Down a west London lane, Jeremy Musson visits the tiny forge that made garden ornaments for Vita Sackville-West and Gertrude Jekyll.
‘People come in for a dancing girl and walk out with a Mercury,’ says Peter McBride, who runs H Crowther Ltd in west London, founded in 1908.
Crowther’s is a survivor of another age, a hidden wonder tucked away behind Chiswick High Road. It is one of a small number of long-standing businesses which carry on in the same old brick-built workshops, providing traditional goods and services – just as they have always done. Crowther’s occupies an old forge and workaday brick shed at the end of a garden behind a typical London terrace.
Stepping into its garden, where stand the dancing girls, piping boys, the lion’s masks and the pirouetting Mercurys, one feels an echo not just of the early 1900s but of the 18th century.
Crowther’s still continues to make these traditional lead garden statues and urns, supplying and repairing dancing figures, personifications of the seasons and vast lead cisterns (now usually used as planters) for town and country houses in the UK and beyond. McBride points out, ‘A few years ago, we replaced two lead figures at Hestercombe, the lost originals of which had been bought here from us in around 1910.’ They have recently supplied figures as part of the restoration of Stowe landscaped gardens.
The founder was Henry Crowther. He was a son of one Thomas Crowther, an experienced London stonemason who was also, from the 1870s, a dealer in antique garden figures and ornaments,which he could expertly repair. Henry Crowther drew heavily on his father’s stock for creating newly commissioned works in lead. Most are modelled on original 18th-century figures by leading sculptors such as John Cheere. Also in his father’s stock there were urns designed by neoclassical champions such as Robert Adam, circular bas-reliefs, medallions and all manner of classical and baroque urns.
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