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Mainie Jellett painting fetches record price
Mainie Jellett painting fetches record price

Irish Times

time16 hours ago

  • Business
  • Irish Times

Mainie Jellett painting fetches record price

There was great excitement at Whyte's art auction on Monday night when the Mainie Jellett painting Achill Horses, 1933, was sold to a private collector for €210,000. This is the highest price achieved for one of the Irish modernist painter's works to date, and the second-highest for a painting by an Irish woman. Sarah Purser's portrait of Constance and Eva Gore-Booth made €239,000 at the Lissadell House auction in 2003. The Jellett painting, which had an estimate of €70,000-€100,000, was one of a series of more representational works by the artist created in the 1930s. Previously, the highest price achieved for a Jellett painting was €110,000 for The Land Eire 1940, at Whyte's in 2019. This latter painting is part of the current National Gallery exhibition, Mainie Jellett and Evie Hone: The Art of Friendship . Garden calm Thoughtfully designed and thoroughly maintained gardens are more relaxing for the mind and body, according to a new Japanese study. The researchers found a correlation between rapid gaze shifts and a reduction in heart rate and improved mood among students interacting with Kyoto's famous Murin-an garden, compared with a garden in the University of Kyoto. READ MORE Visitors to Bloom , the annual gardening festival in the Phoenix Park this weekend will no doubt be seeking inspiration on how to create moments of calm when viewing the 21 show gardens on display. While many of the show gardens focus on naturalistic planting and biodiversity, there is also a nod to heritage. The Pot Gallery Garden's uses free standing and vertical pots to show how to create green spaces on terraces and balconies, and the Estate's Essence, a mini-walled garden inspired by garden designer Patrik Weisser's work on Abbeyleix House and Farm in Co Laois, are cases in point. Victor Mee's Summer Garden sale in Co Cavan on Tuesday, June 10th and 11th, has been timed to follow Bloom, with the expectation that gardening enthusiasts will be keen to create new areas of interest in their green spaces after their visit to the country's largest and most popular gardening festival. The 2025 Summer Garden sale at Mee's auction rooms has more than 1,000 lots. Outdoor sculptures are always of interest, but this year the bronze and cast-iron statuary features a range of wild and domesticated animals, including Irish hares, horses, sheep, ducks, pigs and red squirrels. Two life-size bronze pigs (€600-€1,200) at Victor Mee's Summer Garden sale Two bronze hares (€1,500-€2,500) Two bronze geese (€600-€1,200) Take for example, the two life-size bronze pigs (€600-€1,200), the two bronze hares (€1,500-€2,500), the two bronze geese (€600-€1,200) or the bronze galloping horse (€10,000-€20,000). Peter Dowdall of the Irish Gardener says animal sculptures can do something quite magical in a garden. 'They catch the eye, spark curiosity and often bring a sense of playfulness or nostalgia,' he says. There are also some larger pieces with the potential to become the centre pieces of a garden. These include a wrought-iron English Victorian-style glasshouse (€18,000-€22,000). And, then there is the usual mix of cast-iron tables, garden seats, bird baths, sundials and a good range of troughs in limestone and granite. The French wrought-iron entrance gates (€1,500-€2,500) might be exactly what a rural or urban homeowner requires to bring a dash of style to the entrance to their property. Irish sculptor Bob Quinn's Best Night Ever (€47,000) will feature on the grounds of Cork's Castlemartyr resort Irish sculptor Eamonn Ceannt's Happy Face III (€55,000) will feature on the grounds of Cork's five-star Castlemartyr resort The five-star Castlemartyr resort in Co Cork is the venue again this year for Art and Soul, the touring art and sculpture exhibition run by Gormleys Fine Art Gallery. This is the third time that Oliver Gormley has opted to use one of Cork's most luxurious hotels as the sumptuous setting for his art and sculpture sale. With more than 350 works for sale, including pieces by world famous artists such as Andy Warhol, Damien Hirst, Banksy and Salvador Dalí, the show is an opportunity for people to view works – even if they can't afford to buy. Ninety large sculptures and installations will be set throughout the 220-acre grounds of the 18th-century manor house estate. These include works by Irish sculptors Bob Quinn (Best Night Ever, €47,000) and Eamonn Ceannt (Happy Face III, €55,000). Both sculptors are renowned for their figurative work in bronze. Following a career as a commercial artist and designer, Quinn became a full-time sculptor in 2002. His works can be seen in the National Botanic Gardens in Dublin, the Newman House garden on St Stephen's Green and on the University College Dublin sculpture trail. Similarly, Eamonn Ceannt turned to sculpture later in life, after a long career in the private and public sector. His work can be seen at Blarney Castle, Co Cork; Sligo town; Bewley's Cafe on Grafton Street; and on the UCD sculpture trail. Art & Soul at Castlemartyr runs June 1st-29th, 11am-7pm daily, with guided tours at noon, 3pm and 5pm each day. There is also a series of talks by participating artists. Anyone keen to incorporate a visit into an overnight at the hotel can avail of the Art + Soul visit and stay package. Finally, the biggest Vintage and Antiques Fair, run by Robin O'Donnell of Hibernian Antiques Fairs, goes ahead next weekend, June 7th and 8th, 11am-6pm at Limerick Racecourse. Admission €5 for adults and children go free. Antique and vintage dealers will also gather to sell their wares in the Royal Marine Hotel, Dún Laoghaire, tomorrow (June 1st), 11am-5.30pm. Admission €3.50. And an Antiques, Vintage and Collectables fair will be held in the Abbeyleix Manor Hotel in Abbeyleix, Co Laois, on Sunday, June 8th, noon-5.30pm. , , , What did it sell for? West of Ireland Bog by Paul Henry West of Ireland Bog, Paul Henry Estimate €120,000-€180,000 Hammer price €125,000 Auction house Whyte's Anglesea Market, Dublin, 1933 by Harry Kernoff Anglesea Market, Harry Kernoff Estimate €30,000-€50,000 Hammer price €40,000 Auction house Whyte's Mid-18th-century limestone Medici lions Mid-18th-century Medici lions Estimate €50,000-€70,000 Hammer price €42,000 Auction house Adam's A life-size bronze horse by Anthony Scott. Bronze horse, Anthony Scott Estimate €30,000-€50,000 Hammer price €26,000 Auction house Sheppard's

Joan Eardley Sketches of Glasgow street children to be sold at auction
Joan Eardley Sketches of Glasgow street children to be sold at auction

The Independent

timea day ago

  • Business
  • The Independent

Joan Eardley Sketches of Glasgow street children to be sold at auction

Sketches depicting Glasgow street children by artist Joan Eardley will go on sale at auction next week. The 11 small pastel and charcoal drawings were selected from one of Eardley's sketchbooks which was given to a doctor after her death by her close friend Angus Neil, who died in 1992. Eardley is considered one of the great British artists of the 20th century and the collection is to be sold live online and in Edinburgh by auctioneers Lyon & Turnbull on June 5. The works depict studies of street children in Townhead for which she is best known, alongside sketches of Catterline on the north-east coast of Scotland where she lived with Mr Neil. The friends met at Scottish art school Hospitalfield House in Arbroath, Angus, in 1947 and Mr Neil would often stay in her Townhead studio for long periods of time. When Eardley moved to Catterline, he helped renovate her cottage and became a fixture around the small fishing village. After the war, Mr Neil struggled with his mental health and Eardley became a pivotal figure in his life, looking out for him and helping him financially. When Eardley died of cancer in 1963 aged 42, a distraught Mr Neil was admitted to the psychiatric hospital Sunnyside Royal near Montrose. The sketchbook was given by Mr Neil to a GP in Glasgow in the 1960s, who had provided him with room and board during a breakdown, and has been treasured by the family ever since. The auction also includes four large works by Eardley, including Fishing Nets, Catterline, which is valued at £30,000-£50,000. It featured in a major exhibition of Eardley's work in the National Galleries of Scotland in 2016-17. Jeannie, valued at £40,000-£60,000, depicts an elderly lady, Jeannie Kelso, who was befriended by Eardley during holidays to the Isle of Arran in the early 1940s. Blue Jersey, which depicts a child holding her baby brother, is estimated to fetch between £20,000 and £30,000. A rare example of an early Eardley painting, Street Scene, from the 1940s, has a valuation of £7,000-£10,000. Charlotte Riordan, senior specialist at Lyon & Turnbull, said: 'These sketches epitomise the intuitive mark-making and consummate skill of Joan Eardley. To me, they also speak volumes about the woman herself; they're direct – blunt even – but clever and charismatic. A total original.'

Is there a place for AI art? These Hong Kong artists say yes
Is there a place for AI art? These Hong Kong artists say yes

South China Morning Post

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • South China Morning Post

Is there a place for AI art? These Hong Kong artists say yes

In spite of an open letter signed by over 6,500 artists, demanding the cancellation of Augmented Intelligence – Christie's artificial intelligence (AI) art auction that ran from February 20 to March 5 – the event was a commercial success, bringing in more than US$728,000, with 28 of the 34 displayed pieces sold. The letter, written to auction hosts Nicole Sales Giles and Sebastian Sanchez, stated: 'Many of the artworks you plan to auction were created using AI models that are known to be trained on copyrighted work without a licence. These models … exploit human artists, using their work without permission or payment to build commercial AI products that compete with them. 'Your support of these models … rewards and further incentivises AI companies' mass theft of human artists' work.' This work by Bianca Tse used AI to generate an impression of the Kowloon Walled City in Hong Kong. Photo: Handout But it should be said that not all artists are against the use of AI – there are those in Hong Kong who fully embrace it and even make it their primary creative medium. Bianca Tse, for instance, believes there is a lot of misunderstanding surrounding AI art and the technology behind it. For example, high-profile artists like Refik Anadol, whose work was featured in the auction, train their models using their own work or data sets, where the copyright claims should 'clearly' belong to the artist. 'My understanding of commercial AI models is that they don't target specific artists' works, but are trained on vast data sets comprising trillions of images from various sources,' Tse explains. 'The AI learns to imagine and create – much like how a human artist learns by observing and interpreting the world around them.' Tse, who graduated from the Hong Kong Polytechnic University School of Design, says her big turning point came when she stopped seeing AI as a threat and started viewing it as a 'powerful creative partner'. Liza Dorrer. Photo: Handout Liza Dorrer, who is completing her PhD at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST), and teaches specialised courses on AI image-generation tools Midjourney and Stable Diffusion for interior designers and architects, believes that the debate on whether AI art is 'real' art comes down to the technology behind the tools.

Scottish Colourist painting sells for more than £381,000 at auction
Scottish Colourist painting sells for more than £381,000 at auction

The Independent

time21-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Independent

Scottish Colourist painting sells for more than £381,000 at auction

A 'masterful' painting by Scottish Colourist Samuel John Peploe which once hung in his patron's drawing room has sold for more than £381,000 at auction. Roses In A Green Jug went under the hammer in the Scottish art sale at Bonhams in Edinburgh on Wednesday. It sold for £381,400 including buyer's premium, above the estimate of £250,000-£350,000. Paintings by fellow Scottish Colourist Francis Campbell Boileau Cadell and by the late Jack Vettriano also featured in the sale. Peploe once characterised his career as a search for the perfect still life, and was influenced by his time in Paris from 1910-12 where he studied the work of Post-Impressionist masters. Major Ion R Harrison, a Scottish shipping magnate, first encountered Peploe's work at an exhibition in Glasgow in the 1920s and soon became a close friend and patron of the painter and the Scottish Colourists. May Matthews, managing director of Bonhams Scotland, said: 'Peploe's Roses In A Green Jug is a masterful execution of composition and colour, taking inspiration from Paul Cezanne and French Post-Impressionism, while maintaining the artist's distinctive individual style. 'Peploe's still lifes were meticulously planned and executed, creating the dialogue between object and space for which he and his fellow Colourists were renowned. 'The work has a remarkable provenance, having once hung in the drawing room of Croft House owned by Ion R Harrison, a notable patron of the Scottish Colourists.' Roses In A Green Jug can be seen hanging in the background of Cadell's Portrait Of Mrs Ion R Harrison of 1932. Six works by Vettriano, who died earlier this year, also went under the hammer. Pendine Beach (Study), which was painted in 1996, sold for £44,800, including buyer's premium, above the estimate of £20,000-£30,000. The painting once hung in the late Sir Terence Conran's Bluebird restaurant in London, after he bought the picture in 1996, Bonhams said. A selection of landscapes of the island of Iona were also sold. They included Peploe's paintings of The White Strand, Iona, which went for £74,060. All prices included buyer's premium.

Warwickshire charity art auction to support children in Nepal
Warwickshire charity art auction to support children in Nepal

BBC News

time17-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • BBC News

Warwickshire charity art auction to support children in Nepal

A charity which supports disadvantaged children and young adults living in the shadows of the Himalayas is looking to raise funds with an art Futures Nepal, which is based in Royal Leamington Spa, Warwickshire, has been running for 20 was set up by Andrew Small who learned about a centre for orphaned and disabled children in Kathmandu while he was trekking in one of the world's poorer countries."Nepal changed my life forever," said Mr Small, who created the charity to help youngsters in Nepal to find jobs and homes. Mr Small said he was "impressed" by how many Midlands artists had agreed to provide pieces of work for the auction."With help and support, many of our youngsters go on to find jobs and a home and are able to give back to their community. So any contribution makes such a difference," he are dozens of different artworks in the auction, which closes on the day of the fundraising dinner. Also taking part is French artist Alan Reullier, whose latest work centres on the heritage of the motor industry in the Midlands. He has a collection of original drawings from British Motor Heritage Ltd, dating from the 1800s to the late 1970s, which were being digitised and couldn't be took ownership of them on the proviso that they could not be resold in their original form, so he reimagined them, turning them into pieces of artwork that have been sold around the world."I'm delighted to help New Futures Nepal," he said. "Children should always have access to education and care wherever they are in the world. The charity is doing valuable work and I hope all these artistic contributions will make a huge difference." Follow BBC Coventry & Warwickshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

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