Masterful painters
APAINTING by one of the finest English watercolour artists is due to go under the hammer at a Yorkshire auction house next month. The British, European and Sporting Art Sale, at Tennants Auctioneers, on November 13, will feature the Peter de Wint (1784-1849) work, “A view of Whitby looking down the river towards the sea”, which will be offered with an estimate of £10,000 to £15,000 (plus buyer’s premium).
Peter de Wint was one of the finest English watercolour painters of his era, greatly admired for his expansive views of the English countryside executed in a muted palette of warm earthy colours.
He became established as a drawing master and spent most of the year teaching and painting in London, but in the summers he travelled to the countryside where he taught wealthy families and painted his much-loved landscapes.
He favoured the North of England, spending much time in Yorkshire, Cumberland and Westmorland; his paintings can be found in the National Gallery and the V&A.
Also of note in the sale is “Europa and the Bull” by the Circle of Jean-francois de Troy (1679-1752) (estimate: £15,000-£25,000), “St Mark’s Square, Venice” by Antoinetta Brandeis (1849-1910) (£6,000-£9,000), and “The Sheik’s Daughter” by Eduard Sack (1857-1913) (£5,000-£8,000). Sack’s painting was exhibited at the Royal Academy Winter Exhibition in 1909, loaned by Mrs George Mcculloch of London.
A fine selection of English watercolours includes “The Mouth of the River Early Morning” by William Callow (1812-1908) (£2,000-£3,000), and “Lake Maggiore, Northern Italy” by William Leighton Leitch (1804-1883) (£2,000-£3,000).
The Sporting section of the sale is led by “Shamming” by William Henry Hamilton Trood (1850-1899) (£6,000-£9,000).
Signed and dated 1887, the painting was once owned by Joseph Harger Mitchell, managing director of the Halifax Building Society. Mitchell’s daughter gifted the painting to her neighbour in Greetland, in whose family it has since remained.
Trood was an animal painter of some repute, who greatly favoured dogs both as companions and as subjects for his highly finished and finely detailed paintings.
Further highlights include “Merry Monarch, winner of The Derby, 1845” by Henry Thomas Alken (1785-1851) (£3,000-£5,000), and “Portrait of Shortcoming, winner of the Waterloo Cup 1921” by Lilian Cheviot (1876-1936) (£1,500-£2,500).
Painted in the year of the greyhound’s victory, Shortcoming was owned by Osbert Cecil Molyneux, 6th Earl of Sefton.
■ An illustrated catalogue for the sale will be available at www.tennants.co.uk