DAPHNE ALLEN (1899-1985) §
ARTS & CRAFTS CASSONE, CIRCA 1920
Estimate: £6,000 - £8,000
Auction: Lots 1 to 336 | 16th October at 10am
Description
walnut, inset with allegorical panels, Visited by Angels, Gathering Spring Flowers, and Among Children, oil on board, the front panel signed DAPHNE ALLEN
Dimensions
The cassone 143cm wide, 66cm high, 60cm deep; the central panel 29.2cm x 72.4cm, the side panels each 29.2cm x 35.5cm
Footnote
Note: Daphne Allen was the daughter of Hugh Allen, and possibly the granddaughter of Ruskin’s publisher George Allen. She was educated at Streatham College for Girls and continued to live in that area of South London into adulthood. While still a child, Allen produced watercolours inspired by the New Testament, published in 1912 by George Allen as A Child’s Visions. The same year, they were exhibited as A Child’s Visions and Fancies at the Dudley Galleries. In 1913, a second group was published as The Birth of the Opal; A Child’s Fancies, and again exhibited at the Dudley Galleries.
Through her teens, Allen illustrated volumes by other authors for Headley Brothers: John Oxenham’s The Cradle of Our Lord (1916), A Garden of Love from Herrick & the Other Poets of the 17th Century (1917), and Janet Dykes and Christine Standing’s The Man Who Chose Poverty – The Story of St Francis (1917). She also exhibited alongside Annie French and others at the Burlington Gallery in December 1919. Later exhibitions include one of ‘landscapes and imaginative watercolours’ at B F Stevens & Brown (1928) and another of paintings at the Little Burlington Gallery (1937).
Her further activities included painting memorials (including one for Christ Church, Newcastle, New South Wales), designing stained glass (for Scotby Church, Northumberland), and producing drawings for the Illustrated London News (at least until the end of 1952).