the commission of John Maitland and Elizabeth Murray, 1st Duke and Duchess of Lauderdale. Thence by descent,until acquired in 1948 by HM Government when Sir Lyonel, 4th Bt (1854 – 1952) and Sir Cecil Tollemache, 5th Bt (1886 – 1969) presented Ham House to the National Trust. Entrusted to the care of the Victoria & Albert Museum until 1990, when returned to the care of the National Trust, to which ownership was transferred in 2002.

Makers and roles

workshop of John Besnier (fl.1681), sculptor

References

Avery 2013: Charles Avery, ‘Seventeenth-century Sculpture at Ham House’ in Christopher Rowell, ed., Ham House. 400 Years of History, New Haven/London 2013, pp. 158-77., pp. 172-76

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