Adam's HOMAN POTTERTON A LIFETIME OF COLLECTING 7th September 2021

64 58 A COLLECTION OF NINETY-SIX PLASTER INTAGLIO PORTRAIT MEDALLIONS, depicting European historical, literary and royal personages, contained in four frames € 400 - 600 59 A PAIR OF FAUX MARBLE CIRCULAR COLUMNS, one raised on square platform base. 108cm high (42.5”) € 800 - 1,200 60 EDWARD A. FOLEY (1814-1874) Portrait Bust of a Young Girl White statuary marble, 50cm high (19.6”) Signed and inscribed ‘London 1859’ € 5,000 - 6,000 Born in Dublin, the son of Jesse Foley, a native of Winchester, he was the elder brother of John Henry Foley RA, RHA. Edward showed a talent for modelling and received instruction from his step-grandfather Benjamin Schrowder (c.1757-1826). He had come to Dublin to do sculpture in the new Custom House and assisted Edward Smyth (1749-1812) in the carving of the key-stones, emblematic of the Irish rivers. Smyth, who was a close neighbour, later took the thirteen year old Edward as an apprentice. Schrowder had married Foley’s grandmother and he lived and had his studio in the same house on Montgomery Street as the Foleys lived in. Around this time Edward became a pupil in the Royal Dublin Soci- ety’s School. Foley was unable to finish his apprenticeship as Smyth was unable to provide him with work, so he resolved to take his chances in Lon- don. After some time, he was engaged by William Behnes as an as- sistant. Soon Foley had achieved a reputation in his own right and began to exhibit at the Royal Academy in 1834 and continued to exhibit there regularly until 1873. Strickland describes his non-por- trait works as “graceful ideal works” of which the present bust is an example. He died tragically at the age of 60.

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