logo
Painting once owned by first British prime minister fetches record fee

Painting once owned by first British prime minister fetches record fee

Telegraph14 hours ago
A Canaletto painting of Venice owned by Britain's first prime minister has fetched a new auction record for the artist.
Venice, the Return of the Bucintoro on Ascension Day (c. 1732), was sold to an anonymous bidder for £27.5 million (£31.9 million with fees) at Christie's in London last night.
The painting adorned the walls of Number 10 Downing Street during the 20 year tenure of Sir Robert Walpole, in the 1700s.
Andrew Fletcher, Christie's global head of the Old Masters Department, said the piece was 'unquestionably the greatest work by the artist to have come to the market in a generation.'
He said: 'Seldom does a true masterpiece such as this – particularly by a painter as important as Canaletto – appear on the art market.
'This extraordinary painting of the grandest and most familiar view of Venice, by the city's most recognisable painter, dates to Canaletto's finest period and is as notable for its illustrious provenance as much as for its impeccable condition.'
Christie's King Street headquarters had been decorated with a reproduction of the painting in the lead up to Tuesday's Old Masters Evening Sale, where the Venetian's work had been expected to fetch £20 million.
The oil on canvas artwork was formerly accompanied by a pendant showing The Grand Canal, looking north-east from Palazzo Balbi to the Rialto Bridge.
The pair had remained together until Venice, the Return of the Bucintoro on Ascension Day, was last sold at Paris auction house Ader Tajan in 1993.
Appearing at auction for the first time in nearly 250 years, the Venetian's work fetched 66 million French francs (£7.5m), setting a record for an Old Master sold at auction in France.
The pendant, Grand Canal from Palazzo Balbi to the Rialto, was later sold at Sotheby's in London in 2005, for £18.6m, which was formerly the record auction price for a Canaletto.
Discovery
The painting's presence in Sir Robert's collection was first noticed by British Art historian Sir Oliver, who discovered a reference in the 1736 manuscript catalogue of paintings at 10 Downing Street and in the 1751 auction catalogue when they were sold by Sir Robert's grandson, George.
While it is not known when Sir Robert acquired the Canaletto, it is likely that his son, Edward, facilitated the deal after his time spent in Venice between 1730 and 1731.
Purchase of the paintings may have been prompted by the refurbishment of 10 Downing Street in 1732-35 after the residence was offered to Sir Robert by King George II in 1732.
Falling on the fortieth day after Easter Sunday, the Feast of the Ascension of Christ was a staple of the Venetian calendar until the fall of the Republic in 1797.
On this day alone would the Doge use Bucintoro, the official galley of the Doge of Venice and a symbol of the Serenissima, to sail out to the lido and cast a ring into the water as a symbol of Venice's marriage to the sea.
The vessel depicted in Canaletto's work, the last to be made at the Arsenale, was designed by Stefano Conti, and decorated by the sculptor Antonio Corradini.
Giovanni Antonio Canal, known as Canaletto, was born in Venice in 1697. He became a favourite of British collectors, visiting England repeatedly between 1746 and 1756.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Paxos launches stablecoin in the EU
Paxos launches stablecoin in the EU

Finextra

time13 minutes ago

  • Finextra

Paxos launches stablecoin in the EU

Digital asset outfit Paxos has launched its Global Dollar (USDG) stablecoin across the European Union. 0 USDG is landing in Europe compliant with the EU's Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulations, says Paxos, with a portion of reserve assets with European banking partners. The stablecoin is available via a host of distribution partners, including Kraken, Gate, Coinmetro, SwissBorg, Zodia Custody, and Orbital. Walter Hessert, head, strategy, Paxos, says: 'USDG is a fully regulated global USD-stablecoin that is compliant with MiCA and now available in the EU, a testament to our commitment to offering global digital assets that are supervised by prudential regulators and also meet the highest standards of consumer protection. "We're excited to partner with some of the leading players in Europe to bring this leading standard of compliance to more than 450 million consumers in the European Union.'

Sir Keir Starmer could be ousted as PM within months, two senior Labour MPs tell Sky News
Sir Keir Starmer could be ousted as PM within months, two senior Labour MPs tell Sky News

Sky News

time18 minutes ago

  • Sky News

Sir Keir Starmer could be ousted as PM within months, two senior Labour MPs tell Sky News

Two senior Labour MPs have suggested the prime minister may have to go within months if the government continues to perform poorly. Sky News' deputy political editor Sam Coates said his sources - a member of the government and a prominent politician - have "put Sir Keir Starmer on notice". Both warned that, if Labour performs badly in next May's elections across Wales, Scotland and London, it could mark the end of his time in Downing Street. Coates added: "The level of unhappiness and despair in parts of the Labour Party is so striking that right now, on the first anniversary, I am hearing from ministers in government that Starmer might have to go in months." Reform UK is surging in the polls in Wales, while Labour faces a threat from left-wing parties such as the Greens in London. 1:16 It comes as the prime minister made it clear that Rachel Reeves has his "complete support" as chancellor and remains integral to his project, Sky News's political editor Beth Rigby understands. She looked visibly upset during Prime Minister's Questions, with a spokesperson claiming she had been affected by a "personal matter". A day earlier, Sir Keir's controversial welfare bill was passed despite a sizeable rebellion from Labour MPs, with major U-turns meaning a new £5bn black hole has appeared in the country's finances. One senior figure told Rigby that the pair were as "as close politically" as any chancellor and prime minister have ever been. "She is going absolutely nowhere," they added. 2:58 Ms Reeves's tears sent markets spiralling, with the value of the pound and long-term government bonds falling sharply. Later in the day Sir Keir, said Ms Reeves will be chancellor for a "very long time to come". The prime minister said it was "absolutely wrong" to suggest her tearful appearance in the Commons related to the welfare U-turn. "It's got nothing to do with politics, nothing to do with what's happened this week. It was a personal matter for her," he said while speaking to the BBC's podcast Political Thinking with Nick Robinson. "I'm not going to intrude on her privacy by talking to you about that. It is a personal matter." Asked if she will remain in post, he said: "She will be chancellor by the time this is broadcast, she will be chancellor for a very long time to come, because this project that we've been working on to change the Labour party, to win the election, change the country, that is a project which the chancellor and I've been working on together." He said Ms Reeves has done a "fantastic job" and added: "She and I work together, we think together. In the past, there have been examples - I won't give any specific - of chancellors and prime ministers who weren't in lockstep. We're in lockstep."

Instant view: UK markets see 2022-style selloff as worries build over finance minister
Instant view: UK markets see 2022-style selloff as worries build over finance minister

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Instant view: UK markets see 2022-style selloff as worries build over finance minister

LONDON, July 2 (Reuters) - British government bond prices fell by the most since October 2022 and the pound tumbled on Wednesday, after finance minister Rachel Reeves appeared visibly distressed in parliament, a day after the government sharply scaled back plans to cut benefits. The yield on the 10-year government bond, or gilt, rose as much as 22 basis points on the day at one point to around 4.68% , as investors ditched UK debt. That would be the largest one-day jump in the British benchmark yield since October 2022, in the aftermath of then-Prime Minister Liz Truss' mini-budget that cost her premiership. The pound dropped by over 1% to $1.3589 , while domestic mid-cap stocks tumbled (.FTMC), opens new tab. COMMENTS: LINDSAY JAMES, INVESTMENT STRATEGIST, QUILTER, LONDON: "The spike in gilt yields is seemingly a response to signals that have been taken by some to suggest that Rachel Reeves' job may be at risk – though the government has since said her tearful appearance in this afternoon's PMQ's was due to a personal matter. The rise in yields implies investors would be nervous if she were to go. Despite the regular criticism levied in her direction, unwavering commitment to her fiscal rules have generally been welcomed - in sharp contrast to the unfunded pledges from the Truss government. A sudden departure would be likely to prompt questions about the government's commitment to this approach, particularly in light of the recent U turn on planned cuts to welfare spending." MOHIT KUMAR, CHIEF FINANCIAL ECONOMIST EUROPE, JEFFERIES, LONDON: "The UK government faces a difficult choice. We have a negative view on the UK fiscal picture. Our view of growth is much lower than the official OBR forecasts (we are looking at 1-1.2% growth in the UK for the next three years, vs 1.7-1.9% which is the OBR forecasts). Lower growth will make the Chancellor's fiscal plans unrealistic. Even if we get higher taxes, we do not think that raising taxes will give as much revenue as the government would be hoping for. Thus the government would need hard choices in order to bring the deficit picture in line. Recent market reaction reflects the market concerns on the credibility of the government to bring down fiscal deficits." GORDON SHANNON, PORTFOLIO MANAGER, TWENTYFOUR ASSET MANAGEMENT, LONDON: "(The welfare U-turn) is signalling that the Labour Party is a lot less concerned about what the gilt market thinks." "I would have thought it was seared into politicians' memories what happened to Liz Truss." "I continue to view it as you've breached your own commitments and that sets fire to your credibility in a world where there is increasing focus on the solvency positions of governments." CHRIS SCICLUNA, HEAD OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH, DAIWA CAPITAL MARKETS, LONDON: "Clearly the market is revaluating the outlook for fiscal policy and hence the significant steepening in the gilt curve. The vote in the House of Commons gives reason to think again about the likely outlook for public borrowing. "The market has understood for some time that the government was off track on borrowing and was anticipating corrective measures in the budget but if markets continue to move in the direction we see today, it might have to make some announcements on the revenue side than on public expenditure cuts. "The BoE is obviously reviewing QT and they will probably bring an end to asset sales in the autumn." JANE FOLEY, SENIOR FX STRATEGIST, RABOBANK, LONDON: "Since the savings from welfare reform that Chancellor Reeves had pencilled in have now evaporated, UK budget issues are back in the fore. The gilt curve steepened at the open this morning as concerns about supply returned. In addition, the UK press is speculating that a cabinet reshuffle could be in the pipeline. Some of this has hinted that Starmer could even replace Reeves as Chancellor." NEIL WILSON, UK INVESTOR STRATEGIST AT SAXOBANK, LONDON: "Gilt yields were moving up but started to spike during (Prime Minister's Questions) as Reeves looked utterly shaken." KATHLEEN BROOKS, RESEARCH DIRECTOR, XTB, LONDON: "The prospect of political turmoil is causing bond yields to rise. The market is pricing in the possibility of a replacement chancellor with a more left-leaning agenda, which is spooking the bond market and waking up the bond vigilantes from their slumber." DANNI HEWSON, HEAD OF FINANCIAL ANALYSIS, AJ BELL, LONDON: "It's about Rachel Reeves finding herself in a very difficult situation following a series of U-turns, which means that the savings that had been anticipated from the winter fuel payments and from the disabilities changes - well, they're not going to be had. And that leaves her with another black hole and the question now is, how does she deal with that? And of course, there's an awful lot of speculation that she will have to increase taxes, but if she were to do that after saying that she wasn't going to, then that is politically difficult for the Labour government. What's gone on in Parliament today has absolutely unsettled (investors)"

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store