China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Trove from Churchill’s daughter up for auction

- By ASSOCIATED PRESS in London

Sotheby’s auction house is selling art, books, furniture and a humidor owned by a well-known Briton who traveled the world on high-level diplomatic missions duringWorl­dWar II, met Roosevelt and Stalin and loved a good cigar.

No, it’s not wartime leader Winston Churchill but his daughter, Mary Soames.

The auction of her artworks and artifacts on Wednesday offers an unusually personal look at her father and a pivotal moment in history.

“They are little slices of history,” says Frances Christie, head of modern and postwar British art at Sotheby’s, holding a silver coffee pot given to Churchill as a birthday present from his War Cabinet colleagues in 1942 to commemorat­e the crucial British victory at El Alamein.

Soames, who died in May at the age of 91, kept the coffee pot in her London home, along with other mementos, after her father’s death in 1965.

The 280 items on sale reflect both Churchill the statesman — there’s a battered red ministeria­l briefcase from his time as secretary of state for the colonies— but also Churchill the artist and animal-loving family man. They humanize a politician whose firm leadership and never sayspeeche­s rallied Britain to defeat Nazi Germany.

The star lot, valued at 400,000 pounds to 600,000 pounds ($627,000 to $940,000), is an impression­ist-style oil painting by Churchill of the goldfish pond at Chartwell, the family home in southern England.

Another painting, The Weald of Kent Under Snow, depicts the view from the house, a vista that Churchill adored.

The items also include sketches of the household’s marmalade cat, and the salt bowl on which Toby, the family parakeet, used to balance during Sunday lunches at Chartwell.

The sale is also a reminder that Soames was a formidable figure in her own right. She served as an antiaircra­ft gunner during the war and accompanie­d her father on diplomatic missions to Washington and elsewhere. The sale includes a photo of US president Franklin D. Roosevelt signed “To Mary Churchill from her friend, the other naval person” — a reference to WinstonChu­rchill’s former role as First Lord of the Admiralty.

The humidor is a reminder that Soames shared her father’s love of cigars.

“They used to have competitio­ns to see who could maintain the longest chain of ash,” Christie says.

The auction record for aChurchill painting is 1 million pounds. Christie says the high price tags— unusual for an amateur artist — were not just because of his name.

“How do you define amateur artist?” she says. “He’s just an artist. Obviously he had a very busy day job.”

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