Rare Classic Car Robert Policeman Mascot C1920's By John Hassall
Antique Rare John Hassall โRobert Policemanโ Car Mascot โ Signed & Numbered โ c.1920s ๐
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Overview ๐
Offered here is a rare and highly collectible English automobilia mascot designed by John Hassall RI (1868โ1948), popularly known as โRobert Policeman.โ
With one arm extended in the instantly recognisable stop-traffic gesture, this is a wonderfully witty and optimistic interwar designโa miniature sculpture that captures the character of British motoring at a time when roads, traffic control, and car culture were rapidly modernising.
Especially desirable in this example is the combination of named designer authorship, strong sculptural silhouette, clever period engineering, and documented published/auction referencesโall in one compact, displayable object.
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Historical Importance ๐๏ธ
Car mascots are far more than ornaments: they are small sculptures born from a specific cultural moment. In the early 20th century, as motoring shifted from novelty to ambition and everyday identity, mascots became a way for owners to express status, humour, personality, and style. They sit at the intersection of:
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Design history (miniature sculpture for mass culture)
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Motoring heritage (the โfaceโ and personality of a vehicle)
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Advertising & visual culture (recognisable characters and gestures translated into objects)
โRobert Policemanโ is especially meaningful because it transforms a modern urban figureโthe traffic policeman, symbol of order and the new road cultureโinto a witty emblem. The result feels distinctly British, distinctly interwar, and unmistakably of its period.
A further highlight is the adjustable porcelain head, adding an interactive, tactile quality that reflects the eraโs taste for mechanical charm and mixed materialsโturning the mascot into an object that invites engagement rather than remaining static.
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About the Designer: John Hassall RI (1868โ1948) ๐จ
John Hassall is widely regarded as one of the most important British illustrators and advertising artists of the late Victorian, Edwardian, and early 20th-century era. Born in Walmer, Kent, he trained in Europe before establishing himself in London at the moment when modern commercial advertising was becoming a dominant visual force.
He is celebrated for enduring poster imagery including โSkegness Is So Bracingโ (1908) and the original Kodak Girl (1910)โimages that helped define the golden age of British poster art and public-facing design. His election (1901) to the Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours and the Royal Society of Miniature Painters underlines the esteem in which his draughtsmanship and design intelligence were held.
Because Hassallโs reputation rests largely on two-dimensional work (posters, print advertising, illustration), authentic three-dimensional objects tied to his designs are comparatively scarce. A mascot like this is therefore an unusually desirable crossover: poster art + design history + motoring culture in one period artefact.
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The Mascot: โRobert Policemanโ ๐ฎโ๏ธ
Superbly cast in brass, this mascot presents with a rich, attractive patina โจ and a wonderfully engaging mixed-material feature: a spring-loaded enamelled porcelain head. The head can be adjusted by subtly tilting the helmet, allowing small changes in expression and attitudeโan interactive mechanical detail that gives the piece โlifeโ from different viewing angles.
The pose is brilliantly judged: the extended arm reads clearly at a distance, creating a bold outline that would have been effective on a radiator top as well as in a cabinet. It is exactly the kind of mascot collectors pursueโhumorous, instantly legible, and deeply of its time.
Historically, the model was distributed through Smithโs Motor Accessories and remains one of the more charming and culturally specific British mascot designs of the early motoring period.
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Materials & Craftsmanship โ๏ธ
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Body: cast brass with well-developed antique surface colour and wear consistent with age
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Head: enamelled porcelain (period taste for mixed media)
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Mechanism: spring-loaded / adjustable head movement (adds personality and display versatility)
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Overall effect: a miniature sculpture balancing character with engineering ingenuityโtypical of high-quality interwar automobilia
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Markings ๐ท๏ธ
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Signed โHassallโ to the side โ๏ธ
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Numbered underneath ๐ข
These details are central to desirability, supporting authenticity and helping distinguish a serious collectible example from later decorative pieces.
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Size ๐
Compact, but with strong presenceโideal for a classic car radiator, desk display, shelf, or collectorโs cabinet.
Dimensions (cm):
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Total height: 11.5 cm
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Width (widest point): 6.5 cm
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Depth: 5.5 cm
Despite its modest scale, the design has an excellent visual โreadโ thanks to the silhouette, gesture, and facial detail.
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Provenance & Published References ๐ฐ
This model is unusually well documented:
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From the notable auction house Richard Edmonds Auctions, 26 November 2022
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Curated by Cheshire Antiques Consultant LTD
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Antiques Trade Gazette, Issue 2576, 21 January 2023, p.30 (โThe Web Shop Windowโ), illustrated and described as โRobert Policemanโ (copy supplied with the item)
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Why Youโll Love It ๐
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Rare, characterful early motoring mascot
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Designed by John Hassall RIโmajor British poster/advertising artist
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Signed and numbered for collector confidence
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Brass with attractive patina + spring-loaded porcelain head
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Published reference in Antiques Trade Gazette
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A standout automobilia conversation piece with strong display appeal
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Condition ๐ ๏ธ
In attractive antique condition with surface wear and patina consistent with age and use. The brass shows honest period ageing. The porcelain head shows normal age-related wear. Mechanism present and visually effective. Overall, a very appealing, authentic example.
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