Sunday, March 3, 2019

'HAUGHTON INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR; GREAT COLLECTORS AND THEIR TASTE, PASSION AND PATRONAGE' ON 26 AND 27 JUNE 2019 IN LONDON COSTS L160 INCLUDING DINNER AT ATHENAEUM HOTEL AND IS A CRASH COURSE ON ART HISTORY. FIFTEEN RENOWNED ART EXPERTS WILL TALK ON DIVERSE, ECLECTIC SUBJECTS AND EXPAND YOUR MIND AS MOST MALAYSIANS ARE NEW IN COLLECTING. TOTALLY FASCINATING AND ENLIGHTENING!

KEE@FSWMAG.COM

Haughton International Seminar : “Great Collectors : Taste, Passion & Patronage” Wednesday 26th June & Thursday 27th June 2019 At The British Academy, 10-11 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH 

 HENRY FRICK'S FRAGONARD ROOM
 HENRY CLAY FRICK'S ST FRANCIS IN THE DESERT'
LORD ROTHSCHILD

Brian and Anna Haughton of Haughton International are delighted to announce the third annual two-day seminar entitled “Great Collectors : Taste, Passion & Patronage” which will take place on Wednesday 26th June and Thursday 27th June 2019 at The British Academy, 10-11 Carlton House Terrace, London SW1Y 5AH. 


15 international speakers will stage a global tour of some of the great collectors throughout the centuries. This seminar will discuss their collections of ceramics, silver, paintings and decorative arts and their influence on wider collecting tastes. 


The seminar will cover a broad range of subjects such as the Face to Face series which this year features Lord Rothschild O.M. in conversation with Dame Rosalind Savill. 


Equally impressive is Timothy Schroder discussing William Beckford, patron of Goldsmiths; Dr Xavier Bray, Director of the Wallace Collection talking about Sir Richard Wallace and why The Wallace Collection is named after him; Caroline de Guitaut, Senior Curator of Decorative Art at Royal Collection Trust outlining Fabergé : from the Romanovs to Royalty - assembling the British Royal Collection of a Russian Master Goldsmith; and Paul Crane highlighting the vast English and Continental porcelain collections amassed by Harry John Hyams. 


Paul Crane, a descendant of Dr Wall who founded the Worcester Porcelain Manufactory in 1751, is a specialist of European Ceramics and has worked at The Brian Haughton Gallery since 2001. 


The new venue for the seminar is The British Academy, housed at 10-11 Carlton House Terrace, where William Gladstone lived from 1856-1875. Carlton House Terrace, built between 1827 and 1833, is Grade 1 listed and Sir Nikolaus Pevsner described the buildings as among “the greatest terrace houses ever built in Britain”. 


The seminar is generously supported by Christie’s, Ten Ten Foundation Inc, the British Shop and the Brian Haughton Gallery. The cost of the two-day seminar is £88 (incl VAT). 


The cost of the two-day seminar including dinner at The Athenaeum on Wednesday 26th June is £160 (incl VAT). 


Student tickets for the two-day seminar (on production of ID) is £50 (incl VAT). Advance booking is essential due to limited numbers. 


Tickets will be on sale from Wednesday 25th February at 3pm (GMT). All details regarding the programme and the booking form can be found on www.haughton.com 


For further information please contact Iona Sale, IONA PR, 01451 832 268, 07721 030 825, iona@ionapr.com or Giles Haughton, 020 7389 6555 or giles.haughton@haughton.com 


SYNOPSIS OF 2019 LECTURES HAUGHTON INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR “GREAT COLLECTORS : TASTE, PASSION & PATRONAGE (in no particular order) Face to Face: The Lord Rothschild O.M. in conversation with Dame Rosalind Savill. 


Professor Dame Rosalind Savill DBE, FBA, FSA became Director of The Wallace Collection in 1992 and retired in 2011. She is a specialist in French 18th century decorative arts. 

For thirty years Jacob Rothschild has devoted his superlative eye, and his passion for artistic change and challenge, to enhancing his family estate of Waddesdon Manor in Buckinghamshire. 


His discernment in acquiring and commissioning historic and contemporary works of art, from tiny Sèvres porcelain figures to startling new buildings, is inspirational. 


This conversation will explore his extraordinary collections, and how they have brought a new magic and vibrancy in this fairy-tale palace and confirmed him as the veritable wizard of Waddesdon. 


“Maybe a little too enthusiastic about pictures”: Henry Clay Frick as a Collector by Ian Wardropper, Director and CEO of The Frick Collection 



An 1870 Mellon Bank report on Henry Clay Frick’s coking operation in Connelsville, Pennsylvania described him as “maybe a little too enthusiastic about pictures, but not enough to hurt”. 

By the time his Manhattan mansion opened in 1914 this early enthusiasm became a disciplined passion, as he assembled one of the finest collections of Old Master paintings, sculpture and decorative arts in the world. 


This lecture traces his trajectory as a collector and the legacy of the institution he established. 


Porcelain, Politics and Prestige in the 18th century: Three Russian Empresses – Anna, Elizabeth and Catherine the Great by Lydia Liackhova, Senior Research Curator, Department of Western European Decorative Art at the State Hermitage Museum 

It was only relatively late, early in the 18th century, that Russia began to look upon itself as a European state. Collecting works of art became one means of asserting an understanding of the Western mindset and porcelain was to occupy a special place in the collecting sphere, serving as an indicator of the Russian elite’s European preferences. 


For Russia, the 18th century was the age of female rule: Anna, Elizabeth and Catherine held the throne for most of the period between 1730 and 1796. 


Inspired by collecting: The Dr Ernst Schneider Collection of Meissen porcelain at Lustheim Castle by Dr Katharina Hantschmann, Senior Curator, Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, Munich 


The collector Dr Ernst Schneider (1900-1977) was one of the leading industrialists of the young German Federal Republic. After WWII he moved from Saxony to Dusseldorf, where he was president of the Chamber of Commerce, highly respected by politicians and economists. 


On several occasions he mentioned that without collecting he would not have been so successful in his work and that he gathered his energy by studying and handling his porcelain. In 1968 he donated the greatest part of his porcelain collection with more than 2,000 pieces to the Bavarian State. 


His prerequisite for exhibiting the collection in a Baroque palace was fulfilled by placing the collection in Lustheim Castle which is situated outside Munich. 


16th century Dukes and Duchesses of Urbino: From the credenza to the guardaroba by Professor Timothy Wilson, Honorary Curator, Department of Western Art, Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford 

In the 16th century, potteries in the Duchy of Urbino produced some of the most sophisticated and virtuoso of all Renaissance maiolica. The Della Rovere Dukes actively supported the artistic pottery industry in towns of the duchy – Urbino, Castel Durante, Pesaro and Gubbio – and on occasion used it for diplomatic gifts. 


Closer looking at the evidence shows that the successive Duchesses were actively involved in generating and administering prestigious commissions. 


Augustus the Strong (1670-1733) – a King’s passion for porcelain by Ruth Sonja Simonis, Research Associate, Porzellansammlung, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden 


Augustus the Strong (1670-1733) had great things in mind when he purchased the “Dutch Palace” (later called the “Japanese Palace”) in Dresden in 1717. He aimed to create a “porcelain castle” in which every room was decorated with wares from East Asia and Meissen. 


The lecture takes a closer look at Augustus’ passion for East Asian porcelain and his special aims and interests regarding collecting objects from the Far East. 


“This entire lofty endeavour……” a princely Porcelain Cabinet in the Age of Reason by Sebastian Kuhn, Department Director, Bonhams European Ceramics 



Karoline Luise, Margravine of the small principality of Baden Durlach in south western Germany (1723-83) was one of the most cultured princesses and great collectors of her age. 


Her paintings cabinet and her interest in the natural sciences are well documented, but she also owned a very substantial and today, little known, collection of Asian and European ceramics. 


This lecture will discuss the scope of her ceramics collection with a focus on European porcelain. 


“A Most Formidable Assembly”: The Katz Collection of English Porcelain at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston by Thomas Michie, Senior Curator of European Decorative Arts and Sculpture, Museum of Fine Arts Boston 


Between 1951 and 1988, Jessie and Sigmund Katz of Covington, Louisiana, donated first to the Rhode Island School of Design and subsequently to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, a vast collection of early English porcelain that is widely regarded as one of the finest ever assembled. 


Despite the fame of the collection, little is known about the Katzes themselves, their criteria for collecting, or their connections to museums in Providence and Boston. 


This lecture presents the story of the Katzes and their goal to form “the most formidable assembly of English porcelain dating 1745-55 extant”. 


Lady Charlotte’s China Mania by Sally Kevill-Davies, M.A., independent researcher, author and lecturer 

Lady Charlotte Schreiber (1812-1895) came to London aged 21 and befriended Benjamin Disraeli. He introduced her to Sir John Guest, Master of the Dowlais Ironworks in Wales, known as ‘the greatest manufacturer in the world’. 

In 1833 she married him and threw herself whole-heartedly into his industrial world. She translated The Mabinogion from Welsh into English, a publication which inspired her friend, Alfred Lord Tennyson to write his Idylls of the King. 


She bore her husband 10 children. On Sir John’s death in 1852 she engaged Charles Schreiber as tutor for her children, fell in love and they were shortly married. 


Around 1867 their joint passion for collecting ceramics took hold. Self-taught, they travelled throughout Europe under highly unsatisfactory conditions, experiencing triumphs and disasters. 


Their story was recorded minutely in her journals. Charles died in 1884 and their collection of English ceramics, which numbered 1,800 pieces, was given to the Victoria and Albert Museum. 


The speaker will also discuss some of the most exciting pieces in the collection as well as the background to her collecting. 


William Beckford, patron of Goldsmiths by Timothy Schroder, curator, lecturer and writer 


William Beckford of Fonthill Abbey (1760-1844) was one of the greatest art collectors of all time. He was also an obsessive collector of new silver and goldsmiths’ work. 

This was invariably of astonishingly high quality and often made to his own eccentric designs. Collectively, these works evoke the world of the princely patrons of the Renaissance and Baroque. Not only that, but the lecture shows that Beckford’s fascinating silver is as much a window into his personality as Fonthill Abbey itself. 


But the silver survives, the Abbey does not. 


Countess Wilhelmina von Hallwyl and her Chinese Treasures by Rose Kerr, Honorary Associate of the Needham Research Institute in Cambridge 


This little-known Hallwyl collection is housed in a Swedish National Museum in Stockholm, and comprises a cornucopia of paintings, furniture, silver and ceramics. Among the ceramics are more than 1,000 Chinese and Japanese pieces, collected between 1879 and 1930 by a discerning and wealthy woman. 


Countess Wilhelmina von Hallwyl patronized the auction houses and dealers of Europe and became a member of the “Karlbeck syndicate”. In the 1920s, this pan-European group of collectors engaged Swedish engineer Orvar Karlbeck to purchase objects in China. 


Thus the Hallwyl Collection encompasses both fine porcelain from old European collections and archaeological ceramics from China. 


Fabergé : from the Romanovs to Royalty – assembling the British Royal Collection of a Russian Master Goldsmith by Caroline de Guitaut, Senior Curator of Decorative Art at Royal Collection Trust 



The British Royal Collection contains the pre-eminent group of works by the Russian goldsmith and jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé (1846-1920). Collected over five generations from Queen Victoria to Her Majesty The Queen, through gift, purchase and commission, the collection documents the diverse range of works created by the Fabergé firm. 


This lecture reveals the shared patronage of the last two Emperors of Russia with their British relations and the individual taste of successive royal collectors. 


A Chosen Collection: Harry John Hyams, Connoisseur Collector and his remarkable collection at Ramsbury Manor by Paul Crane, ceramic historian and author 



Harry John Hyams was one of the most enigmatic and energetic collectors of the 20th and 21st centuries. Shrouded in secrecy his modus operandi was to collect the very best of many disciplines across the art world that was to include one of the finest collections of decorative arts every assembled. 


The collection is displayed within his country home at Ramsbury Manor, now administered through his beneficial gift by the Capricorn Foundation. 


The collection displayed at Ramsbury reveals insights into his own unique character and is a tribute to his astonishingly high calibre of knowledge and his indefatigable eye as a great connoisseur art collector. 


The lecture will concentrate on his vast English and Continental porcelain collections which he began to collect when he was in his early 20s and finished the day before he died in December 2015. 


Sir Richard Wallace: The Collector by Dr Xavier Bray, Director of the Wallace Collection “One of my first endeavours as Director was to find out as much as possible about Sir Richard Wallace. Who was this British born and French educated man, said to be the illegitimate son of the 4th Marquess of Hertford? 



"What was his role in the formation of the collection and why is The Wallace Collection named after him and not after the 4th Marquess of Hertford? In this lecture, I will set out to reveal what I have since discovered and why he has informed many of my ambitions for the future of The Wallace Collection”. 


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