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Auction archive: Lot number 190

(Scottish Paintings & Sculpture, 4th

Estimate
£200 - £300
ca. US$268 - US$403
Price realised:
£2,250
ca. US$3,024
Auction archive: Lot number 190

(Scottish Paintings & Sculpture, 4th

Estimate
£200 - £300
ca. US$268 - US$403
Price realised:
£2,250
ca. US$3,024
Beschreibung:

(Scottish Paintings & Sculpture, 4th December 2020) FRANCIS CAMPBELL BOILEAU CADELL R.S.A., R.S.W. (SCOTTISH 1883-1937) JACK AND TOMMY. TWENTY DRAWINGS BY F.C.B. CADELL London: Grant Richards Ltd., 1916. 4to, 20 tipped-in plates, inscribed on the front-free andpaper: "From H.B. Cadell - Xmas - 1930. With best wishes to you both.", original quarter cloth with pictorial boards Note: The artists Beatrice L. Huntington (1889-1988) and William Macdonald (1883-1960) were married in 1925, establishing a strong artistic partnership that was to last the entirety of their lives. Both came into the marriage with established artistic visions, William having already trained in Paris and visited Spain, a country that was to become key to his artistic output, and earned him the moniker William ‘Spanish’ Macdonald, as recognition of his personal passion for the country and the success of his views of its landscapes. Meanwhile, Beatrice had undertaken artistic training with periods of study in London, Munich and Paris and gained some success as a portrait painter. Following their marriage, the pair travelled in Spain and then exhibited the resulting works in a joint exhibition in Dundee in 1928. Within their joint collection, both artists are represented with a selection of work that reveals their key artistic preoccupations; particularly portraiture and the range of locations that they both lived in and enjoyed travelling to: Edinburgh, Spain, Kirkcudbright, Canada. Throughout their lives, Beatrice and William moved in artistic circles; on their marriage William was already well-established in the Edinburgh arts scene, with a particular friendship with Scottish Colourist, F.C.B. Cadell, and it is his stylish portrait of William that anchors the whole collection. Their marriage also cemented Beatrice’s involvement in these Edinburgh artistic circles. The copy of Cadell’s ‘Tommy and Jack’ offered here is an indication of the depth of the friendship; the book was a gift with a personal inscription to the couple in the artist’s hand. However, the pair knew many artists, spending time in locations with specific creative connections, particularly Cassis in the South of France, favoured by the Scottish Colourists, and Kirkcudbright in Dumfries and Galloway, known as an artist’s colony, where they were friendly with the artist E.A. Taylor and his wife, the designer Jessie M. King. Meanwhile their home base was in the New Town of Edinburgh, Hanover Street, within walking distance of both the Royal Scottish Academy and the commercial gallery quarter, where both exhibited and sold their work. On that basis, the collection also contains works by other artists, both friends and contemporaries of the couple. In this auction, we are delighted to be offering two works by Beatrice. The first is an early work, a portrait of her mother, dating to 1915. Impressionistic in approach, she develops a lovely sense of balance across the composition with the gentle folds of her mother’s voluminous black costume contrasted with the colourful patterning of the trellis and flower behind her. There are nods to Bonnard, as well as Whistler’s iconic view of his own mother. The painting was probably painted at the family home in St. Andrews and was exhibited at both the Grosvenor Gallery and the R.S.A. By the 1920s Beatrice was significantly engaged with avant-garde developments in Europe, keeping in touch with Paris, and developing a new approach, away from this softness towards something starker and more stylised, with elements of cubism. However, she also engaged with contemporaries closer to home, such as in ‘Still-Life,’ where we can see elements of the still-life work of Anne Redpath in the chosen perspective, and a possible nod to her friends the Scottish Colourists, in the bold colour choice. Beatrice remained committed to her art throughout her life, still refining her approach and ideas into her late eighties. The works by William offered here to take a journey thr

Auction archive: Lot number 190
Auction:
Datum:
4 Dec 2020
Auction house:
Lyon & Turnbull
119 to 223 - Friday, 4th December 2020 18:00
Beschreibung:

(Scottish Paintings & Sculpture, 4th December 2020) FRANCIS CAMPBELL BOILEAU CADELL R.S.A., R.S.W. (SCOTTISH 1883-1937) JACK AND TOMMY. TWENTY DRAWINGS BY F.C.B. CADELL London: Grant Richards Ltd., 1916. 4to, 20 tipped-in plates, inscribed on the front-free andpaper: "From H.B. Cadell - Xmas - 1930. With best wishes to you both.", original quarter cloth with pictorial boards Note: The artists Beatrice L. Huntington (1889-1988) and William Macdonald (1883-1960) were married in 1925, establishing a strong artistic partnership that was to last the entirety of their lives. Both came into the marriage with established artistic visions, William having already trained in Paris and visited Spain, a country that was to become key to his artistic output, and earned him the moniker William ‘Spanish’ Macdonald, as recognition of his personal passion for the country and the success of his views of its landscapes. Meanwhile, Beatrice had undertaken artistic training with periods of study in London, Munich and Paris and gained some success as a portrait painter. Following their marriage, the pair travelled in Spain and then exhibited the resulting works in a joint exhibition in Dundee in 1928. Within their joint collection, both artists are represented with a selection of work that reveals their key artistic preoccupations; particularly portraiture and the range of locations that they both lived in and enjoyed travelling to: Edinburgh, Spain, Kirkcudbright, Canada. Throughout their lives, Beatrice and William moved in artistic circles; on their marriage William was already well-established in the Edinburgh arts scene, with a particular friendship with Scottish Colourist, F.C.B. Cadell, and it is his stylish portrait of William that anchors the whole collection. Their marriage also cemented Beatrice’s involvement in these Edinburgh artistic circles. The copy of Cadell’s ‘Tommy and Jack’ offered here is an indication of the depth of the friendship; the book was a gift with a personal inscription to the couple in the artist’s hand. However, the pair knew many artists, spending time in locations with specific creative connections, particularly Cassis in the South of France, favoured by the Scottish Colourists, and Kirkcudbright in Dumfries and Galloway, known as an artist’s colony, where they were friendly with the artist E.A. Taylor and his wife, the designer Jessie M. King. Meanwhile their home base was in the New Town of Edinburgh, Hanover Street, within walking distance of both the Royal Scottish Academy and the commercial gallery quarter, where both exhibited and sold their work. On that basis, the collection also contains works by other artists, both friends and contemporaries of the couple. In this auction, we are delighted to be offering two works by Beatrice. The first is an early work, a portrait of her mother, dating to 1915. Impressionistic in approach, she develops a lovely sense of balance across the composition with the gentle folds of her mother’s voluminous black costume contrasted with the colourful patterning of the trellis and flower behind her. There are nods to Bonnard, as well as Whistler’s iconic view of his own mother. The painting was probably painted at the family home in St. Andrews and was exhibited at both the Grosvenor Gallery and the R.S.A. By the 1920s Beatrice was significantly engaged with avant-garde developments in Europe, keeping in touch with Paris, and developing a new approach, away from this softness towards something starker and more stylised, with elements of cubism. However, she also engaged with contemporaries closer to home, such as in ‘Still-Life,’ where we can see elements of the still-life work of Anne Redpath in the chosen perspective, and a possible nod to her friends the Scottish Colourists, in the bold colour choice. Beatrice remained committed to her art throughout her life, still refining her approach and ideas into her late eighties. The works by William offered here to take a journey thr

Auction archive: Lot number 190
Auction:
Datum:
4 Dec 2020
Auction house:
Lyon & Turnbull
119 to 223 - Friday, 4th December 2020 18:00
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