Read Magpies, Squirrels and Thieves Online
Authors: Jacqueline Yallop
12
. âAcute Chinamania',
Punch
, âAlmanack' 1875, 68 (17 December 1874), n.p. This was part of a series of satires by George du Maurier, who waged a long-running crusade against what he saw as the affectations of the Aesthetic movement and its taste for collecting china.
13
. Joseph Marryat,
A History of Pottery and Porcelain, Medieval and Modern
(London: Murray, 1857); see also Clarissa Orr (ed.),
Women in the Victorian Art World
(Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1995).
14
. Journal, Introduction, 14 March 1870 and 3 November 1874.
15
. Journal, Introduction, and see also, for example, 27 May 1876.
1
.   Schreiber, Journal, 23 August 1869 and 8 March 1872.
2
.   Jules Janin, âA Summer and A Winter in Paris', in George Newenham Wright,
France Illustrated
, vol. 4 (London: Peter Jackson, 1845â7), p. 112.
3
.   Journal, 2 October 1869 and 22 March 1870.
4
.   Journal, 10 May 1872 and 8 April 1874.
5
.   Quoted in Orr (ed.),
Women in the Victorian Art World
, p. 130.
6
.   The story of the gourd-shaped bottle is related by Montague Guest in the concluding notes to Charlotte's journals: âThe Adventures of a Bottle', vol. II, pp. 484â8, with additional material taken from Charlotte's daily entries.
7
.   For an excellent discussion of female art critics, see Pamela Gerrish Nunn, âCritically Speaking', in Orr (ed.),
Women in the Victorian Art World
(Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1995), pp. 107â25. This comment is from Alice Oldcastle, quoted on p. 114.
8
.   Journal, 22 May 1869.
9
.   Journal, 8 March 1872.
10
. Journal, 19 and 20 March 1880.
11
. Journal, 23 September 1880.
12
. Journal, 28 September 1880.
13
. âEconomic and Social History: Industry and Trade, 1500â 1880',
A History of the County of Warwick: Volume 7: The City of Birmingham
(1964), pp. 81â139.
14
. Journal, 29 March 1884.
15
. Journal, 9 June 1884.
16
. Journal, 3 May 1884.
17
. Journal, 18 November 1884.
18
. Journal, 17 October 1885
19
. Journal, 13 November 1885.
20
. The book on English fans was finished in 1888, followed two years later by a publication on European fans. Neither is now in print. The other Freewoman was Baroness Coutts, a banker's daughter and philanthropist.
1
.   The portrait, now in the Liverpool Museum, is dated 1843, but a letter from the Royal Academy concerning the work is dated 9 May 1840, suggesting it was already in existence then. Mayer was born on 23 February 1803.
2
.   Letter from H. T. Kemball Cook to G. J. Binns, 19 June 1828, archives of Liverpool Museums. For the biographical information on Joseph Mayer and his collecting, I am indebted to the work of the National Museums and Galleries on Merseyside, and in particular
Joseph Mayer of Liverpool 1803â1886
, edited by Margaret Gibson and Susan M. Wright (London: Society of Antiquaries/National Museums & Galleries on Merseyside, 1988).
The majority of Mayer's papers are deposited with Liverpool City Archives or at Bebington Library.
3
.   Ibid.
4
.   Obituary,
Liverpool Daily Post
, 20 January 1866.
5
.   A. W. Franks, quoted Caygill and Cherry (eds),
A. W. Franks
, p. 169. The brooch has the accession number MLA 1856.7â1, 1461.
6
.   Joseph Clarke, letter to Joseph Mayer, October 1852.
7
.   Joseph Clarke, letter to Joseph Mayer, 19 October 1854.
8
.   Roach Smith, letter to Joseph Mayer, 12 December 1852; letter to Mayer, 11 April 1856.
9
.   For details of the Faussett collection, see Roger H. White, âMayer and British Archaeology',
Joseph Mayer of Liverpool 1803â 1886
, edited by Margaret Gibson and Susan M. Wright.
10
. Officers' Reports, 15 November 1853, British Museum Central Archive.
11
. Joseph Mayer, letter to A.W. Franks, 24 November 1853 and 26 February 1854, BM (MLA) papers.
12
. Roach Smith, letter to Joseph Mayer, 20 February 1856.
13
. âAntique Ivory Carving',
Art Journal
(1 October 1855), p. 276.
14
. Joseph Clarke, letter to Joseph Mayer, 28 March 1868.
15
. Joseph Clarke, letter to Roach Smith, 22 November 1856.
16
. Joseph Mayer, letter to W. H. Rolfe, 8 September 1857.
17
. See
Joseph Mayer of Liverpool 1803â1886
, pp. 95â6 for further details of the sale. Joseph Clarke, letter to F. W. Fairholt, 14 April 1859.
18
. C. T. Gatty,
The Mayer Collection in the Liverpool Museum considered as an Educational Possession
(Liverpool Art Club, 1878), pp. 20â21.
19
. A. H. Church, âJosiah Wedgwood, Master Potter',
The Portfolio,
3 (March 1894), p. 100.
1
.   Mayer's contribution to the Great Exhibition was first prompted by a letter from Edward Hawkins, Keeper of Antiquities at the British Museum, 11 February 1850 and the pieces were listed in the official catalogue, pp. 674â5 (
Jury Reports
, III.520, class xxiii).
2
.   R. Lepsius,
Letters from Egypt, Ethiopia and the Peninsula of Sinai
, translated by L. and J. B. Horner (London, 1853), p. 41.
3
.   Joseph Mayer, letter to Roach Smith, 27 January 1882.
4
.   For these quotations and further information on John Tradescant, see the Ashmolean Museum's extensive web pages at
www.ashmolean.org
.
1
.  Â
Exhibition of Art Treasures of the United Kingdom Manchester 1857, Report of the Executive Committee
(London: Longman, 1859), p. 3.
2
.   Ibid., p. 4.
3
.   Nathaniel Hawthorne,
English Notebooks
(6 September 1857), p. 332.
4
.  Â
Exhibition of Art Treasures of the United Kingdom Manchester 1857, Report of the Executive Committee
, p. 17.
5
.   Ibid., p. 31.
6
.   Quoted in Charles Saumarez Smith,
The National Gallery: A Short History
(London: Lincoln, 2009), p. 74.
7
.  Â
Exhibition of Art Treasures of the United Kingdom Manchester 1857, Report of the Executive Committee
, p. 20.
8
.   Nathaniel Hawthorne,
English Notebooks
(6 September 1857), p. 332.
9
.   The Duke's criticism may be apocryphal, but it amused Manchester commentators and so was frequently repeated; see, for example,
A Handbook to the Gallery of British Paintings in the Art Treasures Exhibition
(London,1857), p. 3, and the
Manchester Guardian
, 5 May 1857.
10
. Gustav Waagen, letter to Joseph Mayer, 18 August 1856.
11
. J. B. Waring, âCeramic Art',
Art Treasures of the United Kingdom from the Art Treasures Exhibition, Manchester
(London: Day & Son, 1858), p. 31.
12
. Gustav Waagen,
A Walk through the Art Treasures exhibition at Manchester under the guidance of Dr Waagen, Companion to the Official Catalogue
(London: John Murray, 1857), p. 74.
13
. Roach Smith, letter to Joseph Mayer, 11 April 1856.
14
. Minutes of the Library, Museum and Education Committee, 14 February 1867; quoted in Gibson and Wright (eds),
Joseph Mayer of Liverpool,
p. 20.
15
. Joseph Clarke, letter to Joseph Mayer, 28 March 1868.
1
.   The inscription on the bust of Peggy (Margaret) Harrison, now in the Walker Art Gallery (7610,
Foreign Catalogue
). Very little is known of her, or of her exact relationship with Mayer.
2
.   Elizabeth Meteyard,
The Life of Josiah Wedgwood
(London: Hurst and Blackett, 1865), vol. I, p. xiv.
3
.   Joseph Clarke, letter to Joseph Mayer, 8 August 1863.
4
.   Wilkie Collins,
The Woman in White
, edited by John Sutherland (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998), p. 176.
5
.   âChronic Chinamania (Incurable)',
Punch
, âAlmanack' 1875, 68 (17 December 1874), n.p;
Les Français Peints par Eux-mêmes, Encyclopédie Morale du Dix-neuvième Siecle
(Paris: Curmer), vol. I, p. 277.
6
.   âTo our reader',
The Connoisseur: A Collector's Journal and Monthly Review,
1:1 (January 1895), pp. 5â6.
7
.   Freud, writing mostly at the beginning of the twentieth century, identified, for example, a biological drive which directly links collecting to sexual drive, while also identifying a resemblance to hunting and the display of trophies from the aggressive drive. More recently, Jean Baudrillard described collecting as âa powerful mechanism of compensation during critical phases in a person's sexual development'. (Jean Baudrillard, âThe System of Collecting', in
The Cultures of Collecting
, edited by John Elsner and Roger Cardinal (London: Reaktion, 1994), pp. 7â24 (p. 9).)
8
.   Henry James,
The Portrait of a Lady
, edited by Nicola Bradbury (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995), pp. 328, 558, 386; George Meredith,
The Egoist
, edited by George Woodcock (Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1968), p. 138.
9
.   âA Free Village Library',
The Standard
(1878), pp. 11â12.
10
. H. Cunningham,
The Volunteer Force: A Social and Political History, 1859â1908
(London: Croon Helm 1975), p. 2.
11
. Mayer's speech at a celebratory dinner after the opening of the Free Library, reported in the
Staffordshire Weekly Times
, 5 March 1870.
12
. âA Free Village Library',
The Standard
(1878), pp. 18â19.
1
.   See the reminiscences of Dante Gabriel Rossetti's brother William, in
Dante Gabriel Rossetti: His Family-Letters Edited with
a Memoir by William Michael Rossetti,
2 vols (London: Ellis and Elvey, 1895), vol. I. p. 28.
2
.   For details of this and other of Rossetti's demands, see George Charles Williamson,
Murray Marks and His Friends
(London, 1919).
3
.   Quoted in Williamson,
Murray Marks and His Friends
, p. 52.
4
.  Â
Times Literary Supplement
(12 June 1919).
5
.   T. Affleck Greeves,
A Guide to Bedford Park: the first garden suburb
(1893) (London: The Bedford Park Society, 2010).
6
.   Williamson,
Murray Marks and His Friends,
p. 13.
1
.   Walter Sickert, âSmall Pictures',
The Speaker
, 2 January 1897.
2
.   âThe French Gallery',
The Times
, 8 April 1879, p. 4.
3
.   Williamson,
Murray Marks and His Friends
, p. 38.
4
.  Â
Exhibition Culture in London 1878â1908,
database, University of Glasgow, 2006; <
http://www.exhibitionculture.arts.gla.ac.uk/
>
5
.   Bernard Berenson, Italian Painters of the Renaissance (London: Phaidon Press, 1956), pp. ix, xii.
6
.   Schreiber, Journal, 26 February 1870.
7
.   Henry James, Preface to
The Portrait of a Lady
(1881). The fascination was two-way: Charles Dickens, for example, found an eager audience for his
American Notes,
published shortly after his first visit to the United States in 1842.
8
.   J. P. Morgan appears less than sympathetically in Richard Armour's 1953 satire
It All Started with Columbus
: âMorgan, who was a direct sort of person, made his money in money. . . He became immensely wealthy because of his financial interests, most of which were around eight or ten percent. . . This Morgan is usually spoken of as “J.P.” to distinguish him from Henry Morgan the pirate.'
9
.   The Pierpont Morgan Library in New York was made a public institution in 1924 by his son, J. P. Morgan; many of the gems were donated to the American Museum of Natural History in New York. Pierpont Morgan also left works from his collection to the Metropolitan Museum of Art and founded the Yale Babylonian collection with over 3,000 cuneiform tablets.
10
. William Bode,
Die italienische Bronzestatuetten der Renaissance
, 3 vols (Berlin: B. Cassirer, 1907â12), vol. I, p. 3; quoted in Clive Wainwright, âA Gatherer and Disposer of other men's stuffe:
Murray Marks, connoisseur and curiosity dealer',
Journal of the History of Collections
(2002), p. 171.
11
. Ibid.
12
. James McNeill Whistler, letters to F. R. Leyland, 2 and 9 September 1876 (University of Glasgow Transcription 08796; Manuscript division, Pennel-Whistler Collection PWC 6B/22/1).
13
. There has been much writing and discussion about Leyland's Peacock Room and Whistler's contribution. For a detailed and authoritative account, see Linda Merrill,
The Peacock Room: A Cultural Biography
(New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1998). The room is now on show, complete, at the Freer Gallery of Art in Washington.