West Country Spring 2014 Fine Picture Auction Preview
Dan Goddard reviews the upcoming Picture Auction (within the West Country Spring
2014 Fine Sale) with works ranging from Old Master oils to Robert Lenkiewicz portraits.
We are looking forward to the reaction to the paintings by
Robert Lenkiewicz (1941-2002)
in the Picture auction (within the
Spring 2014 Fine Art Sale)
on 29th April 2014, which includes a group of 13 consigned from a collector in Cornwall.
The group will test the market and gauge the interest and demand for Lenkiewicz
since the heady days of 2003–2008.
Study of the Hut by Robert Lenkiewicz (1941-2002) (FS22/356) is being offered on
29th April 2014 as part of Spring 2014 Fine Sale and is one of 26 Lenkiewicz pictures
in the auction. The estimate for this rare Lenkiewicz landscape is £3,000-£5,000.
Robert Lenkiewicz died in 2002 and in 2003, 2004 and 2008 we conducted spectacular
studio sales where, in a frenzy of interest and buying, just about every one of
the 1,300 lots sold easily. But since 2008, the Lenkiewicz marked has cooled and
is more selective and the result is that market values for pictures by Lenkiewicz
have, in some cases, come down.
This collection comprises good variety in terms of period, subject, project and
medium. For example, there are two early works.
This early Lenkiewicz portrait entitled 'Young Hasid' (FS22/352) carries a pre-sale
estimate of £4,000-£6,000. The auction is being held in Exeter with two live Internet
bidding platforms available for those unable to attend in person.
The 1960s Hampstead portrait of
Young
Hasid
(FS22/352) is loosely after a painting by Marc Chagall and is a connection
to the artist's Jewish ancestry and experiences at his parent's hostel in London,
which took-in immigrant and displaced Jews. The painting was previously part of
the studio collection and was sold in 2008 for £4,200. This time, it is offered
with an estimate of £4,000-£6,000.
A fragment from 'The Fight' (FS22/353) by Robert Lenkiewicz (1941-2002), which was
cut up into pieces, is estimated at £1,000-£1,500.
In the 1980s, Lenkiewicz started a project on Local Education, which included
A large painting called
The Fight
(FS22/353), which depicted a Saturday night scene on the Barbican (in Plymouth)
with a group of Skinheads, local Fascists and young onlookers scuffling and barging
to watch a punch-up. The painting was cut-up into fragments, some of which were
sold in 2003, and this small canvas (which is part of the original) is inscribed
on the reverse and shows a young man engaged in the adrenaline rush. It is estimated
at £1,000-£1,500.
The Painter with Karen (FS22/354) by Robert Lenkiewicz. Estimate: £20,000-£30,000.
The Painter with Lisa (FS22/357) by Robert Lenkiewicz. Estimate: £20,000-£30,000.
There are also two large paintings that were exhibited at the 1994 Birmingham Exhibition
of The Painter with Women Project. Both of these are high quality examples
of the artist tackling large scale canvases, where the theme of Relationship
and the figures dominate the picture. Equivalent paintings of this quality have
made high five figures sums. For example,
Lisa Stokes Holding a Mirror
(which sold in these rooms in 2010 for £40,000) and these two
The Painter With Karen
(FS22/354) and
The Painter with Lisa
(FS22/357), each with estimates of £20,000-£30,000, compare very well with that
quality of painting.
A rare and unusual landscape by Robert Lenkiewiz entitled 'Estuary Study - 8am February'
is expected to fetch £6,000-£8,000 when it falls under the hammer in the Exeter
salerooms.
Lenkiewicz landscapes are more unusual and indeed one of the most admired Lenkiewicz
prints is called Silver Lake. In this sale, there are two landscape paintings.
The first entitled
Study of The Hut
(FS22/356), estimate £3,000-£5,000, seems to hint at the presence (or non-presence)
of a person. This is a constant theme for Lenkiewicz - as if someone has just walked
away from the view. The other landscape is a version of Silver Lake called
Estuary Study – 8am February
(FS22/351) and depicts a misty and transparent view across water, estimate £6,000-£8,000.
Off to Market by Harold Harvey (1874-1941) is typical of his early work and carries
A pre-sale estimate of between £8,000 and £12,000.
Included among a small collection of paintings from South Devon is the
Harold Harvey
oil titled
Off to Market
(FS22/415). The painting was purchased in 1904 by the family of the present owner
from an 'Art Exhibition' in Newlyn.
Harvey is an important name in the formation and development of the painting community
in Cornwall, where he was educated before studying in Paris from 1894-1896 under
his future mentor Norman Garstin. In 1896, Harvey studied further at the
Academie Delecluse and the Academie Colarossi and, in 1897, he
returned to Penzance where he worked with Norman Garstin.
He became a member of the Royal Cambrian Academy from 1909 and a member
of the Newlyn Society of Artists from 1910-1935. In 1911, he married the
artist Mary Bodinnar and they settled in Newlyn where in 1920, with his
close friend and artist Ernest Proctor, he established the Harvey-Proctor
School of Art.
Painted while he was in his 20s, the rural, local subject of this painting is typical
of Harvey's early work, which depicted farm labourers and fisherman, and though
the style and brushwork has impressionist influences, the palette and form is still
realist and traditional in terms of the transition from Victorian painting. The
theme of 'Off to Market' was one that Harvey would revisit and the young man depicted
here crops up in other works, as too do the cow and calf! This is a tight little
painting and a good example from the period prior to 1910 and it is estimated at
£8,000-£12,000.
A Portrait of Two Young Girls (FS22/373) attributed To Arthur Devis (1712-1787)
is being offered in our Three Day Fine Art Sale starting on 29th April 2014 at our
salerooms in Exeter, Devon. This picture is expected to realise £5,000-£7,000.
Among the portraits is an 18th century study of
two young girls
(FS22/373), which is just about life size and attributed to Arthur Devis.
Devis seems to have had a rather up and down career. By 1745, he has trained under
the Flemish master Peter Tillemans and had established a very successful
portrait studio in Great Queen Street in London. By the 1760s, he had fallen out
of fashion, with the flair and style of contemporaries like Sir Joshua Reynolds
and Johann Zoffany much more in favour, and Devis resorted to picture restoration
before retirement to Brighton on 1783. The charming portrait of the sisters is estimated
at £5,000-£7,000.
A miniature of a Russian officer (FS22/364) wearing the Star for the Order of St
Vladimir and the Order of Saint Anne is anticipated to fetch £3,000-£4,000 in the
picture auction.
On a much smaller scale is the
miniature of a Russian officer
(FS22/364), which dates to the early 19th century. The miniature is octagonal and
the young officer is wearing the Star for the Order of St Vladimir and the Order
of Saint Anne and is estimated at £3,000-£4,000.
This interior scene (FS22/417) by the Danish Carl Wilhelm Holsoe (1863-1935) is
estimated at £15,000-£20,000.
Carl Wilhelm Holsoe
was born in Lyngbye, near Arhus in Denmark. He studied at the Royal Academy
in Copenhagen between 1882-1884, and subsequently at the Artists Studieskole
under Peder Severin Kroyer. In 1886, he exhibited at Charlottenberg, an
interior, a subject for which he was to become renowned. Holsoe's interior scenes,
inspired by Vermeer, often sparsely furnished, are a feature of Danish
painting in the latter part of the 19th Century and he became popular throughout
Scandinavia and the rest of Europe, receiving an honourable mention at the Universal
Exposition in Paris and a medal at the Munich Exhibition of 1891.
The
Holsoe interior
(FS22/417) in this sale depicts a lady sewing by a window and has an estimate
of £15,000-£20,000.
A Sore Head (FS22/281) by David Eustace (b 1950) is one of a small group by
the contemporary artist in the auction. This particular painting is estimated at
£100-£200.
To round off this look at a few of the paintings coming up for sale on 29th April
2014 is the small group by the contemporary artist
David Eustace.
Eustace's work has become popular as greeting cards and prints and whose originals
sell in a number of modern art galleries. Eustace was born in Birmingham in 1950
and trained at Sutton School of Art and Exeter College of Art,
but insists that he is largely self-taught. His paintings reveal a social quirkiness
combining odd characters and peculiar moments, like the one entitled
A Sore Head
(FS22/281), estimate £100-£200.
Viewing for the sale commences on Friday, 25th April 2014 and to find out more about
the paintings or to order a catalogue, please call the auction rooms on (01392)
413100 or email
Dan Goddard.
- Bearnes Hampton & Littlewood
- Fine Art Auction
- Robert Lenkiewicz (1941-2002)
- Harold Harvey (1874-1941)
- Arthur Devis
- Carl Wilhelm Holsoe (1863-1935)
- David Eustace (b 1950)
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