Sir Winston Churchill, The Goldfish Pool at Chartwell, oil on canvas, circa 1962 (est. £50,000-80,000) © Sotheby's Sir Winston Churchill, The Goldfish Pool at Chartwell, oil on canvas, circa 1962 (est. £50,000-80,000) © Sotheby's - Mit freundlicher Genehmigung von: sothebys.com

Wer: sothebys.com

Was: Auktion

Wann: 21.11.2017

The Last Work Ever Painted by Sir Winston Churchill The Goldfish Pool at Chartwell from 1962 Never Before Exhibited Having Been Gifted to the Artist’s Bodyguard Sergeant Edmund Murray

To be Offered at Sotheby’s Modern & Post-War British Art Sale 21 November 2017 Appearing on the market for the first time since it was gifted by Sir Winston Churchill to his bodyguard…

The Last Work Ever Painted by Sir Winston Churchill The Goldfish Pool at Chartwell from 1962 Never Before Exhibited Having Been Gifted to the Artist’s Bodyguard Sergeant Edmund Murray

To be Offered at Sotheby’s Modern & Post-War British Art Sale 21 November 2017 Appearing on the market for the first time since it was gifted by Sir Winston Churchill to his bodyguard Sergeant Edmund Murray, The Goldfish Pool at Chartwell is the final work that Britain’s greatest war-time leader ever painted. The work depicts the beloved goldfish pool in the garden of Churchill and his wife Clementine’s home at Chartwell – the place most closely linked to his development as a painter. A unique and moving insight into his final years, The Goldfish Pool at Chartwell will be offered with an estimate of £50,000-80,000, as part of Sotheby’s Modern & Post-War British Art Evening Sale in London on 21 November.

“Painting is a friend who makes no undue demands, excites no exhausting pursuits, keeps faithful pace even with feeble steps, and holds her canvas as a screen between us and the envious eyes of time or the sultry advances of decrepitude. Happy are the painters, for they shall not be lonely. Light and colour, peace and hope, will keep them company to the end, or almost to the end, of the day.” Sir Winston Churchill, Painting as a Pastime, 1921/22 Winston Churchill discovered painting when he was 40, in the wake of the debacle of the 1915 Dardanelles campaign, which, as First Lord of the Admiralty, he had been responsible for instigating. From this moment on, painting was to form an essential part of his life and he rarely travelled without his paint-box – a passion that would endure far in to old age. On many occasions, he remarked that the “Muse of Painting came to his rescue”. This painting depicts one of the series of water gardens near the house at Chartwell, where he especially enjoyed feeding the golden orfe, whose descendants still swim in the pool at Chartwell. Churchill and Clementine had bought the house in 1922 – a purchase that was made possible by an unexpected inheritance from a distant cousin – and were to live there for 40years. Chartwell not only became the family home and a beautiful venue for entertaining guests, but also Churchill's cherished country retreat and a constant source of inspiration until his death in 1965. Unlike many of his landscapes at Chartwell, this painting is unusual in zooming right into the water itself taking in the luscious foliage along the water side. It is an exemplary essay in tonality and near-abstraction, combining multiple hues of greens and browns to striking effect with the golden orfe brought to life through vivid flashes of orange impasto. “Yesterday Papa and I walked round all the lakes, and in the round one below the pool there are about 1,000 little golden orfe! They are no bigger than this and pale goldy yellow in colour with here & there a touch of red. They look so sweet swimming around in the weeds. Papa is very much excited.”

Mary Soames, letter to Clementine Churchill, 1938Having never sold a work during his lifetime, the vast majority were given by the artist to friends, colleagues, employees, foreign dignitaries or family members. This painting was gifted to his bodyguard Sergeant Edmund Murray, who served with him from 1950 to his death in 1965, and who provided much support and encouragement in setting up his easel and preparing his brushes. Murray remembered that the final occasion Sir Winston used brushes was at Chartwell around 1962 – one of his favourite places providing a fitting subject for his last painting. Churchill’s works at Chartwell are highly sought after, with the world auction record of £1.8 million achieved for a masterpiece from 1932 focusing on the same subject, which sold at Sotheby’s in 2014 having been in the collection of his daughter, Mary.

The sale offers a further work by Churchill, an early landscape painting inspired by the South of France, to be offered with an estimate of £100,000-150,000. An accomplished work from 1922, much like The Goldfish Pool at Chartwell it carries a fascinating story of a very private connection with Churchill and his family. It was given to Miss Maud Elgie, who between 1919 and 1921 had charge over the household’s nursery and Churchill and Clementine’s two eldest children. The sheer enjoyment that Churchill took in the process of painting is apparent in the freely applied and richly textured paint of this warm and bright view.

 

Tags: Malerei, Winston Churchill

Sotheby’s Modern & Post-War British Art Sale 21 November 2017

Das könnte Sie auch interessieren
London, Messe, 09.10.2024 - 13.10.2024
London, Ausstellung, 09.10.2024 - 13.10.2024
Peter Uka, Transit Point, 2023. Courtesy Mariane Ibrahim
London, Ausstellung, 08.10.2024 - 20.11.2024
Image Credit: Robert Longo © Sophie Chahinian.
SIR JOHN LAVERY (IRISH, 1856-1941)  Sketch for the Irish debate, House of Lords  signed 'J Lavery' (lower left)  oil on canvas-board  25x35cm   £20,000-30,000
London, Messe, 22.01.2025 - 26.01.2025
London Art Fair 2024 Modern and Contemporary Art Fair
London, Messe, 21.02.2025 - 23.02.2025
London, Messe, 15.05.2025 - 18.05.2025
Images  © Graham / Finn Carlow
Archiv
London, Ausstellung, 31.05.2022 - 16.10.2022
Martha Jungwirth All Will Fall
London, Messe, 12.10.2022 - 16.10.2022
Sam Fogg, Frieze Masters 2022  Photo by Michael Adair. Courtesy of Frieze and Michael Adair.
London, Ausstellung, 08.09.2022 - 03.10.2022
Sturtevant, The Store of Claes Oldenburg, 1967
Hem The Incredible House of Cards designed by Bertjan Pot (credit Peter Guenzel)
London, Ausstellung, 09.07.2022 - 20.07.2022
William Turnbull, Centenary Retrospective, installation view. Courtesy: Offer Waterman and Turnbull Studio; Photo: Lucy Dawkins
London, Messe, 03.07.2022 - 08.07.2022
© 2022 London Art Week
London, Ausstellung, 01.06.2022 - 18.06.2022
Anju Dodiya: Anatomy of a Flame, FRIEZE No.9 Cork Street, London
London, Presse, 27.05.2022
London Gallery Weekend screening for Piccadilly Lights, Piccadilly Circus, 15 May 2022 Photography by Will Amlot
William Barak - Corroboree (Women in possum skin cloaks), est. 300,000 - 400,000 USD
Gerhard Richter, Seestück (Seascape), 1975, est. $25–35 million
London, Ausstellung, 13.05.2022 - 15.05.2022
From left to right: Rafal Zajko, Siren VI. Courtesy of Cooke Latham Nigatu Tsehay, Pace of Time IX, 2022, acrylic on canvas. Courtesy of Addis Fine Art Simryn Gill, Channel, 2014, ilfochrome prints, 31.6 x 32 cm. Courtesy the artist and Jhaveri Contemporary Jem Perucchini, Sbandieratore (notturno), 2021, oil on linen, 15.7 x 11.8 in. Courtesy of Corvi-Mora  Atul Dodiya, Untitled, 2018, three wooden cabinet installation with painted glass, framed photographs and found objects, 7.8 ft x 13.3 ft. C