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  • ICONIC YEATS ACQUISITION FOR IRELAND’S NATIONAL GALLERY

    June 26th, 2025

    Jack B. Yeats (1871 – 1957) – Singing ‘The Dark Rosaleen’, Croke Park (1921). Purchased, 2024, with special support from the Government of Ireland and a generous contribution from a private donor

    The National Gallery of Ireland has acquired Jack B. Yeats’s iconic painting Singing ‘The Dark Rosaleen’, Croke Park (1921). It was purchased in 2024, with special support from the Government of Ireland and a generous contribution from a private donor and is now on display. As one of Yeats’s few overtly political works, this painting stands as a deeply personal response from a keenly sensitive individual to a seismic moment in Irish history. It is unclear if the scene represents a specific moment Yeats observed, an amalgamation of separate sketches, or a product of his imagination. Though the work does not explicitly reference the violent events at Croke Park on 21 November 1920, known as Bloody Sundayits title, setting, and sombre tone evoke the tragedy and its consequences.

    On that day, during a Gaelic football match between Dublin and Tipperary, Auxiliaries (a paramilitary unit of the Royal Irish Constabulary) opened fire on spectators, killing 14 civilians, including Tipperary footballer Michael Hogan, and injuring 60 others. Sketchbooks in the Gallery’s Yeats archive contain multiple depictions of hurling matches at Croke Park indicate Yeats’s familiarity with the setting. When first exhibited in 1921 The Freeman’s Journal remarked on the “surge of patriotic emotion that the most dismal surroundings cannot repress.” It is a lament in the aftermath of the episode rather than a depiction of the violence itself.

    The painting was stolen in the Dunsany Castle art robbery in 1990, subsequently recovered and returned to the Plunkett family in 1995. The same year the late art collector Sheila Plunkett, Lady Dunsany, sold ‘Singing the Dark Rosaleen – Croke Park’ at Sothebys for £500,000, when it was bought by Ben Dunne. The Mary and Ben Dunne Collection was sold by Gormley’s in 2022.

    AFFORDABLE IRISH ART AT O’DRISCOLL ONLINE SALE

    June 24th, 2025

    Donald Teskey RHA (b.1956) – Kerry Seascape, lithograph – number 36 from an edition of 100. UPDATE: THIS MADE €950 AT HAMMER

    Fresh from the success of an online auction on June 23 where Muingelly V (2023), and oil on canvas by Donald Teskey made a hammer price of €11,000, Morgan O’Driscoll will offer a lithograph by the same artist in his Irish art online auction which runs until July 1. The limited edition Kerry Seascape lithograph pictured here is estimated at just €400-600. The off the wall sale, with over 400 lots of affordable art, will be on view in Skibbereen on June 27 and 30 and on July 1. Desire of the Moon (1990) by William Crozier was the top lot at the June 23 auction. It made €17,000 at hammer. A unique bronze Mayo Famine Ship by John Behan made €6,800.

    A 1959 LE BROCQUY AT SOTHEBY’S IN LONDON

    June 23rd, 2025

    Louis le Brocquy – Painting Figure. UPDATE: THIS WAS UNSOLD

    This 1959 work by Louis le Brocquy is at Sotheby’s Modern British and Irish art sale in London on June 26 with an estimate of £30,000-50,000. It was acquired by the present owner at the Esther Robles Gallery in Los Angeles. The auction features important works by British and Irish artists and those working in the UK across the 20th century, including the St Ives Modernists, Scottish Colourists, Bloomsbury, Camden Town, Vorticist and Post-War groups, and it will span paintings, drawings, sculptures and ceramics.  Among the Irish artists featured are Sir John Lavery, William Scott and Jack Coulter.

    LIMERICK SILVER CREAM EWER AT HEGARTY’S ONLINE SALE

    June 23rd, 2025

    GEORGE II IRISH – LIMERICK – SILVER CREAM EWER BY JOSEPH JOHNS. UPDATE: THIS MADE 4,600 AT HAMMER

    A ver rare c1745 Limerick silver cream ewer by Joseph Johns is among the lots at Hegarty’s online sale in Bandon on June 26. This intricate piece has a clear hallmark to left of the engraved cartouche. Joseph Johns was the most prolific of Limerick’s goldsmiths and became a freeman of Limerick in 1731. He lived and worked in Main Street, Englishtown (now Mary Street), opposite Fanning’s Castle. The ewer is estimated at €5,200-6,200.

    HOT AND COOL FURNITURE OFFERINGS AT WOODWARDS

    June 22nd, 2025

    Edwardian roll top desk. UPDATE: THIS MADE 180 AT HAMMER

    A hot Georgian wine cooler or a cool Edwardian desk? The choice is yours at Woodwards online summer auction in Cork on June 28. Well positioned each of these stylish antique pieces can add grace to most homes. Estimated respectively at €600-€800 and €400-€600 they are not particularly expensive and would have cost more 20 years ago.

    Such is the sad state of the market for antique furniture. The happy news (if that is not a contradiction in terms right now) is that furniture like this does offer spectacular value. The sale at Woodwards is rich in such pieces like a Regency crossbanded tea table (€400-€600), a d-end dining table (€200-€400), a parquetry inlaid hall table (€200-€400), a Victorian walnut davenport (€300-€500), a William IV card table (€250-€400) and a Regency Pembroke table (€300-€600).  Among other offerings are a large Persian rug (€500-€800), a five piece cast iron patio suite (€800-€1,200), a gilt console mirror with marble table top (€800-€1,200) and art including Vanity Fair Spy prints and Victorian silhouettes and collectibles. 

    Georgian wine cooler UPDATE: THIS MADE 380 AT HAMMER

    IMPOSING PAIR OF STONE KINSALE HOUNDS AT SHEPPARDS

    June 21st, 2025

    One of a pair of stone sculptures of Kinsale hounds UPDATE: THESE WERE UNSOLD

    A monumental pair of stone sculptures of Kinsale hounds might be a tad over the top for your average apartment entrance but with a mansion, a castle or even a large imposing garden it is another story entirely. The Great Danes, in the style of the favourite hunting hound of the 25th Lord Kingsale, John de Courcy (1717-1776) are among a number of remarkable lots at Sheppards annual Glantelwe Gardens sale in Durrow on June 24.

    A keen deer hunter Lord Kingsale lived at Old Head Castle and imported a pair of hunting dogs to help him deal with wolves. It is claimed the Kinsale hounds killed the last wolf in Ireland. 

    A pair of classical style terracotta campana urns UPDATE: THIS WAS UNSOLD

    Sheppards auction, on view from today at Glantelwe Gardens along the banks of the River Erkina in Co. Laois, offers more than 600 lots of statuary, sculpture and architectural pieces.  Here you will find everything from a monumental Italian bronze fountain with four classically draped female figures (€15,000-€25,000) to a bronze patinated cannon (€3,000-€5,000), a contemporary bronze sculpture of boxing hares (€2,500-€3,500), a cast iron frog ornament (€50-€80) and a 19th century horse drawn carriage formerly owned by actress Maureen O’Hara.

    With classical and contemporary statues, moulded stone urns, cast and wrought iron furniture, architectural salvage sourced from an Irish demesne, antique follies and ornamental ironwork this sale should be a mecca for collectors, gardeners and designers in search of a show stopping centrepiece or a discreet focal point.

    A large green patinated bronze sculpture of Mercury,  a pair of 19th century arched entrance gates, a set of six cast iron standard urns, a pair of Italianate stone dogs on plinths, neo-classical moulded urns, a pair of large Medici lions in composite stone, a 19th century cast iron bistro set and even a monumental bronze sculpture of a jockey on horseback all have the capacity to inspire.

    The Kinsale hounds will set you back an estimated €8,000-€12,000.

    A 19th century horse drawn carriage owned by Maureen O’Hara. UPDATE: THIS LOT WAS WITHDRAWN

    RARE IRISH FREE STATE £50 NOTE AT NOONANS IN MAYFAIR

    June 21st, 2025

    UPDATE: THIS MADE £14,000 at hammer

    A rare early Irish £50 note dated September 10, 1928 and featuring Lady Lavery could make up to £15,000 (€17,600) at Noonans in Mayfair on June 25.  That was the month when legal tender notes, pegged in value to the pound sterling, came into circulation. It followed a determination by the then Irish Free State in the mid 1920’s to design its own coins and banknotes.  Until the advent of the euro three series of legal tender notes were issued by Ireland. The Irish Free State £50 note is considerably rarer than the £100 note. This particular one was described by Andrew Pattison of Noonan’s as: “one of the finest-known examples of this first date for the iconic Lady Lavery series”.  A proof £100 note from 1978-79 featuring a vignette of 16th century pirate Grace O’Malley (Granuaile) is estimated at £2,000-£2,600 (€2,350-€3,052).

    VERY RARE LOTUS VASE AT ADAMS FINE ASIAN ART SALE

    June 21st, 2025

    This very rare blue and white Lotus vase with Yongzheng mark is at Adams with an estimate of €60,000-€80,000. UPDATE: THIS MADE €51,000 AT HAMMER

    A rare blue and white globular Lotus vase leads the sale of Fine Asian Art at Adams in Dublin on June 25. Estimated at €60,000-€80,000 it carries the Yongzheng (1723-1735) six character mark in underglaze blue.  The Yongzheng emperor took an unprecedented personal involvement in ceramic production and actively participated in the design and oversight of Imperial porcelain.  Precious pieces from his era hold a revered place in Qing Dynasty ceramics.  The auction offers more than 400 lots with estimates from €200 up.

    AMERICAN GOLD EAGLE INDIAN HEAD COINS AT ADAMS

    June 20th, 2025

    A GROUP OF NINE AMERICAN GOLD EAGLE TEN-DOLLARS INDIAN HEAD COINS, 1926. UPDATE: THESE MADE €10,000 AT HAMMER

    This group of nine American gold eagle coins is the top lot at Adams timed online Jewellery Box sale which runs until June 24. The ten dollar Indian head coins from 1926 have a total gross weight of 150.8 g and are estimated at €10,000-15,000. Viewing for the auction gets underway in Dublin today. A total of 394 lots will come under the hammer.

    IRISH ELK HORNS AND OSCAR WILDE’S DESK THE TOP LOTS AT FONSIE MEALY

    June 19th, 2025

    A GIGANTIC IRISH DEER SPECIMEN

    A very fine pair of enormous fossilized Irish Elk Horns and Skull, the horns with 14 points and spanning 98″ made a hammer price of €40,000 at Fonsie Mealy’s Chatsworth summer fine art sale in Castlecomer today. Oscar Wilde’s desk made €29,000, a second specimen Irish elk horns made €28,000, a pair of large early 19th century terrestrial and celestial globes by John and William Newton, London, 1818 made €15,000, a French bateau bed owned by Oscar Wilde made €15,000, a Louis XV Cartel clock and barometer set made €12,000 and a bronze of The Cossacks Crossing the Balkans by Evgeny Alexandrovich Lanceray made €9,000.

    (See posts on antiquesandartireland.com for June 14 and June 9, 2025)