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  • THE COLLECTION OF HUBERT DE GIVENCHY AT CHRISTIE’S PARIS

    February 2nd, 2022
    Paris, Hôtel d’Orrouer and an interior view by Pierre Bergian Le Salon Vert à Hôtel d’Orrouer, 2021

    Christie’s has announced the sale of the exceptional fine and decorative arts collection of legendary fashion designer Hubert de Givenchy (1927-2018), featuring more than 1,200 lots of French and European Furniture and works of art, including sculpture and paintings from Old Masters to Modern and Contemporary works. Each object was chosen with Hubert de Givenchy’s meticulous eye and reflects his exquisite taste. Drawn from two of de Givenchy’s most iconic and elegant homes—the Hôtel d’Orrouer in Paris and the Château du Jonchet in the Loire Valley—the collection includes many exceptional objects unseen on the market for decades as well as more recent works acquired towards the end of his collecting journey. Christie’s will offer this extraordinary collection at auction in Paris from June 14 to 17 (live sales) and from  June 8 to 23 in a dedicated online sale. The timing of the announcement of the sale coincides with the 70th anniversary of the first haute couture collection Hubert de Givenchy presented in Paris on February 2, 1952, which was a resounding international success. 

    His family stated: “Through this sale, we are very pleased to be able to celebrate the exceptional taste of Hubert de Givenchy and his lifelong companion Philippe Venet. We wish to share the elegance and aesthetic heritage that they have passed on to us in order to inscribe their vision in the history of art and interior design in a universal way.”

    Loire Valley, Chateau du Jonchet and an interior view by Pierre Bergian L’atelier au Jonchet, 2021

    RARE IRISH £100 NOTE AT DIX NOONAN WEBB

    February 2nd, 2022
    UPDATE: THIS MADE £32,000 AT HAMMER

    An Irish Free State £100 note, dating from 10 September 1928 – one of only few examples known – is estimated at £12,000-£16,000 at a sale at Dix Noonan Webb in London on February 24.  The sale will also include the second part of the collection of the late Gus Mac Amhlaigh of Dublin, totalling 113 lots.

    An Irish Free State £50 note from September 1928 hand signed by Éamon de Valera is expected to fetch £10,000-£12,000. (UPDATE – THIS £50 NOTE MADE £10,000 AT HAMMER). A specimen 1978 Bank of Ireland £100 note, and a specimen Bank of Ireland 1978 £50 note each made £26,000 at hammer.

    Two specimen Bank of Ireland Ploughman notes: a £50 and a £100, both dating from around 1929, each sold for £32,240. Neither of these had appeared in auction for decades and had been expected to fetch £5,000-6,000 each [Lots 410 & 411].

    The three notes were part of the John Geraghty Collection and were all bought by an overseas collector with an interest in rare notes from all countries. The superb collection had been put together by the late John Geraghty and his son Sean, and comprised 54 lots which fetched £183,656.

    Among the rarities at the sale of British, Irish and world banknotes are more than 30 ‘skit’ notes dating from the 19th century from the collection put together by Sir David Kirch. Andrew Pattison explains: “These documents, for it is technically incorrect to call them banknotes, are remarkable pieces of social history.  They give us snapshots into the cares, fears, livelihoods, humour and pastimes of those who lived and worked in the British Isles for the last several hundred years. Skit notes generally mirror designs of real banknotes of the era.  Some, by accident or design, sail very close to the wind, and 19th century court records are full of attempts made by unscrupulous or ignorant individuals to pass them as real money.  Many of the punishments were severe, including flogging and transportation to the colonies.”  

    LIVE ONLINE JEWELLERY SALE AT HEGARTY’S

    February 1st, 2022

    This Art Deco style diamond and tanzanite cluster ring is among the highlights at Hegarty’s online jewellery auction which runs to February 8. There are rings, necklaces, earrings and brooches from private Irish sellers and dealers. More than 80 lots will feature. UPDATE: THIS MADE 7,300 AT HAMMER

    DECORATIVE INTERIORS AT VICTOR MEE TWO DAY SALE

    January 30th, 2022
    Irish mahogany wakes table in the Georgian manner UPDATE: THIS MADE 1,400 AT HAMMER

    This Irish wake table comes up as lot 440 at Victor Mee’s decorative interiors sale which takes place on February 2 and 3. It is estimated at 2,000-4,000. The auction of 1,272 lots kicks off at 5.30 pm on February 2. It includes a wide range of seating in a variety of styles, antique furniture, art and a good selection of collectibles and curiousities.

    KATHLEEN LYNN’S RISING MEDAL MAKES 58,000

    January 29th, 2022
    UPDATE: THIS MADE 58,000 AT HAMMER

    THE 1916 Rising service medal awarded to Kathleen Lynn sold for a hammer price of 58,000 at Mullen’s Collector’s Cabinet sale today. It was awarded for her service to the Irish Citizen Army, City Hall Garrison and had been estimated at 20,000-30,000. Dr. Lynn gifted the medal to her cousin George Llewellyn Wynne and it was passed on by descent.

    The daughter of a Co. Mayo Church of Ireland rector, her upbringing was conservatively Protestant and Unionist but,
    like her distant cousin Constance Markievicz, Lynn became politically radicalised through her exposure to the poverty of Dublin’s slums while she studied medicine. She became a suffragette and, influenced by the writings of James Connolly, joined the Irish Citizen Army as Chief Medical Officer. Arrested and imprisoned and was one of only six women to be deported to British jails for their part in the Rising. Following her release she was appointed vice-president of Sinn Fein and was on the run for much of the War of Independence.

    (See post on antiquesandartireland.com for January 15, 2022)

    JONI MITCHELL PAINTING OF JIMI HENDRIX AT JULIEN’S

    January 29th, 2022
    Jimi Hendrix by Joni Mitchell at Julien’s. UPDATE: THIS SOLD FOR $22,400 at hammer

    Joni Mitchell, who has joined Neil Young in asking for her music to be removed from Spotify over Covid misinformation concerns, has always thought of herself as a painter derailed by circumstances. “I sing my sorrow and I paint my joy” she said once.  An artists proof by the singer songwriter of an original oil painting of Jimi Hendrix is one of many highly collectible highlights at Julien’s MusiCares charity relief auction live and online from Hollywood on January 30. Signed and framed by the writer of global hits like Both Sides Now, Big Yellow Taxi and Woodstock, it is estimated at $2,000-$4,000.

    RESTORED 16TH CENTURY ITALIAN ART AT NATIONAL GALLERY OF IRELAND

    January 29th, 2022
    Giovanni Antonio Sogliani – The Virgin and Child with Saint John the Baptist, 1620-1630 – Photo © National Gallery of Ireland

    Christ & His Cousin: Renaissance Rediscoveries opens today at the National Gallery of Ireland. The  exhibition showcases eight little-known restored sixteenth-century Italian paintings. For over a decade, the Gallery’s head of conservation Simone Mancini has carefully treated these paintings to reveal quality that was previously unrecognised. Exploring natural portrayals of human behaviour, such as warm and playful moments between the infants and the Madonna, these paintings tell the story of an imaginary encounter between a young Christ and his cousin, a meeting not referenced in the bible. According to the Bible, the two cousins did not meet until later in life, however, their relationship as children was described in later texts which proved incredibly popular and inspired many Italian artists to represent the two infant cousins in their works during the Renaissance period. Tying in with the exhibition, the paintings will be accompanied by four rare volumes drawn from the Gallery’s Library & Archives, some of which were instrumental in defining the development of sixteenth-century art.  The exhibition runs until May 8.

    ONLINE SUNDAY SALE AT HEGARTY’S IN BANDON

    January 29th, 2022
    Late 18th century fold over tea table. UPDATE: THIS MADE 850 AT HAMMER.

    There is furniture and jewellery to choose from at Hegarty’s live online auction from Bandon 2 pm on January 30. A late 18th century Georgian demi lune tea table has an appealing satinwood cross banded top and a flame mahogany frieze.  It is estimated at €800-€900. An 18 carat white gold Ceylon sapphire and diamond cluster ring might be just the thing for Valentine’s Day but it does not come cheap. The sapphire weighs 4.72 carats and the ring is estimated at €12,000-€13,000.  Among the collectibles on offer is a Cork silver salt spoon (€100-€200) and there are a number of items made by Tiffany including a 14 carat yellow gold compartmented pill box (€250-€450).  The catalogue is online.

    BOTTICELLI’S MAN OF SORROWS MAKES $45.5 MILLION

    January 28th, 2022
    Sandro Botticelli – The Man of Sorrows c1500.

    The Man of Sorrows by Botticelli sold for $45.5 million at Sotheby’s in New York on January 27. The hammer price was $39.3 million, just under the estimate of around $40 million. From an American collection the work had last changed hands in 1963 for £10,000. Works by Botticelli (about 1445-1510), best known for his various portraits of Madonna and Child, The Birth of Venus and Primaverararely appear on the auction market. The Man of Sorrows is one of only four of his late works known to be in private hands according to Sotheby’s.

    (See posts on antiquesandartireland.com for October 8, 2021 and January 2, 2022)

    ART BY GWEN O’DOWD AT TIMED SALE AT ADAMS

    January 28th, 2022
    Gwen O’Dowd (b.1957) – Claddagh 14. UPDATE: THIS MADE 650

    This oil on canvas by Gwen O’Dowd is entitled Claddagh 14 and comes up at the James Adam sale of the Jacqueline Stanley and Campbell Bruce collection. It is estimated at 700-1,000. Viewing for this timed online art sale gets underway in Dublin today and continues over the weekend and on Monday. Bidding is now open and it will begin to close from 1 pm on Tuesday, February 1.