The Mercury

Jolie sells Churchill painting at auction

- Bang Showbiz

LOS ANGELES: Angelina Jolie has sold a painting by Sir Winston Churchill for £8.28 million (R173 million).

The 45-year-old actress sold The Tower Of The Koutoubia Mosque – which was painted by the former British prime minister in Marrakesh, Morocco, during World War II – to an anonymous buyer at an auction in London.

A Christie’s spokespers­on described the painting as Churchill’s “most important work”.

“Aside from its distinguis­hed provenance, it is the only landscape he made during the war,” the spokespers­on said.

Churchill was a keen artist and did the painting after the Casablanca Conference in 1943.

He subsequent­ly gave the artwork to US president Franklin Roosevelt, and Angelina became its owner in New Orleans in 2011 after it was put up for sale.

Nick Orchard, Christie’s head of modern British and Irish art, hailed the importance of the artwork.

He suggested it helped to forge a “special relationsh­ip” between the UK and the US.

“This is Churchill’s diplomacy at its most personal and intense.

“It is not an ordinary gift between leaders. This is soft power, and it is what the special relationsh­ip is all about.” |

MANUFACTUR­ING companies have remained more confident about the 12-month outlook for business activity in spite of economic recovery slowing under level 3 lockdown in February.

Data released by IHS Markit yesterday showed that the composite single-figure indicator of private sector business performanc­e barely managed to remain on expansiona­ry territory during the month.

IHS Markit said its purchasers’ managers index (PMI) dipped back to 50.2 index points from 50.8 in January as demand failed to pick up again on slower recovery in business conditions.

The group said private sector output growth softened since the start of the year as new business was again broadly unchanged under lockdown restrictio­ns.

The latest reading indicated that new business was broadly unchanged for the third month in a row as demand trends fell, with domestic spending and export demand remaining weak.

This prompted greater efforts by manufactur­ing companies to lower both employment and inventorie­s and offset a sharp rise in purchase costs.

Employment fell to the greatest extent since last October amid a reduction in outstandin­g work. IHS Markit said some firms also mentioned that input shortages and adverse weather meant they were unable to scale up output.

IHS Markit economist David Owen said weak consumer spending continued to hold back the South African economy as new order volumes remained at a similar level to that seen last November. Owen said the slowdown resulted in larger cuts to staffing and inventorie­s as businesses

looked to remove excess capacity and offset rising cost pressures. “However, this could further depress sales, particular­ly as several firms commented that job losses were contributi­ng to lower domestic demand,” Owen said.

“Vaccines could provide a ray of light and encourage greater business investment, but for now, economic growth remains mild.”

Meanwhile, IHS said business optimism has improved to its highest for 12 months, driven by hopes of an end to the pandemic and a strong rebound in economic activity during 2021.

Approximat­ely one-in-three firms gave a positive forecast for output, although lingering economic uncertaint­y meant that some respondent­s were downbeat.

President Cyril Ramaphosa this week eased lockdown restrictio­ns to alert level 1, with fewer hours of curfew and alcohol sales returning to normal trading hours following a decline in new Covid-19 cases.

The group said despite current economic trends remaining weak, business confidence strengthen­ed to the strongest since before the Covid19 outbreak. It said there were hopes that the pandemic would end in the near future and that easing restrictio­ns would allow more businesses to reopen.

 ??  ?? MANUFACTUR­ING companies have remained more confident about the 12-month outlook for business activity in spite of economic recovery slowing down under level 3 lockdown. | Supplied
MANUFACTUR­ING companies have remained more confident about the 12-month outlook for business activity in spite of economic recovery slowing down under level 3 lockdown. | Supplied

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