30 Oct 2020 A) Fri, 30Th Oct 2020 Viewing: Full Sale Viewing at Chiswick by Appointment Only
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Silver & Objects of Vertu (30 Oct 2020 A) Fri, 30th Oct 2020 Viewing: Full Sale Viewing at Chiswick By Appointment Only Thu 29 Oct, 11am - 5pm Please contact the Silver & Objects of Vertu Department to book a viewing appointment. Lot 404 Estimate: £1000 - £1500 + Fees An Elizabeth II modernist sterling silver three-piece tea service, Sheffield 1959/61/62 mark of Walker and Hall, designed by David Mellor An Elizabeth II modernist sterling silver three-piece tea service, Sheffield 1959/61/62 mark of Walker and Hall, designed by David Mellor Pride pattern, of plain ogee form, comprising a teapot (1962), milk jug (1962) and sugar bowl (1959) and a pair of sugar tongs (1961). The teapot with removable lid with ebonised knop finial, the strap handle with leather covering. Each fully and part-marked. Together with a Pride pattern silver plated (EPNS) tray. (5) Teapot length – 23.5 cm / 9.25 inches Silver elements weight – 1409 grams / 45.3 ozt Tray length – 51.2 cm / 20 inches Tray weight – 1697 grams The Pride tea service was designed by David Mellor in 1958. In 1959 it won a Council of Industrial Design award for both aesthetic and practical reasons. Manufactured by Walker & Hall of Sheffield, who employed Mellor as a design consultant from 1954. DAVID MELLOR CBE RDI (1930-present) David Mellor is one of the best known 20th century British designers and was a key figure in the evolution of post-war British design. He was born in Sheffield in 1930 and, from the age of twelve, attended the Junior Art Department Sheffield College of Art. In 1945, he progressed to the Sheffield College of Art where he became interested in contemporary design. After National Service Mellor, went to the Royal College of Art under Professor Robert Goodden, winning a scholarship to study at the British School in Rome. After graduating in 1954, Mellor returned to Sheffield and set up a workshop and studio for special commissions in silver and was at the centre of a resurgence of the interest in contemporary silversmithing. In 1962, he became the youngest ever Royal Designer for Industry. Mellor is recognised for the great diversity of his design work from cutlery, hence his nick name the 'cutlery king,' to designing Britain's first modern street furniture. Driven by a passion for good design for the public he made a considerable impact on the British street landscape, with designs for bus shelters, the square post box, street lighting, seating and litter bins. However, we will be most familiar with his traffic lights. In 1965, he was commissioned by the Ministry of Transport to redesign the national traffic light system, Mellor's traffic lights are still in use today almost unaltered since their introduction 40 years ago. A museum in Hathersage in Derbyshire shows the full historic collection of his work..