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Auction archive: Lot number 41

THE TALLYMAN'S WIFE

Opening
€3,000 - €5,000
ca. US$3,530 - US$5,883
Price realised:
€2,900
ca. US$3,412
Auction archive: Lot number 41

THE TALLYMAN'S WIFE

Opening
€3,000 - €5,000
ca. US$3,530 - US$5,883
Price realised:
€2,900
ca. US$3,412
Beschreibung:

Seán Keating PPRHA HRA HRSA (1889-1977)
Signature: signed lower right
Medium: pastel
Size: 20½ x 20in. (52.07 x 50.80cm) Framed Size: 26.50 x 26in. (67.31 x 66.04cm) Condition: This work appears to be in very good condition. some surface dirt visible. The figure in this study, The Tallyman's Wife, made her first appearance, albeit facing in the opposite direction, in a painting entitled The Overman (1930-31), exhibited in 1931. (1) However, the faint wording in the artist's hand, which appears to...Read more The figure in this study, The Tallyman's Wife, made her first appearance, albeit facing in the opposite direction, in a painting entitled The Overman (1930-31), exhibited in 1931. (1) However, the faint wording in the artist's hand, which appears to read '… of Science' and 'steam turbo tunnel', suggests that this example was made as a study for the artist's mural for the World's Fair in New York in 1939. The theme of the Fair was 'Building the World of Tomorrow', and the Irish government agreed to exhibit, in spite of trouble in Europe, and the expense involved, because the authorities in New York agreed to give Ireland 5000 square foot of free exhibition space in an area known as 'The Hall of Nations'. That building was used to exhibit elements of Ireland's culture and history, including a large-scale mural by Maurice MacGonigal and a stained-glass window by Evie Hone which is now housed in Government Buildings, Dublin. Keating showed another work, Race of the Gael, in the IBM Hall of Science, which may account for some of the wording on the sketch. The better-known building, Michael Scott's so-called 'Shamrock Pavilion' was used for physical displays of Ireland's modern developments and industries. Keating was commissioned to paint a large-scale mural to decorate the inside of the 'Shamrock Pavilion'. Destroyed onsite in 1941, the mural featured the only full-scale image of the 'Shannon Scheme' that Keating ever painted, which showed the enormous scale of the steam turbos - hence the lettering 'steam turbo tunnel' on the sketch - along with Aer Lingus' first aeroplane, and a new cement factory. Seated to the bottom right of Keating's mural was the woman from The Overman, this time she was cast in an entirely different role. With her bucket of flowers, she emblematically reminded visitors to the pavilion of Irish-born playwright and critic, George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950), and his original stage play, Pygmalion. Keating was a keen admirer of Shaw's work. In its original stage version, Shaw set up a classic plot; a lower-class woman cleaned up by an upper-class professor, with a strong subtext about a union between the two. But Shaw subverted the plot by insisting on Doolittle's liberation from her mentor, thereby offering a suggestive metaphor for Keating and his viewers at the time. Shaw's Eliza Doolittle, a role written for Mrs Patrick Campbell, and first performed by her in London in 1914, had been a flower seller. The artist reused the sketch again for a study in pastel entitled Study for Eliza Doolittle, and an associated oil painting, entitled Eliza Doolittle in Dublin, both of which were exhibited with The Bell Gallery, Belfast, in 1965. 1. The Overman (1930-31) was exhibited in the Royal Glasgow Institute of Fine Art in 1931 and is now in the collection of ESB. Dr Éimear O'Connor HRHA Author: Seán Keating: Art, Politics, and Building the Irish Nation (Kildare: Irish Academic Press, 2013) Research Associate, HI, UCD August 2019. Visualise on Your Wall Using Art Visualiser 1. Scan the QR Code / Download Art Visualiser if it's your 1st time 2. Press Visualise On Wall / Aim your phone at your floor while it calibrates * 3. Move your position until it meets the floor and bottom of your wall 4. Click the Pin icon to lock it into place and the painting will appear on your wall 5. You can move the painting around with your finger and move your position to see the painting from different angles * Older mobile devices will require an AR Marker to be downloaded, printed on A4 and positioned on your wall Clo

Auction archive: Lot number 41
Auction:
Datum:
19 Oct 2020
Auction house:
Whyte & Sons Auctioneers Ltd
Molesworth Street 38
Dublin 2
Ireland
info@whytes.ie
+353 (0)1 676 2888
Beschreibung:

Seán Keating PPRHA HRA HRSA (1889-1977)
Signature: signed lower right
Medium: pastel
Size: 20½ x 20in. (52.07 x 50.80cm) Framed Size: 26.50 x 26in. (67.31 x 66.04cm) Condition: This work appears to be in very good condition. some surface dirt visible. The figure in this study, The Tallyman's Wife, made her first appearance, albeit facing in the opposite direction, in a painting entitled The Overman (1930-31), exhibited in 1931. (1) However, the faint wording in the artist's hand, which appears to...Read more The figure in this study, The Tallyman's Wife, made her first appearance, albeit facing in the opposite direction, in a painting entitled The Overman (1930-31), exhibited in 1931. (1) However, the faint wording in the artist's hand, which appears to read '… of Science' and 'steam turbo tunnel', suggests that this example was made as a study for the artist's mural for the World's Fair in New York in 1939. The theme of the Fair was 'Building the World of Tomorrow', and the Irish government agreed to exhibit, in spite of trouble in Europe, and the expense involved, because the authorities in New York agreed to give Ireland 5000 square foot of free exhibition space in an area known as 'The Hall of Nations'. That building was used to exhibit elements of Ireland's culture and history, including a large-scale mural by Maurice MacGonigal and a stained-glass window by Evie Hone which is now housed in Government Buildings, Dublin. Keating showed another work, Race of the Gael, in the IBM Hall of Science, which may account for some of the wording on the sketch. The better-known building, Michael Scott's so-called 'Shamrock Pavilion' was used for physical displays of Ireland's modern developments and industries. Keating was commissioned to paint a large-scale mural to decorate the inside of the 'Shamrock Pavilion'. Destroyed onsite in 1941, the mural featured the only full-scale image of the 'Shannon Scheme' that Keating ever painted, which showed the enormous scale of the steam turbos - hence the lettering 'steam turbo tunnel' on the sketch - along with Aer Lingus' first aeroplane, and a new cement factory. Seated to the bottom right of Keating's mural was the woman from The Overman, this time she was cast in an entirely different role. With her bucket of flowers, she emblematically reminded visitors to the pavilion of Irish-born playwright and critic, George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950), and his original stage play, Pygmalion. Keating was a keen admirer of Shaw's work. In its original stage version, Shaw set up a classic plot; a lower-class woman cleaned up by an upper-class professor, with a strong subtext about a union between the two. But Shaw subverted the plot by insisting on Doolittle's liberation from her mentor, thereby offering a suggestive metaphor for Keating and his viewers at the time. Shaw's Eliza Doolittle, a role written for Mrs Patrick Campbell, and first performed by her in London in 1914, had been a flower seller. The artist reused the sketch again for a study in pastel entitled Study for Eliza Doolittle, and an associated oil painting, entitled Eliza Doolittle in Dublin, both of which were exhibited with The Bell Gallery, Belfast, in 1965. 1. The Overman (1930-31) was exhibited in the Royal Glasgow Institute of Fine Art in 1931 and is now in the collection of ESB. Dr Éimear O'Connor HRHA Author: Seán Keating: Art, Politics, and Building the Irish Nation (Kildare: Irish Academic Press, 2013) Research Associate, HI, UCD August 2019. Visualise on Your Wall Using Art Visualiser 1. Scan the QR Code / Download Art Visualiser if it's your 1st time 2. Press Visualise On Wall / Aim your phone at your floor while it calibrates * 3. Move your position until it meets the floor and bottom of your wall 4. Click the Pin icon to lock it into place and the painting will appear on your wall 5. You can move the painting around with your finger and move your position to see the painting from different angles * Older mobile devices will require an AR Marker to be downloaded, printed on A4 and positioned on your wall Clo

Auction archive: Lot number 41
Auction:
Datum:
19 Oct 2020
Auction house:
Whyte & Sons Auctioneers Ltd
Molesworth Street 38
Dublin 2
Ireland
info@whytes.ie
+353 (0)1 676 2888
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