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  • IRISH COUNTRY HOUSE PROVENANCE AT SHEPPARDS STRADBALLY HALL SALE

    May 16th, 2026

    An exhibition Killarney davenport by James Egan

    A Killarney davenport exhibited at the RDS in the 19th century, a Cork silver coffee pot, a micromosaic panel of the Doves of Pliny, the Farnese bull and a French Empire eagle standard are among the collective delights at Sheppards Stradbally Hall sale in Co. Laois next on May 19-20.

    The emphasis is on Irish country house provenance in an auction of great variety and more than 1,200 lots.  It is on view at Stradbally Hall from today.

    The most expensively estimated lots are a bronze of The Farnese Bull from the workshop of Antonio Susini (1543-1632) in Florence (€50,000-€80,000), a landscape dated 1792 by Claude Louis Chatelet (€45,000-€65,000), a pair of George III satinwood and marquetry cabinets on stands attributed to Ince and Mayhew (€40,000-€60,000), a Killarney davenport by James Egan purchased at the RDS exhibition in 1864 by the Corcoran family of Wexford (€40,000-€60,000) and a c1780 Adam breakfront bookcase from Temple House, Co. Sligo (€40,000-€60,000). 

    A George III Adam breakfront bookcase from Temple House 

    Much more affordable, and highly collectible, is a 19th century grand tour micromosaic panel of doves after the celebrated Roman model of the Doves of Pliny in a gilt frame (€500-€800), a William IV rosewood and mother of pearl tea caddy (€150-€250) and a Napoleonic gilt bronze eagle standard from Dirk House in Co. Limerick (€500-€800) with provenance to Jean-Baptiste Lynch, Count of the first French Empire, Mayor of Bordeaux and peer of France who inherited the Chateau Lynch estate in 1779.

    The 18th century Cork silver coffee pot is of baluster form. Made by Carden Terry it is estimated at €8,000-€12,000.  Lot 242 is an 18th century portrait miniature of Lady Dunraven (€800-€1,200).  A portrait of Norah Hill (1835-1920), Jane Austen’s Irish born grand niece, by John Joseph Slattery is estimated at €3,000-€5,000.  A 19th century neo-classical statuary and white marble chimneypiece from Seafield House, Donabate is estimated at €5,000-€8,000 and an Adam chimneypiece is estimated at €8,000-€12,000.

    John Joseph Slattery – Portrait of Norah Hill, Jane Austen’s Irish born grand niece 

    A limited edition pair of lifesize Kingsale Hounds with bronze mounts on bases (€10,000-€15,000) heads up 67 lots of garden and outdoor pieces.

    There is an estimate of €30,000-€50,000 on an 18th century Irish mahogany side table complete with lion mask.  A pair of Irish William IV rosewood and gilt side tables (€20,000-€30,000), a Georgian two pillar dining table (€8,000-€12,000) and a William IV inverted breakfront serving table (€10,000-€15,000) hark back to the country house elegance of former times.

    There is much to choose from in furniture from a Chinese Chippendale style four poster bed (€3,000-€5,000) and an 18th century Hepplewhite breakfront secretaire (€7,000-€9,000) to a Georgian brass bound plate bucket (€800-€1,200) and a pair of French Empire mahogany and parcel gilt torchéres (€800-€1,200). There are four classic cars, a Porsche 944 turbo, a 1997 Bentley Brooklands, a Lotus Elan and an Alfa Romeo sprinter. With estimates from €20 up the catalogue will reward a long slow perusal. The auction will take place at Stradbally Hall and online. It is divided into four segments for the convenience of buyers.

    A baluster form dragon vase

    CUBIST LANDSCAPE BY SWANZY AT DOYLE NEW YORK

    May 16th, 2026

    Mary Swanzy – Cubist landscape with trees c1927 

    Art by Evie Hone, Mary Swanzy, Louis le Brocquy, Gerard Dillon and Patrick Collins will be included in the sale of important fine art by Doyle New York next Wednesday (May 20).  They are from the collection of Joseph M Murphy. A c1927 Cubist landscape with trees by Swanzy is, at $30,000-$50,000, (€25,420-€42,370) the most expensively estimated Irish lot. Composition with Guitar by Hone has an estimate of $20,000-$30,000  (€ 16,950-€25,420)while estimates for the other Irish pictures range from $6,000-$18,000 (5,080-€15,250).

    A HIGH RELIEF DOOR CRAFTED BY THE BAULE PEOPLE

    May 16th, 2026

    A carved door from the Baule People 

    The Baule People from the Ivory Coast in west Africa are renowned for their artistry. A high relief carved door with figures and a large animal (€500-€1,000) at Gormleys auction of contents from Frankfort Castle, Dundrum, Dublin (once the home of hotelier P V Doyle) the evening of Tuesday May 19 is freighted with culture and centuries of tradition. The current owner recently sold the home after 30 years in residence. The auction offers a lifetime collection of antique furniture, tribal art and art by, among others, Patrick O’Reilly, Taylor Carson, Felim Egan and Craigie Aitchison.  The most expensively estimated lot is an arresting still life entitled Joseph et ses Freres by Nathalie du Pasquier (€10,000-€15,000).  The auction, curated by Niall Mullen, is now on view at Frankfort Castle.

    WHITE GLOVE AUCTION OF THE COLLECTION OF ROBERT MNUCHIN

    May 15th, 2026

    Mark Rothko – Brown and Blacks in Reds

    Mark Rothko’s Brown and Blacks in Reds sold for $85.8 million at Sotheby’s white glove auction (100% sold by lot) of the collection of Robert Mnuchin in New York last night. It was the second highest price for a Rothko at auction. The Mnuchin collection made $166.3 million. The Now and Contemporary auction at Sotheby’s last night totalled €266.8 million, a 110% increase on last years sale. The combined total was $433.1 million. There were artists records for Kenneth Noland, Ding Shilun, Joseph Jaeger, Yu Nishimura and Florian Krewer.

    The Mnuchin collection was characterised by deep bidding, averaging 12 bids per lot, with bidders participating from 24 countries. Artworks from the collection of Jean and Terry de Gunzburg totalled $50.7 million. The standout results continue a strong wave of 100% sold sales in recent months at Sotheby’s around the world, starting with the sale of the Karpidas collection in September last year, followed by six white-glove sales at Sotheby’s New York last season and further white-glove sales of Modern and Contemporary Art in Hong Kong and London in March.

    (See posts on antiquesandartireland.com for April 5 and May 2, 2026)

    DAPPING ON LOUGH MASK BY PAUL HENRY AT WHYTE’S

    May 14th, 2026

    Paul Henry RHA (1876-1958) – DAPPING ON LOUGH MASK, COUNTY MAYO, 1928-36

    T’is the season which makes this artwork by Paul Henry at Whyte’s sale of Important Irish Art on May 25 seasonal at the height of the fly fishing particularly of the moment in Ireland. Dapping is a traditional fly fishing technique where the fly touches the water while the line remains in the air, favoured on Lough Mask late in the season. The estimate for this work is €150,000-200,000. Early viewing at Whyte’s on Molesworth Street in Dublin gets underway today and the catalogue is online.

    THE MOST EXPENSIVE FANCY VIVID BLUE GREEN DIAMOND EVER AT AUCTION

    May 13th, 2026

    The Ocean Dream became the most expensive fancy vivid blue-green diamond ever sold at auction at Christie’s in Geneva today. It made CHF 13,567,500 | US$ 17,366,400 after 20 minutes of intense bidding. The magnificent jewels sale achieved CHF 51,859,550 | US$ 66,501,674, with sell through rates of 99% by lot and 186% by low estimate. Of the 87 lots offered 84% sold over their high estimate. 

    (See post on antiquesandartireland.com for April 24, 2026)

    THE JEWELS OF CLAUDIA CARDINALE AT CHRISTIE’S PARIS

    May 12th, 2026

    Butterfly Brooch, early 20th century. Courtesy Christie’s Images Ltd. 2026, Anna Buklovska

    Jewels from the collection of Claudia Cardinale will highlight Christie’s Joaillerie Paris online sale from June 19-26. The sale will take place after the tribute that at Cannes Film Festival from May 12-15 and 65 years after her first ascent of the red carpet in 1961. The star who died last year is remembered as one of the greatest actresses in the history of Italian and international cinema. About 20 pieces of jewellery chosen, cherished and worn by the actress will be in the sale.

    PAIR OF LIMERICK SILVER SERVING SPOONS AT ADAMS BLACKROCK

    May 12th, 2026

    PAIR OF ENGRAVED LIMERICK SILVER SERVING SPOONS

    This pair of engraved Limerick silver serving spoons from 1775 are at the online furniture auction by Adams Blackrock on May 20. Made by Maurice Fitzgerald they are estimated at €3,500-€4,500. The Dublin auctioneers will hold timed online sales of furniture, collectibles, jewellery, watches and Irish paintings on May 20.

    BLAKE AND AGE OF ROMANTIC FANTASY AT NATIONAL GALLERY

    May 11th, 2026
    The Body of Abel Found by Adam and Eve

    Largely unrecognised during his lifetime the influence of poet, painter and printmaker William Blake resonates to this day.  Wordsworth thought  Blake mad in a way that was more interesting than the sanity of Lord Byron or Walter Scott. In 1893 Yeats, who drew on him for inspiration, edited an edition of his collected works. His influence on the Beat poets of the 1950’s, the counterculture of the 1960’s, musicians like Jim Morrison, Bob Dylan, U2 and Van Morrisson, film makers like Martin Scorsese and Ridley Scott and writers like J.G. Ballard and Philip Pullman, is enormous.  William Blake: The Age of Romantic Fantasy at the National Gallery in Dublin until July 19, presents a selection of his most iconic works of art along with  paintings and drawings by his contemporaries. The loan exhibition from Tate offers a rare opportunity in Ireland to encounter one of the most visionary and wildly unconventional figures in art and literature whose inventive works resonated far beyond his own era.  Pictured here is The Body of Abel Found by Adam and Eve. Photo: Tate.

    THE FOUNDER OF THE IRISH SCHOOL OF LANDSCAPE PAINTING

    May 9th, 2026

    William Van Der Hagen – A Harbour scene and a Coastal scene both dated 1838. UPDATE: THIS WAS UNSOLD

    Dutch born artist William Van der Hagen, who settled in Ireland in 1722, is regarded as the founder of the Irish school of landscape painting.  He visited earlier because his View of Drogheda, now at the Highlanes Gallery, dates to 1718.  “Corke Harbour”  dates to 1738 and is the earliest surviving oil painting of the harbour. Sold at Woodwards in 2004 for €360,000 it remains in a private collection.

    A pair of oil panels by Van der Hagen will lead the Irish Old Masters sale at Adam’s in Dublin on May 14.  The estimate for A Harbour Scene, Men-of-War Anchored in a Calm Sea with Fishermen beside a Tower and A Coastal Scene with Ships in Heavy Seas off a Rocky Coast is €25,000-€35,000. A catalogue note points to the fact  that these small works share both the European tradition and the nascent Irish landscape school with whose genesis the artist is so closely linked. 

    A set of 13 canvas wall hangings painted by Van der Hagen designed to transform the walls at Dublin Castle into an Italian fantasy complete with garden follies, palaces and landscapes ahead of a grand ball will soon be displayed at the State Apartments in Dublin Castle.  They were acquired by the OPW after being re-discovered under layers of wallpaper during alterations at Knole, the ancestral home of the Dukes of Dorset in Kent.

     A Prospect of Kinsale after Charles Smith (1715-1762) published c1750. UPDATE: THIS WAS UNSOLD

    There are 61 lots at Adam’s Irish Old Masters sale which kicks off with a 25 strong set of James Malton’s Picturesque and Descriptive Views of the City of Dublin (€5,000-€7,000).  A set of 12 coloured engravings of the built glories of Georgian Dublin after Samuel Brocas is estimated at €3,000-€5,000.

    A set of three coloured lithographs of Cork rivers after Henry Morgan printed and published in Exeter in 1849 estimated at €300-€500 would enhance any local collection as would A Prospect of Kinsale taken from Ye Old Fort after Charles Smith (1715-762) published in Dublin c1750 (€500-€700).  These are among a number of topographical works from around Ireland in the sale.

    Charles Lewis (1753-1795) – A Still life of Peaches, Plums and Figs UPDATE: THIS MADE 12,000 AT HAMMER

    A painting of peaches, plums and figs in a silver bowl by Charles Lewis dated 1788 is a rare survivor of still life painting from Georgian Dublin.  Born in Gloucester Lewis moved to Dublin in 1776 and his art, though little known today, was much admired by his contemporaries and circulated widely in the 19th century.

    Maria Spilsbury Taylor (1776-1820) was the most significant female artist to work in 19th century Ireland.  She is represented by an oil on canvas titled Family Group: A Mother with her Children Dancing and Playing the Tambourine. It carries an estimate of €3,000-€5,000.  Market Day, Derryvarragh, Co. Westmeath by Erskine Nicol is signed and dated 1857 and estimated at €5,000-€7,000.

    Thomas Hickey (1741-1824) – an 1801 drawing of Sir Barry Close. UPDATE: THIS MADE 800 AT HAMMER

    In an auction with landscapes, seascapes, genre scenes and topographical views there is only one portrait, a charcoal, pastel and pencil drawing by Thomas Hickey (1741-1824). The subject is Sir Barry Close (1756-1813), the Armagh born British East India Company army officer and diplomat who played a crucial role in expanding British power in India. A skilled linguist he played a pivotal role in the Mysore campaigns against Tipu Sultan.  A dress sword set with diamonds in 18 carat gold presented to Close made a hammer price of €280,000 at Adam’s Townley Hall sale last October. The Irish Old Masters auction is now on view at Adams