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  • 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

    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

    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 

    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.

    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

    TIME FOR A RARITY LIKE AN IRISH OAK HARP CLOCK?

    May 9th, 2026

    Rare 1860’s Irish oak harp clock by John Donegan

    An unusual and very Irish oak harp clock by the Dublin maker John Donegan from the 1860’s is the prime lot at R.J. Keighery’s clock auction in Waterford on May 13.  Only eight of these clocks are known. This is the first to be sold at auction.  It measures nine feet tall and is brimful of detail like harps, pikes, a wolfound, two round towers and a lyre.  The base depicts the Giant’s Causeway and the hood is in the shape of a harp.  It is estimated at €6,000-€9,000.  John Donegan is known as the last of the Irish watchmakers.

    The auction offers 345 watches and clocks from four lifetime collectors along with associated furniture lots.  There are longcase clocks, wall clocks, carriage clocks, marble mantle clocks, barometers and watch arts.  A brass dial longcase clock by William Maddock of Waterford made in 1766 is estimated at €1,800-€2,200. A large ormolu and boulle clock has an estimate of €1,250-€1,450.

    A selection of longcase clocks at Keighery’s sale 

    WHYTE’S PORTRAIT RECALLS HITLER’S WWII ENVOY IN DUBLIN

    May 8th, 2026

    Patrick Hennessy RHA (1915-1980) – Portrait of Eva Hempel

    This portrait at Whyte’s auction of important Irish art in Dublin on May 25 stirs up memories of another deeply troubled time in world affairs. The subject of Patrick Hennessy’s portrait, Eva Hempel, was wife of Hitler’s envoy in Dublin Dr. Eduard Hempel. Though not at the time a member of the Nazi party the career diplomat was appointed as ‘Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of the German Reich’ in Dublin by Adolf Hitler in 1937. He was pressured to join the Nazi Party in 1938 and continued to represent the Third Reich in Ireland until 1945. Dr Hempel commissioned portraits of each of his family members by the then emerging Cork artist Patrick Hennessy. The portraits were made at Dr Hempel’s official residence on Sloperton Road, Dún Laoghaire and it was to this address that then Taoiseach Éamon de Valera famously called to express the Free State’s condolences following Hitler’s death in 1945. The house was destroyed in an arson attack in the early 1950’s and the remains demolished in 1955.

    After the War, Dr Hempel resigned his diplomatic post and the family was granted asylum in Ireland. He was not allowed to work and Eva supported the family by running a confectionary and bakery. Berthold, one of their sons died in Dublin in 1948 from a brain tumour. The family returned to Germany in 1950 where Hempel helped set up a diplomatic service for the new Federal Republic. The portrait remained in the collection of the Hempel family. It was last sold at the estate sale of their collection in Munich in 1994 and has been in a private collection. Lot 38 is estimated at €4,000-6,000. Whyte’s sale will offer 132 lots of Irish art with an overall value of €1.4 million.

    KASHMIR SAPPHIRE RING AT ADAM’S AUCTION IN DUBLIN

    May 7th, 2026

    KASHMIR. A VERY RARE SAPPHIRE AND DIAMOND CLUSTER RING, CIRCA 1890-1900

    This Kashmir sapphire ring is at Adam’s sale of fine jewellery and ladies watches on May 12. The estimate is €50,000-90,000. It is accompanied by a report dated December 2025 from the SSEF laboratory in Switzerland, stating that the antique cushion-shaped sapphire weighing 3.532 carats is of Kashmir origin with no indications of heating. Kashmir sapphires hold a unique place in the world of gemstones and are distinguished by their colour and velvety appearance. The catalogue for the sale is online. Adam’s will not allow internet bidding on this lot.

    SKY TO THE GROUND AT GORMLEY’S SCULPTURE SALE

    May 7th, 2026


    Simon Hayes – Sky in the Ground

    Sky in the Ground by Simon Hayes is lot 20 in Gormley’s timed online sculpture sale which runs until May 12. Made of powder coated stainless steel it is estimated at €900-€1,100. The auction, with 113 lots, features the sculpture collection of Simon Hayes, offered alongside works from several prominent private collections. The catalogue is online and sculptures can be viewed at Dunmurraghill, Dondea, W91 C3F6, Co. Kildare from May 8-12.

    PAIR OF ITALIAN PORTRAITS OF SAINTS MAKES €73,000 AT FONSIE MEALY

    May 5th, 2026

    PAIR OF ITALIAN SCHOOL PORTRAITS

    This pair or late 17th/early 18th century Italian portraits made €73,000 at Fonsie Mealy’s fine art and antique sale. With a provenance to the Ponsonby’s of Ballynatray, Waterford the oils on canvas depict classical female saints. A c1630 painting of an angel and the dead Christ at candlelight from the Circle of Triomphe Bigot made €19,000 and a Madonna and Child with the infant St. John the Baptist by Raffaellino del Garbo (1466-1524) made €13,000. An early 20th century Fabergé circular pill box made €15,000.

    RESTORATION OF ONLY MEDICI TAPESTRY IN PUBLIC COLLECTION OUTSIDE ITALY

    May 5th, 2026

    The Meeting of Dante and Virgil, 1546–49. Wool, silk, tapestry weave. Courtesy of Mia.

    The only early Medicean tapestry in a public collection outside Italy is to be restored. The Minneapolis Institute of Art (Mia) is recipient of the 2026 Museum Restoration Fund from The European Fine Art Foundation (TEFAF). Joint support from the Bank of America Art Conservation Project will enable the conservation of The Meeting of Dante and Virgil, a monumental 16th-century Italian tapestry of exceptional rarity and importance.

    Established in 2012, the TEFAF Museum Restoration Fund supports the conservation and related scholarly research of significant works held in public collections. This year marks the first time the fund has supported the treatment of a tapestry. Mia holds one of the most distinguished tapestry collections in the United States, with 41 works. The Meeting of Dante and Virgil is among the most significant Renaissance works in Mia’s collection and is considered the most important Italian Renaissance tapestry in the United States. The tapestry measures 5.3 meters, which is equivalent to 17.4 feet.

    The Florentine workshop that produced the tapestry was founded in 1545 by Duke Cosimo I de’ Medici, who sought to rival the celebrated weaving centers of Brussels. He recruited Jan Rost, a master weaver from Brussels, to establish and oversee production. The tapestry’s design and cartoons were created by the painter Francesco Salviati (1510–1563) between 1546 and 1548, and the work was woven between 1547 and 1549 during the formative years of Medici tapestry production.

    TEFAF New York runs from May 15-19 at the Park Avenue Armory.

    CONTEMPORARY CURATED MAY SALE ONLINE AT LOT 100

    May 4th, 2026

    Richard Gorman – Stone Lithograph AP

    This Stone Lithograph by Richard Gorman, an artist’s print from an edition of 40, is at the May Contemporary Curated online art auction by Lismore based Lot 100 with an estimate of €600-800. The auction offers art by Irish Australian artist John Kelly, Pauline Bewick, Julianne Guinee, Louis le Brocquy, Katherine Boucher Beug, Peter Murray, Felim Egan, Charles Tyrrell and two screenprints by Andy Warhol of Marilyn Monroe among a selection of 93 lots. The auction is live online until May 12.

    AMAZING OFFERINGS AT ART SALES IN NEW YORK THIS MONTH

    May 2nd, 2026

    Jackson Pollock (1912-1956) – Number 7A, 1948 at Christie’s

    So far in 2026 the rebound in the art market which began in the second half of last year has continued.  In a world full of new uncertainties the big New York art sales this month look set to continue the trend. In a market where the premium is on rarity and quality there are some amazing offerings.

    In the late 1940’s Jackson Pollock pioneered a revolutionary painting style that was utterly baffling to most people.  Nowadays the art of  ‘Jack the Dripper’ is unbuyable unless you happen to be one of the growing global band of billionaires – whose numbers now approach  4,000 from a figure of just 140 in 1987. The largest example of Jackson Pollock’s monumental drip paintings left in private hands, Number 7A, 1948 – from the collection of legendary Condé Nast co-owner S I Newhouse – is at Christie’s on May 18. 

    The first and only large scale drip painting ever to appear at auction was last seen at an exhibition at the Whitney Museum in 1977. 

    Constantin Brancusi  (1867-1957) – Danaïde, 1913 at Christie’s.

    Another great rarity from the S I Newhouse collection is Danaïde, conceived and cast in 1913 by Constantin Brancusi.  Of the six bronzes cast of this model four are held in institutional collections, the Pompidou in Paris, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Tate London and Kunst Museum, Winterthur.  This sculpture is the only gilded example left in private hands. 

    Both works are estimated at around $100 million.  The Newhouse collection, which includes masterworks by Bacon, Johns, Matisse, Miro, Mondrian, Picasso, Rauschenburg and Warhol, is poised to become only the second collection ever to surpass the $1 billion mark established in 2022 with the sale the collection of Microsoft founder Paul G Allen.

    At Sotheby’s on May 14 the collection of financier Robert Mnuchin featuring Franz Kline, Willem  de Kooning and Mark Rothko is expected to make around $130 million.  Sotheby’s Modern evening auction on May 19 is headed by Arlequin (Buste) painted by Picasso in 1909 and estimated in the region of $40 million.  There are just ten works at this sale, which offers art by Georgia O’Keeffe, Wassily Kandinsky, Degas, Monet and Matisse.

    Elizabeth Peyton (b1965) – Earl’s Court (Liam + Noel) at Sotheby’s.

    With masterworks from the last 80 years the Now and Contemporary evening auction at Sotheby’s in New York on May 14 is led by Basquiat’s Museum Security (Broadway Meltdown)  (1983).  There is art by  by Rothko, Fontana and Calder from the collection of Jean and Terry de Gunzburg.  Earl’s Court (Liam + Noel) December 1995 and dated 1996 by Elizabeth Peyton captures Oasis frontman Liam Gallagher kissing his brother Noel on the cheek. By appropriating a photograph from two concerts at Earl’s Court in London in November 1995 at the height of their fame she contrasts their strained relationship, unprecedented success with their care and appreciation as siblings, their glories with their faults. The estimate is $1.5 million – $2 million.

    Later last year it became apparent that major collectors are becoming more picky.  The upcoming New York sales offer lots of rich pickings for the super rich.

    Mark Rothko No. 1 (1949) at Sotheby’s.

    CONTENTS FROM TWO POPULAR HOSTELERIES AT AUCTION

    May 2nd, 2026

    Interior of Reidy’s Wine Vault bar to be sold by Lynes and Lynes. UPDATE: THIS SOLD FOR €73,000 AT HAMMER

    Reidy’s Wine Vaults in Cork or the Black Cat in Kilkenny?  Against a background where the market for collectibles is performing strongly contents from these popular and now closed watering holes will come up at sales by Aidan Foley and Lynes and Lynes next week.

    Aidan Foley will hold three days of online sales with antiques, silver, art, automobilia and pub memorabilia on May 4, 5 and 6 at 6 pm each day.  Along with some contents from Kilkenny’s Black Cat bar on Black Mill St. in Kilkenny there is art by Mabel Young, Carol Ann Waldron, Ivan Sutton, Markey Robinson and Sean Keating.  The auction has a good selection of vintage forecourt signs, enamel signs, modern dealership signs and paraphernalia like oil cans which are also in strong demand.  The auction is on view in Doneraile over this Bank Holiday weekend.

    The fine interior bar fittings from Reidy’s Wine Vault at Lancaster Quay in Cork, which has been sold and is to become a restaurant, will come under the hammer as one lot at a sale by Denis Lynes on May 9.  The bar counter, which measures over 29′ in length, back bar, dividers, cabinets and light fittings is estimated at €70,000-€120,000.  There will be viewing on the premises on May 6 from 10 am to 5 pm.  In March the complete fittings from the West End Bar in Portadown, one of the oldest licensed premises in Co. Armagh, made a hammer price of €120,000 at an auction by Victor Mee.

    Mabel Young (1889-1974) – A Cottage in a landscape at Aidan Foley’s sale. UPDATE: THIS MADE 900 AT HAMMER