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Still Life of Flowers in an Urn 1.2

circa 1900

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  • Still life of pineapples, peaches, grapes, plums and other fruit in a landscape
    Located in West Sussex, GB
    Oil on canvas: 25 ½ x 30 ½ in. frame: 32 x 37 in. Period Empire frame. Circa 1780. George William Sartorius was a British artist, born in 1759. The Sartorius family were painters o...
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  • Portraits of Francis Wood, and John Wood of Hollin Hall, Yorkshire (Pair))
    Located in West Sussex, GB
    A Superb pair of oval portraits with full provenance. Portrait of John Wood Esq of Hollin Hall, Yorkshire; Portrait of Francis Wood. Circa 1710. Oils on canvas:29 x 24 in. Frame: 37...
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    Early 18th Century Old Masters Portrait Paintings

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  • A Gathering by a Lake in the Roman Campagna
    Located in West Sussex, GB
    A Gathering by a Lake in the Roman Campagna Oil on canvas: 48 x 65 in. Framed: 58 x 74 in. Circa 1840 Samuel James Ainsley (1820-1874) was a British artist recognized especially for his drawings and watercolours of Italy...
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    1830s Romantic Landscape Paintings

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  • Winter in Sussex `78
    Located in West Sussex, GB
    Vernon Southward (1911-81) British Winter in Sussex `78 Exhibited: Paris Salon1980. No.2959, illustrated. Oil on Canvas: 16 x 20 in. frame. 23 x 27. Signed& dated ’78. Original Ga...
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    20th Century Impressionist Landscape Paintings

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  • Full length Portrait of Jeannie Netter, wearing a Burgundy dress
    By Fedor Encke
    Located in West Sussex, GB
    Fedor Encke (1851-1926) – German Full length Portrait of Jeannie Netter, standing in an interior, wearing a Burgundy Velvet Dress holding a Pink Rose Oil on canvas :85 ¾ x 50 ¼ in. Frame :103 x 67 ¼ in. Signed & inscribed ‘New York’. Circa 1910 Jeannie Netter was an American born musician and song-writer but was mostly merited for her sculpture having been taught by the Russian artist Bernstamm. Fedor Encke was born in Berlin, Germany in 1851. Younger brother of Erdmann Encke who was a sculptor, Encke was the illegitimate grandson of King Frederick Wilhelm II of Prussia and Mistress Wilhelmine Encke, Countess of Lichtenau. Fedor studied under Karl Gussow in Berlin and then went on to study in Rome and Paris. Although he set up a studio in Berlin during the 1880’s, he seems to have travelled regularly between Paris and New York painting many American Society sitters, including President Theodore Roosevelt. Encke’s portrait of Roosevelt dressed in Rough Rider uniform, originally hung in the dining room of the White House and is now at the Presidents place of birth, Segamore Hill, New York. This portrait was also published as the frontispiece of ‘The Rough Riders’ by C. Scribners&Sons, 1899. Encke was in Paris in 1902 and painted the two banking giants, John H. Harjes and J.P. Morgan both having their portraits painted at the same time. To try and finish Morgan’s painting Encke hired a young photographer named Edward Steichen to take Morgan’s picture as a kind of aid memoir to minimize the sitting time. This photograph and the painting that resulted from it caused a considerable stir because of the uncompromising pose of Morgan. The portrait became synonymous with the new capitalism. Encke seems to have been very well connected socially and painted for many members of the European nobility as a result. Encke died in 1926. Works in Museums: Segamore Hill, New York (Portrait of Theodore Roosevelt) National Portrait Gallery America; Smithsonian; Brooklyn Museum of Art; Philadelphia Museum of Art. Bibl: Book on Moses Ezekiel...
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    1890s Realist Portrait Paintings

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    Oil

  • Montfort-sur-Meu, Brittany, France
    By Lennard Lewis
    Located in West Sussex, GB
    Lennard Lewis (1826-1913) British Montfort-sur-Meu, Brittany, France Oil on board: 12 x 18 in. Frame: 20 x 26 in. Signed &date1887. Inscribed on artists exhibition label verso. London-born Lennard Lewis was a London watercolourist and painter in oils, who made a specialty of English, French and Portuguese architectural views. He exhibited at the Royal Academy, the Grosvenor Gallery and the Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours. He also showed with the Royal Birmingham Society of Artists and submitted work to exhibitions in Liverpool, Manchester, Sheffield and Leeds. Gallery notes: Montfort-sur-Meu is a commune in the department of Ille-et-Vilaine in Brittany in the northwest of France. It is noted as the birthplace of the Roman Catholic Saint Louis de Montfort.
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    19th Century English School Landscape Paintings

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    Oil

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    Located in Santa Fe, NM
    RED GRAPES, RED WINE Aleksei Kreydun studied the Old Masters and has revived their long lost techniques, building up multiple layers of oil paint and lacque...
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  • The Misunderstanding - Still Life with Honey Bee on Edge of Crystal Decanter
    By Matthew Cook
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    While still life painting can be dated back to the Ancient Egyptians, this still life takes on a modern theme. A crystal decanter and whiskey glass are set upon a piece of fraying tapestry. The curiosity comes when the viewer takes a closer look to discover a bee has flown in and is perched precariously on the neck of the decanter. This piece is framed in a heavy wooden frame with a gold insert. The framed dimensions are H 14.5 x W 16.5 inches. Matthew Cook...
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  • Still Life with Squash, Gourds, Stoneware, and a Basket with Fruit and Cheese
    Located in New York, NY
    Provenance: Selma Herringman, New York, ca. 1955-2013; thence by descent to: Private Collection, New York, 2013-2020 This seventeenth century Spanish still-life of a laden table, known as a bodegón, stands out for its dramatic lighting and for the detailed description of each object. The artist’s confident use of chiaroscuro enables the sliced-open squash in the left foreground to appear as if emerging out of the darkness and projecting towards the viewer. The light source emanates from the upper left, illuminating the array, and its strength is made apparent by the reflections on the pitcher, pot, and the fruit in the basket. Visible brush strokes accentuate the vegetables’ rough surfaces and delicate interiors. Although the painter of this striking work remains unknown, it is a characteristic example of the pioneering Spanish still-lifes of the baroque period, which brought inanimate objects alive on canvas. In our painting, the knife and the large yellow squash boldly protrude off the table. Balancing objects on the edge of a table was a clever way for still-life painters to emphasize the three-dimensionality of the objects depicted, as well a way to lend a sense of drama to an otherwise static image. The knife here teeters on the edge, appearing as if it might fall off the table and out of the painting at any moment. The shape and consistency of the squash at left is brilliantly conveyed through the light brush strokes that define the vegetable’s fleshy and feathery interior. The smaller gourds—gathered together in a pile—are shrouded partly in darkness and stand out for their rugged, bumpy exterior. The stoneware has a brassy glaze, and the earthy tones of the vessels are carefully modulated by their interaction with the light and shadow that falls across them. The artist has cleverly arranged the still-life in a V-shaped composition, with a triangular slice of cheese standing upright, serving as its pinnacle. Independent still-lifes only became an important pictorial genre in the first years of the seventeenth century. In Italy, and particularly through the revolutionary works of Caravaggio, painted objects became carriers of meaning, and their depiction and arrangement the province of serious artistic scrutiny. Caravaggio famously asserted that it was equally difficult to paint a still-life as it was to paint figures, and the elevation of this new art form would have profound consequences to the present day. In Spain Juan Sanchez Cotan...
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    Located in Lincoln, GB
    Hippolyte Pierre Delanoy (1849-1899) A Study of Flowers 1874 Signed and Dated, Oil on Canvas, 57 x 49cm Delanoy was born in Glasgow, of French Parents and was the brother of painter...
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