antiquesandartireland.com

Information about Art, Antiques and Auctions in Ireland and around the world
  • ABOUT
  • About Des
  • Contact
  • Archive for October, 2024

    ESSENTIAL DESIGNER LOOK ALL YOURS AT ADAMS SALE

    Sunday, October 20th, 2024

    A brick lacquered screen designed by Eileen Grey. UPDATE: THIS MADE 16,000 AT HAMMER

    A black lacquered brick screen by Eileen Gray or an Italian oval dining table by Angelo Mangiarotti on two brass bases with a marble top?  The essential designer look from back then is yours for the taking at the James Adam Mid Century Modern sale in Dublin on October 22.

    Stylish sales like this have developed a loyal audience of specialist collectors.  This one encompasses everything from artwork by Felim Egan, Patrick Graham, Bridget Reilly and Mark Francis to a transat (short for Transatlantic) chair by Eileen Gray, lounge chairs in the style of Gio Ponti, a chair and footstool by Charles and Ray Eames, ceiling, floor and wall lights, a maple two door side cabinet by Zelouf and Bell, Missoni rugs, Italian mirrors, Murano glass, coffee tables and drinks trolleys.  This timed online auction is on view now at Adams, St. Stephen’s Green, Dublin.

    An oval dining table by Angelo Mangiarotti  UPDATE: THIS WAS UNSOLD

    ART AND LUXURY AT IRISH AUCTIONS NEXT WEEK

    Saturday, October 19th, 2024

    Italian 17th century style copper water cistern at Fonsie Mealy. UPDATE: THIS MADE 5,800 AT HAMMER

    Art, luxury and the Epsom Gold Cup will vie for the attention of collectors next week.  With a selection headed by Sean Scully’s Wall Dark Green (2021) – on course to possibly become the most expensive painting to be sold this year in Ireland – the Irish and international online art sale by Morgan O’Driscoll on October 22 is a must see.

    A 17th century style Italian copper water cistern at Fonsie Mealys Chatsworth autumn fine art sale in Castlecomer on October 23 and 24 will undoubtedly leave some viewers with a sense of deja vu.  For many decades this unusual piece graced the storied Park Hotel in Kenmare, which came under new ownership last November.  The estimate is €5,000-€7,000.

    The sale offers more than 100 lots from this luxurious hotel including a suite of four landscape scenes from the circle of Flemish baroque painter David Teniers the Younger (1610-1690) which graced the main stairway.  The estimate is €3,000-€4,000.

    Wall Dark Green (2021) by Sean Scully at Morgan O’Driscoll. UPDATE: THIS WAS UNSOLD

    Old Road, Caherciveen by Jack Butler Yeats ( €180,000-€240,000), Study of Self (1994) by Louis le Brocquy (€120,000-€180,000) and Gerard Dillon’s The Table in the Blue Room (€100,000-€150,000) are among leading lots at Morgan O’Driscoll’s sale.  The 172 lots on offer include a seductive selection of work by artists ranging from Roderic O’Conor, George Mounsey Wheatley Atkinson and Donald Teskey to Patrick Scott, Genieve Figgis and Felim Egan.

    There is sculpture by John Behan and highly collectible work by Frank Auerbach, Albert Irvin and William Scott in a sale that is on view all weekend  and on Monday at the RDS.

    Meantime Fonsie Mealy offers racegoers a chance to bag the Epsom Gold Cup from 1963.  It was won in 1963 by Mrs Anne Biddle’s homebred L’Homme Arme, trained by Tommy Shaw. Born Anne Bullitt in Philadelphia she was daughter of US Ambassador William Bullitt and became, in 1966, the first woman in Ireland to be allowed a trainers licence. 

    Cork Butter Trade made his Pile  by Stephen O’Driscoll (1825-1895) at Fonsie Mealy. UPDATE: THE COLLECTION MADE 3,000 AT HAMMER

    It is unusual to find at auction a group of no less than eight charismatic Cork silhouettes by Stephen O’Driscoll (1825-1895).  These ones, to be sold as a collection at Fonsie Mealy, have typical titles like Cork Butter Trade made his Pile, The Man Wot Weighted the Cat, Cork Beggars Opera, The Council of War – a Volcano Row and The Two Paddys Blowing up the Mansion House.  The estimate is €2,000-€3,000.

    The most expensively estimated lot is an Irish Victorian giltwood side table (€20,000-€30,000) made by Arthur Jones in Dublin in 1853 and exhibited that year at The Irish Industrial Exhibition in Dublin.  At the other end of the price scale, with estimates from €20 euro up, are silver teaspoons, dessert forks, butter knives and sugar tongs. Viewing at Castlecomer is from 1 pm to 5 pm tomorrow and from 10 am to 5 pm on Monday and Tuesday.  The catalogue with almost 1,000 lots in total is online.

    George Mounsey Wheatley Atkinson – HMS Conqueror and HMS Duke of Wellington in Cork Harbour (1858) at Morgan O’Driscoll. UPDATE: THIS MADE 34,000 AT HAMMER

    ARRESTING INTERIOR SCENE AT WHYTE’S AUTUMN ART SALE

    Friday, October 18th, 2024

    INTERIOR SCENE WITH WICKER ROCKER – ELIZABETH COPE. UPDATE: THIS MADE 1,700 AT HAMMER

    This oil on board by Elizabeth Cope is lot 21 at Whyte’s autumn online art auction on October 21. The estimate is €1,200-€1,800. Art by  Graham Knuttel, Louise Mansfield, John Skelton, Ciaran Clear, Harry Kernoff, Imogen Stuart, Maurice MacGonigal, Sidney Nolan, Louis le Brocquy, Tony O’Malley, Patrick Caulfield, Neill Shawcross and Barry Castle  is included in the sale.

    ICONIC RORY GALLAGHER GUITAR SELLS FOR £700,000 AT BONHAMS

    Thursday, October 17th, 2024

    RORY GALLAGHER’S 1961 FENDER STRATOCASTER SOLD FOR £700,000

    After just seven bids Rory Gallagher’s legendary 1961 Fender Stratocaster electric guitar sold for £700,000 (£889,400 with fees) at Bonhams in London this afternoon. Estimated at £700,000-£1 million it was secured by the National Museum of Ireland and is coming home. It was bought by Live Nation Gaiety Ltd with a view to donation to the National Museum of Ireland under Section 1003 of the Taxes Consolidation Act, 1997. Promoter Denis Desmond of Live Nation Gaiety, a joint venture with Live Nation, said the guitar made in Fullerton, California and purchased by Rory from Crowley’s Music Shop in Cork in 1963, will end up in Cork.

    Bidding opened at £450,000 and quickly reached £650,000. After the next telephone bid there was a long pause, no more bidders emerged and the guitar was sold. Many lots in the auction of the Rory Gallagher Collection were hotly contested and went way above estimate after bidding battles on the internet, phone and in the room. The 1958 Fender electric guitar known as Rory’s back up Strat made £127,400. A Martin D-35 flat top acoustic guitar  from 1968 made £102,000, a National Trifolian resonator guitar 1930 made £95,650, a Fender Esquire election guitar 1959 made £96,950, a Fender telecaster electric guitar made £82,950, a Martin mandolin 1942 made £51,200 and a green flight case made £14,080. The sale made a total of £2.3 million.

    (See posts on antiquesandartireland.com for October 5 and July 9, 2024)

    HISTORIC IRISH GILTWOOD SIDE TABLE AT FONSIE MEALY SALE

    Thursday, October 17th, 2024

    Irish Victorian Giltwood Side Table and Mirror. UPDATE: THIS WAS UNSOLD

    This Irish giltwood side table and mirror, crafted by Arthur Jones & Sons for the Great Exhibition of 1853, is the leading lot at Fonsie Mealy’s Chatsworth autumn fine art auction on October 23 and 24 in Castlecomer.  A superb example of mid-19th century Irish craftsmanship and nationalist symbolism it is commonly referred to as “The Table of Ireland” as it captures the essence of Irish identity and national pride through a complex composition of decorative motifs. Among them are a harp, a carved mask of a bearded man crowned with a hat of shamrocks, an Irish round tower and a medieval tower house. This historic piece is estimated at €20,000-€30,000. There are 983 lots in the sale and the catalogue is online.

    RARE 17th CENTURY SILK SAFAVID ‘POLONAISE” CARPET AT CHRISTIE’S

    Wednesday, October 16th, 2024

    A silk Safavid silk Safavid ‘Polonaise’ carpet probably Isfahan, Central Persia, early 17th century

    A recently discovered 17th century silk Safavid ‘Polonaise’ carpet probably from Isfahan will lead Christie’s Art of the Islamic and Indian Worlds sale in London on October 24. It was woven in Persia during the reign of Shah Abbas the Great (1588-1629) and has remained preserved in remarkable condition in a Japanese private collection until very recently. This previously unrecorded rare silk carpet is estimated at £1 million – £2 million. The auction offers a curated selection of carpets, ceramics, manuscripts, textiles, works on paper and metalwork from across the Islamic world, with objects spanning over a thousand years of history.  

    IRISH GEORGIAN SIDE TABLE MAKES €30,000 AT HAMMER

    Tuesday, October 15th, 2024

    Irish George II mahogany side table made €30,000 at hammer

    Irish furniture of the mid-18th century can be identified by its specific idiosyncrasies, and in particular with tables and stands, where the frieze and aprons served as the area that furniture makers were able to show off their imagination and skill. Scallop shells were some of the most prominent carvings used as decoration on tables from this period. It emerged as an important part of the lexicon of Irish furniture and decorative arts in the 18th century. The pair of doves which also accompany the shell in the frieze of this table further expressed the symbolism of love, peace and harmony. They are position in opposing directions with wings spread, creating a wonderful balance and sense of movement to the carving. The remainder of the frieze is embellished with fleur-de-lys, foliage and rosettes. This Irish c1750 mahogany side table made a hammer price of €30,000 at the James Adam Townley Hall sale today against an estimate of €30,000-€40,000.

    A portrait of Sir Francis Wyndham by John Michael Wright (1617-1694) last auctioned at the Adare Manor sale in 1982 made €73,000 at hammer; a half length portrait of Queen Mary attributed to Sir Godfrey Knellar made €22,000; a still life by Nicola Cassisa, Naples (1680-1730) made €15,000; a set of 12 George II silver dinner plates from Drogheda House, Dublin by by Robert Calderwood c1737 made €14,000; a set of four large George III silver candlesticks by Richard Williams, Dublin c1765 made €14,000; a Dutch Book of Hours made €12,000; a George IV twin pedestal partners desk made €11,000; a 19th century Continental School painting of a Red Ibis made €11,000; a French ormolu mounted commode made €11,000; an 18th century Irish mahogany side table made €8,000; a large Donegal carpet made €10,000, a Regency brass inlaid sofa table made €10,000 and a Victorian silver inkwell in the form of a donkey carrying panniers made €11,000.

    A Red Ibis Standing in a Leafy Stream, Continental School, 19th century made €11,000 at hammer over a top estimate of €800.

    GENIEVE FIGGIS AT MORGAN O’DRISCOLL ART SALE

    Tuesday, October 15th, 2024

    Genieve Figgis (b.1972) – Untitled (2014). UPDATE: THIS MADE 28,000 AT HAMMER

    This oil on canvas by Genieve Figgis is lot 20 at Morgan O’Driscoll’s current Irish and International art sale, which runs until October 22. The estimate is 25,000-35,000. Work by this Dublin born Wicklow based artist has been exhibited widely in Europe, the US and worldwide. Among the artists in the sale are William Scott, Sean Scully, Frank Auerbach, Callum Innes, Jack Butler Yeats, Roderic O’Conor, Hughie O’Donoghue and Norah McGuinness.

    AN IRISH DINING TABLE AT SOTHEBY’S IN NEW YORK

    Tuesday, October 15th, 2024

    This Irish George II carved and figTCeramics which closes in New York on October 16. The estimate is $5,000-$7,000. A c1760 Irish silver soup tureen and cover in the same sale is estimated at $4,000-$6,000. UPDATE: The table and the tureen were unsold

    IRISHMAN’S HEROIC COLDITZ ESCAPE MEDAL SOLD AT NOONANS

    Monday, October 14th, 2024

    A Second War St. Nazaire raid and Colditz “home-run” D.S.C. and Bar group of seven awarded to Commander W. L. “Billie” Stephens of Northern Ireland sold for a hammer price of £48,000 at Noonans latest sale of Orders, Decorations, Medals and Militaria.

    Christopher Mellor-Hill, Head of Client Liaison at Noonans, said: Medals relating to Colditz and the heroic stories of those who tried to escape always attract strong interest. The story of William Lawson “Billie” Stephens, who was born in Holywood, Northern Ireland in August 1911 into a prominent Ulster family is no different. His Second War Distinguished Service Cross was awarded for his gallantry during both the St. Nazaire raid and Colditz. He had been taken prisoner after his own launch was set on fire, however he endeavoured to make a successful bid for freedom with three others from the infamous Colditz Castle in October 1942 during a breakout conducted by Douglas Bader that culminated with the four men squeezing naked through a narrow vent! It was being sold as part of a deceased estate.”