Fine Furniture - 20th January 2026
Lot 215
A RARE LATE VICTORIAN TAXIDERMY RED SQUIRREL TEA PARTY
Estimate £3,000 - £5,000 | Hammer £8255
Inc. Buyers Premium
Description
A RARE LATE VICTORIAN TAXIDERMY RED SQUIRREL TEA PARTY
ATTRIBUTED TO WALTER POTTER (1835-1918), C.1880-90
the anthropomorphic tableau depicting twelve red squirrels, seven seated around a table eating and drinking, with miniature items of cutlery, glassware and crockery one squirrel wiping his mouth with a napkin with initials 'E J M' and five as a band playing musical instruments including a cello, violin and a French horn, in a glazed giltwood and composition display case on stand
130.2cm high, 92cm wide, 64cm deep
Catalogue Note
Walter Potter, the Victorian taxidermist, is known for his whimsical dioramas featuring small animals such as kittens, rabbits, squirrels, and birds enacting uncannily human scenes, from table games to afternoon tea. Potter began creating his playful taxidermies aged 15, eventually gaining such attention that he opened the Walter Potter Taxidermy Museum in 1880 in Bramber, Sussex, which enabled him to capitalize upon the Victorians’ enthusiasm for the macabre. Potter combined skilled mounting with miniature props and highly detailed costumes, arranged in a theatrical manner to create scenes inspired by literature and by social and domestic rituals.
Over time these curiosities fell out of fashion, and the collection was auctioned and dispersed in 2003, with many tableaux now belonging to private collectors worldwide-cherished for their unconventional charm. His work reflects Victorian sentimentality, curiosity culture, and a fascination with anthropomorphism, leaving behind a legacy that is arguably iconic yet unsettling in equal measure.
See Bonhams, The Sale of the Contents of Mr Potter's Museum of Curiosities, 23rd September 2003 for related examples including: lot 293 the 'The Kittens Wedding', which sold for £21,150 (including premium).