A Bromsgrove Guild of Applied Arts, arts and crafts enamel plaque

Price range: Sold

I am delighted to offer for sale this large enamel plaque. The plaque shows a characterful fish (a carp) swimming in a green watery background. The carp enamel is a copy of, or at least inspired by, Hokusai woodblock pictures.  See final image.

This unsigned plaque was previously in the Collection, and has provenance to, Fieldings Auctioneers, Stourbridge.  Fieldings were disposing of the estate of a member of a the Headley family from Bromsgrove.  I am totally confident  this is a rare Bromsgrove Guild of Applied Arts piece by Ernest Charles Jeffries.

Included in this estate sale were pictures by Lorenzo Headley (active c 1900-1930) and Bromsgrove Guild of Applied Arts metalwork set with enamels.  There were also two caskets set with enamels from the estate, one with an enamel monogram LH, presumably for Lorenzo Headley, and one with monogram enamel ECJ (lot 844).  Other enamels in the sale were signed ECJ.

I have researched this plaque, and the other enamels and metalwork, in the auction extensively.

I am confident the the enamels are by Ernest Charles Jefferies.  The signature monogram ECJ found on the casket appears on an enamel of a turkey in an important fire surround by the  Bromsgrove Guild set within Stoneleigh, a Glasgow mansion. There are four enamels featured in this surround and one of a peacock with flowers is also like that offered at Fieldings (lot 848).  There are also flower enamels inset into Bromsgrove light fittings at Stoneleigh – one of which exhibits very similar unusual leaf tendrils, similar to a loose rose enamel plaque also sold at Fieldings (lot 852).  (See images for the illustration of Stoneleigh and the comparative monogram and enamels).

ECJ is Ernest Charles Jefferies (1869-1942).  Jefferies was born into a local Bromsgrove family and studied at Birmingham School of Art.  From there he became a teacher at the Bromsgrove School of Art under Walter Gilbert and is listed as a metalworker and enameller for the Bromsgrove Guild of Applied Art from c 1902.  It is almost certainly his ECJ monogram on the copper casket sold at Fieldings. Jenny Townshend writes on page 18 of “The Bromsgrove Guild, An Illustrated History”

“In  this same year [1902], the assistant headmaster of the school of art, Ernest Jeffries, began working for the Guild. The Guild bought his designs along with a muffle and a clay body for the muffle, for his use [in enamelling]. Jeffries had been a prize winning student at the Birmingham School of Art and a pupil teacher at the Bromsgrove School of Art. By 1904 he was being paid a regular wage by the Guild.”

Illustrated in the images is also a listing from the 1906 Arts and Crafts Exhibition Society Catalogue of Jefferies work for the Guild.

Assuming the enamels are by Jefferies, quite how they (and his monogrammed casket) came to be part of the Headley family I am not sure. Headley is very likely to have known fellow local artist Jefferies (and the Jefferies family also ran the local grocers in Bromsgrove).  Whether Headley was a patron of the Guild, or perhaps there is later post war family link, I have not established.

I am very grateful to Ian Milne for his assistance with this research and use of his photos of Stoneleigh.

The enamel presents beautifully and is in excellent condition in a modern frame.

Maker: Bromsgrove Guild of Applied Arts (attributed)

Designer: Ernest Charles Jefferies (attributed)

Date: c. 1905

Marks: Unmarked

Material: Enamel on copper

Condition: Excellent

Size: Visible plaque 17 cm diameter, framed 24 cm

Weight : NM

SKU: A1694

Additional Information

For more information see The Bromsgrove Guild, an Illustrated History,  by Quintin Watt.

Period

Arts and crafts, Other