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| Douglas Volk, 'William Macbeth', oil on canvas, 1917 Brooklyn Museum, Gift of a group of American artists and amateurs, 18.38 [Photo: Brooklyn Museum] |
Charles Ricketts & Charles Shannon
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
777. The Toilette of Venus
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
776. Published: Four Fugitive Letters
On 13 June, a festive edition of several letters by Charles Ricketts was published in The Hague under the title Four Fugitive Letters. To Cecil French, Martin Birnbaum, Helen Travers Smith & Isabelle Augusta Gregory.
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| Copies of Charles Ricketts, Four Fugitive Letters (June 2026) |
Whilst working on the publication of The Collected Letters of Charles Ricketts, John Aplin and I realised that once the manuscript would be finalised, previously unknown letters from the artist might come to light. Shortly before that moment, we were able to include a few more letters (these have ‘i’ added after the letter number), but even after the final sequence was established, followed by several rounds of proofreading, some more emerged.
One letter appeared at the auction of the Jeremy Maas collection of Oscar Wilde (Bonhams, 18 February 2026) and another at an auction held by Forum Books (26 March 2026). We also received photographs of a letter in a private collection (thanks are due to Paul Durham) and discovered via the Internet that another one had been auctioned a quarter of a century earlier.
To celebrate the publication of the collected letters by Brill in Leiden and Boston, we decided to edit these four freshly discovered letters.![]() |
| Unassembled copies of Charles Ricketts, Four Fugitive Letters, fresh from the printers [Photo: Huug Schipper, June 2026] |
Charles Ricketts
Four Fugitive Letters. To Cecil French, Martin Birnbaum, Helen Travers Smith & Isabelle Augusta Gregory
12 [and 8] pages, 3 illustrations (2 on the covers), 21 x 12 cm
Designed by Huug Schipper | Studio Tint
Set in Petr van Blokland's Presti Display Medium
Printed on Biotop by Van Deventer Printers, 's-Gravezande
Edition limited to 34 numbered copies
Price: €12,50.
Packaging and shipping:
European Union: €5,00; [with track and trace: €13,50].
United Kingdom: €7,00; [with track and trace: €16,00]
USA and Canada: €7,00; [with track and trace: €25,00].
Orders
You can express your interest by sending an email to Paul van Capelleveen [see the address in the right-hand bar]. You will receive a Paypal invoice.
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
775. Not To Be Taken Away (3)
The two editions published by the Eragny Press bearing the inscription ‘File Copy Not To Be Taken Away’ came from the collection of Antonio Cippico. We can trace their history back a little further.
In 2006, the two editions recently offered by Sophie Schneideman – Flaubert’s La Légende de Saint Julien l’Hospitalier (1900) and Un Coeur simple (1901) – were listed on the website of the antiquarian bookshop Maggs Rare Books in London. The third volume of Flaubert’s Hérodias (1901) was not included, but there is indeed a copy bearing that inscription. We know this from an earlier antiquarian bookshop catalogue.
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| The Gentle Art (Zurich: L'Art Ancien S.A., 1974) |
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| The Gentle Art (Zurich: L'Art Ancien S.A., 1974) |
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| The Gentle Art (Zurich: L'Art Ancien S.A., 1974) |
Wednesday, June 3, 2026
774. Not To Be Taken Away (2)
In Warwick Street (later Craven Street), at Hacon & Ricketts’s shop, ‘At the Sign of the Dial’, visitors could view small exhibitions, examine prints by The Dial group and browse the books published under the name the Vale Press. Charles Ricketts had made his typeface, The Vale, available to Lucien Pissarro, and originally the books published by the Eragny Press were partly distributed through the shop. From 1899 onwards, Hacon & Ricketts bought the complete edition of Eragny Press books, becoming Pissarro's publishers. On a single copy of the print run – the copy shown to visitors as an example – the words ‘File copy Not to be taken away’ were written, as we saw two weeks ago (see blog 772 Not To Be Taken Away).
The catalogues of the exhibitions were no exception, such as that of the Boyd Houghton show held from 25 June to 2 July 1896.
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| Catalogue: An Exhibition of Forty Designs by A. Boyd Houghton including original drawings and proofs retouched by the artist (The Sign of the Dial, 1896) File copy 'Not to be taken away'. |
Sophie Schneideman offered two file copies from the Eragny Press, both titles by Gustave Flaubert, published in 1900 and 1901. On closer inspection, there is something peculiar about one of them, Un Coeur simple.
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| Gustave Flaubert, Un Coeur simple (Eragny Press, 1901) |
Most copies have a label that gives the author's full name: Gustave Flaubert. This is separated from the title by two acorn leaf ornaments, which came with the Vale Type and were designed by Ricketts for the Vale Press.
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
773. Legros Medal of Ricketts
The medal featuring a portrait of Charles Ricketts, created by Alphonse Legros in 1897, was not produced in large numbers. Cast in bronze, these have, over the years, developed a brown patina. One example in the collection of the Musée d’Orsay in Paris has a rather mottled appearance.
See for an image of a copy at auction in 2019 blog 410 'The Ricketts Medal by Alphonse Legros'.
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| Alphonse Legros, 'CR' [Charles Ricketts] (medal, 1897) [Musée d'Orsay (inventory number MEDOR 882)] |
The copy at the Musée d'Orsay (inventory number MEDOR 882) was given to the state for the Musée de Luxembourg by the artist himself.
Wednesday, May 20, 2026
772. Not To Be Taken Away
From 14 to 17 May, Firsts: London’s Rare Book Fair was held in London, for which various antiquarian bookshops published colourful catalogues, such as Sims Reed, and Sophie Schneideman, and highlights including a copy of the signed limited edition of The Ballad of Reading Gaol (offered by Peter Harrington) were published on the Firsts website.
Schneideman's catalogue includes among a large group of Eragny Press editions two books that were shown to clients in the Hacon & Ricketts shop, At the Sign of the Dial. Usually, these copies of Vale and Eragny Press books have the prospectus pasted in at the front. To prevent these file copies, which had likely been handled by many people, from being sold, an instruction was written in ink on the front cover:
File CopyNot to be taken away
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| File copies of Eragny Press books: Gustave Flaubert, Un Coeur simple and La Légende de St. Julien l'Hospitalier (both 1900) |
Wednesday, May 13, 2026
771. Published Online: The Collected Letters of Charles Ricketts
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| The Collected Letters of Charles Ricketts (volume III). Brill, 2026 |
Wednesday, May 6, 2026
770. Another Charles Ricketts
The name Charles Ricketts is not uncommon. In the nineteenth century for example there was an Assistant Surgeon Charles Ricketts who during the Crimean War wrote a letter to The Times, reporting that the Russians killed their prisoners, there was a Charles Ricketts, officer at the Royal Fusilliers who acted in a play at the regimental theatre at Aldershott, another Charles Ricketts was accused of stealing peas and half-a-sack of bran and a bucket and brush (he pleaded guilty), and yet another Charles Ricketts, a beerhouse keeper, sold beer at 'improper hours on Sunday'. Other men called Charles Ricketts were labourers, bakers, plasterers, captains, butcher's boys, inn keepers, land owners or brick layers. Some people with this name won prizes for 'the best yearling bull'.
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| Website Liverpool Geological Society |
On 11 February 1868, Dr. Ricketts, F.G.S. was in the chair for the monthly meeting of the Liverpool Geological Society. He also read one of the papers: 'Remarks on the Upper Silurian Formation', and his full name was given in the Liverpool Albion (17 February 1868) as Charles Ricketts, M.D., F.G.S. He is one of a few people called Charles Ricketts who besides leaving traces in archives and newspapers, published articles and books listed in library catalogues and bibliographies. All his papers have geological themes, although he was trained and worked as a surgeon.
He was born in Titchfield in 1819, the son of Dr. John Alston Ricketts (1786-1852). At a young age, he developed an interest in geology and he kept his first fossil from the Hampshire Cliffs in his collection. He was educated at Bath, graduating in medicine, and in about 1845 moved to Lancaster, and later Birkenhead (near Liverpool) where he worked as a surgeon and lived in Prince-street the greater part of his life. In October 1861 his name figured in the list of 'gentlemen on whom the degree Doctor of Medicine has just been conferred' (Fife Herald, 17 October 1861).
In 1863 he became a member of the Liverpool Geological Society (which was established in 1859), and in 1868 he joined the Geological Society of London. He published a paper 'On some Erratics in the Boulder-clay of Cheshire, &c., and the Conditions of Climate they denote' in the Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London (1885). In 1873, he published Essays On Physical Geology (printed at the Courier steam printing works). Another publication was titled Remarks on the Country around the Wrekin. A Comparison of the Carboniferous Rocks of Coalbrook Dale, with Those of Other Districts (1876). More than twenty of his papers were published in the Proceedings of the Liverpool Geological Society. He was also a member of other societies, such as the Naturalists' Field Club.
Wednesday, April 29, 2026
769. The Other Shannon
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| Sir James Jubusa Shannon, self-portrait, oil, c.1919 © National Portrait Gallery, London |
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
768. Atlas: the Second Study by Charles Shannon at the National Gallery of Art
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| Charles Shannon, study of Atlas [National Gallery of Art, Washington DC] [Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication] |
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
767. Two Studies by Charles Shannon at the National Gallery of Art
There are, according to the museum's website, two studies by Charles Shannon in the collection of the National Gallery of Art in Washington. One depicts Atlas, for an unknown painting; the second work is one of a series of chalk studies for a painting of 'The Good Samaritan', dated 1918. No painting with this title has survived, but after Shannon died in 1937, a large series of chalk and coloured drawings on the subject were sold.
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| Charles Shannon, study for 'The Good Samaritan', signed 'CS 1918' [National Gallery of Art, Washington DC] [Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication] |
Sotheby's 1939 sale was recorded in the Catalogue of Fine Paintings by Old Masters and Modern Drawings (London, Sotheby’s, 14 June 1939) when the property of 'C.H. Shannon, R.A. (decd.)' was sold by order of the executors. Lot number 8 was described - briefly - as 'The Good Samaritan at the Inn Door', the coloured design[,] Thirteen various Studies[,] Chalks'. The lot was sold for £6 5s to Martin Birnbaum, an American dealer and art critic who had been a longtime friend of Ricketts and Shannon.
This particular study of two male figures for the 'Good Samaritan' was acquired by William Henry Donner in Montreux in the late 1930s (this is what the museum's website tells us, but possibly Donner acquired it in the early 1940s). The study went to his daughter, Dora Donner Ide and, in 1999, Mr. and Mrs. John Jay Ide from San Francisco donated the drawing to the National Gallery of Art.
Wednesday, April 8, 2026
766. The Real Name of Thom Winslow
However, the site introduces an error about Florian, stating that she was the elder 'son' of the Winslows, born on 17 March 1914. (All dates on this website are questionable.) Of course, Florian was their only daughter. The mother is introduced as 'Helen Sterling' (1880-1943). This cannot be correct. Sterling was not her family name, it was her middle name. She was not born in 1880 in Cleveland, and in 1960 was very much alive, when she was mentioned in a note about deaths in The Times of 13 January 1960:
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| The New York Times, 31 October 1936 |
Helen Sterling Wilson was the sister of Gertrude S. Thomas who died on 2 October 1935. There were to be two trust funds for 'Florian Winslow Johnstone [...] and Marius Winslow', niece and nephew of the deceased. From this we can conclude that Helen was not a British painter born in 1890, but an American. The genealogy of the Thomas family has partially been published in The Sterling Genealogy by Albert Mack Sterling (New York: The Grafton Press, 1909). Gertrude Streator Thomas and Helen Sterling Thomas were children of Helen Gertrude Streator and Eben B. Thomas, the former a descendent of William Sterling of Haverhill, Mass., the latter a railroad manager who became president of the Lehigh Valley Railway system. Gertrude was born on 5 June 1873, Helen was born on 18 November 1877.
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| Signature of Helen Sterling Winslow on 'Pieta' (undated tempera painting) |
Wednesday, April 1, 2026
765. More on the Winslows?
By April 1938, Helen and Henry Winslow had donated a Japanese artwork to the British Museum in memory of Charles Ricketts. The museum gives the following description:
Amida sanzon raigo zu 阿弥陀三尊来迎図
Painting, hanging scroll mounted as a panel. Amida standing on lotus pedestal, his hands in mudra, and halo with fifteen rays of light; on left Seishi kneeling on lotus pedestal, hands clasped in prayer; on right Kannon on lotus pedestal holding lotus pedestal for the worshipper. Ink, colours and gold on silk.
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| 'Amida sanzon raigo zu' British Museum Museum number1938,0108,0.1 © The Trustees of the British Museum [Shared under a Creative Commons Attribution -NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) licence] |
The pair had a daughter, called Florian, or Ann. She married Thomas Julian Johnstone on 11 May 1935. On 20 September 1951 she married Charles Francis Carr. Later in life she lived on Guernsey. Florian Carr died on 2 May 2007.
Henry Winslow's Poems
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
764. Who was Thom Winslow?
Henry Winslow
Thom and Marius Winslow
Wednesday, March 18, 2026
763. A Seated Figure by an Archway
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| C.H.S. [Charles Shannon?], Seated Figure by an Archway (undated pencil drawing) |
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
762. A Fictional Cover for A Comedy of Masks (1893)
Late 1892, in an undated letter, the poet and prose writer Ernest Dowson (1867-1900) wrote to his former fellow student at Oxford, Charles Sayle (1864-1924), that the novel Dowson had written with another fellow student, Arthur Moore (1866-1952), had been accepted by publisher William Heinemann in London. The novel, started in 1890, would be published in three volumes in the autumn of 1893.
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| Ernest Dowson and Arthur Moore, A Comedy of Masks London: William Heinemann, 1893 [Photo: Maggs Bros., London] |
Dowson wrote to Sayle, who had by then begun a career as a librarian and bibliographer:
Heinemann has accepted our novel, but is vague about dates, which is tedious of him.
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| Ernest Dowson and Arthur Moore, A Comedy of Masks London: William Heinemann, 1894 [first one-volume edition] [Photo: Maggs Bros., London] |
The bindings of the first edition are stamped with an ornament combining a burning torch with a pair of masks, one for comedy and one for tragedy, the classic symbols of Thalia and Melpomene, representing the performing arts. The later, single-volume edition does not show a drama mask, but three comedy masks on a shield, the middle one representing an antique Greek mask.
But the book cover could have looked very different.Wednesday, March 4, 2026
761. Had Zimri Peace Who Slew His Master?
Harry Quilter (1851-1907), whose work was ridiculed by both James McNeill Whistler and Oscar Wilde, gave Shannon and Ricketts the opportunity to create drawings for his magazine The Universal Review. He would reproduce two of these drawings, both by Charles Shannon, in his art historical work Preferences in Art, Life and Literature (1892).
Preferences contained 67 illustrations. However, a deluxe large-paper edition also appeared. These numbered copies contain 114 illustrations, 56 of which were printed in autotype, mounted on additional sheets with the titles and names of the artists handwritten in ink. Among those additional illustrations are a drawing by Shannon and one by Ricketts, the latter titled 'Had Zimri Peace Who Slew His Master?'
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| Charles Ricketts, 'Had Zimri Peace Who Slew His Master?' (The Universal Review, 15 August 1889) [Photo: Jos Uljee] |
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| Charles Ricketts, 'Had Zimri Peace Who Slew His Master?' (published as 'Jezebel' in Preferences in Art, Life and Literature (1892), facing page 232) |
He wrote in a letter that accompanied a copy of the book he sent as a Christmas present to Thomas Sturge Moore (13 December 1926):
We are far from Christmas yet, but I am sending your Christmas present with this as the post-office won't have it, and it too will probably take time on the railway – though I shall send it by passenger train.It comes with a great deal of love from Emily and me to you and Marie. Of course my commercial soul is distressed by the foreknowledge that you will want to cut it up and take out the only things that are of value, for its price is going up steadily! But here it is for you to do as you like with; and we are happy in sending it, for we know you will rejoice in the superb reproduction of Ricketts’ “Jezebel” and the other treasures as much as we do.
It was really a great happiness when we found this copy some months ago, and we at once said we must have it for you.






























