Premium pages left without account:

Auction archive: Lot number 28

Walter Frederick Osborne RHA ROI

Estimate
€30,000 - €35,000
ca. US$35,492 - US$41,407
Price realised:
n. a.
Auction archive: Lot number 28

Walter Frederick Osborne RHA ROI

Estimate
€30,000 - €35,000
ca. US$35,492 - US$41,407
Price realised:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

Walter Frederick Osborne RHA ROI (1859-1903) A Young Girl in a Village Oil on artist's board, 20.5 x 14.3cm (8 x 5½'') Provenance: With Jorgensen Fine Art, Dublin. Walter Osbornes small painting of children in a village square on a sunny day is both characteristic of him, yet colourful and surprising, combining Naturalism with an evocative narrative content, a carefully controlled composition with a relaxed snapshot, almost cinematic quality, and a contrast of strong sunlight and shadow. The figures, of the girl in the foreground, the boy with donkey or mule, and the silhouetted person behind, are sheltering from the heat of the day, and stand in deep shadow. As in several of Osbornes pictures, the little girl is viewed in profile or from behind, looking back at the other figures, creating a relationship with them, and inviting the viewers interest. Are these children brother and sister, what sort of rural lives do they lead, and who is the figure in the background ? In contrast, the upper part of the picture, showing the square and farm buildings, is in bright sunlight. The contrast of bright light and deep shadow, the donkey and sun-baked square, and the hot reds and oranges, give the painting a slightly Spanish atmosphere. Yet the costumes of the children: girl with neat straw hat and bow, boy with hat and white shirt, and the brick buildings, barns and red-tiled roofs, indicate that the setting is in England. Osborne spent much of the period from 1884 to the early 1890s working in villages and in the countryside, and their street scenes, rural subjects with children and landscapes are among his finest paintings. In the present picture, the red brick buildings and high colouring are characteristic of his Berkshire paintings of c.1887/88, so it may date to this period. A diagonal line divides the shadowy foreground area from the sunny background. This is echoed by the diagonals in the roofs which, together with horizontal lines, show the artists love of blocked, interlocking shapes of buildings and walls. Equally typical is the little strip of trees and sky in the upper right corner of the picture, hinting at nature beyond. The colours of the buildings and square: reds, mauves, umbers, pale blues, pinks and oranges, glow with warmth. Certain colours are used in different parts of the picture, giving unity to the picture surface, in certain places, for instance in the girls shoulder, and the sunny edge of a wall above the donkeys ear, Osborne employs a square-brush style, while the pale blue walls and sky are brushed in more broadly. The picture is painted on millboard, a compressed pasteboard often used by Osborne and other Plein-air painters. Julian Campbell Walter Frederick Osborne RHA ROI (1859-1903) A Young Girl in a Village Oil on artist's board, 20.5 x 14.3cm (8 x 5½'') Provenance: With Jorgensen Fine Art, Dublin. Walter Osbornes small painting of children in a village square on a sunny day is both characteristic of him, yet colourful and surprising, combining Naturalism with an evocative narrative content, a carefully controlled composition with a relaxed snapshot, almost cinematic quality, and a contrast of strong sunlight and shadow. The figures, of the girl in the foreground, the boy with donkey or mule, and the silhouetted person behind, are sheltering from the heat of the day, and stand in deep shadow. As in several of Osbornes pictures, the little girl is viewed in profile or from behind, looking back at the other figures, creating a relationship with them, and inviting the viewers interest. Are these children brother and sister, what sort of rural lives do they lead, and who is the figure in the background ? In contrast, the upper part of the picture, showing the square and farm buildings, is in bright sunlight. The contrast of bright light and deep shadow, the donkey and sun-baked square, and the hot reds and oranges, give the painting a slightly Spanish atmosphere. Yet the costumes of the children: girl wi

Auction archive: Lot number 28
Auction:
Datum:
20 Oct 2020
Auction house:
Adams's
St Stephens Green 26
D02 X665 Dublin 2
Ireland
info@adams.ie
+353-1-6760261)
Beschreibung:

Walter Frederick Osborne RHA ROI (1859-1903) A Young Girl in a Village Oil on artist's board, 20.5 x 14.3cm (8 x 5½'') Provenance: With Jorgensen Fine Art, Dublin. Walter Osbornes small painting of children in a village square on a sunny day is both characteristic of him, yet colourful and surprising, combining Naturalism with an evocative narrative content, a carefully controlled composition with a relaxed snapshot, almost cinematic quality, and a contrast of strong sunlight and shadow. The figures, of the girl in the foreground, the boy with donkey or mule, and the silhouetted person behind, are sheltering from the heat of the day, and stand in deep shadow. As in several of Osbornes pictures, the little girl is viewed in profile or from behind, looking back at the other figures, creating a relationship with them, and inviting the viewers interest. Are these children brother and sister, what sort of rural lives do they lead, and who is the figure in the background ? In contrast, the upper part of the picture, showing the square and farm buildings, is in bright sunlight. The contrast of bright light and deep shadow, the donkey and sun-baked square, and the hot reds and oranges, give the painting a slightly Spanish atmosphere. Yet the costumes of the children: girl with neat straw hat and bow, boy with hat and white shirt, and the brick buildings, barns and red-tiled roofs, indicate that the setting is in England. Osborne spent much of the period from 1884 to the early 1890s working in villages and in the countryside, and their street scenes, rural subjects with children and landscapes are among his finest paintings. In the present picture, the red brick buildings and high colouring are characteristic of his Berkshire paintings of c.1887/88, so it may date to this period. A diagonal line divides the shadowy foreground area from the sunny background. This is echoed by the diagonals in the roofs which, together with horizontal lines, show the artists love of blocked, interlocking shapes of buildings and walls. Equally typical is the little strip of trees and sky in the upper right corner of the picture, hinting at nature beyond. The colours of the buildings and square: reds, mauves, umbers, pale blues, pinks and oranges, glow with warmth. Certain colours are used in different parts of the picture, giving unity to the picture surface, in certain places, for instance in the girls shoulder, and the sunny edge of a wall above the donkeys ear, Osborne employs a square-brush style, while the pale blue walls and sky are brushed in more broadly. The picture is painted on millboard, a compressed pasteboard often used by Osborne and other Plein-air painters. Julian Campbell Walter Frederick Osborne RHA ROI (1859-1903) A Young Girl in a Village Oil on artist's board, 20.5 x 14.3cm (8 x 5½'') Provenance: With Jorgensen Fine Art, Dublin. Walter Osbornes small painting of children in a village square on a sunny day is both characteristic of him, yet colourful and surprising, combining Naturalism with an evocative narrative content, a carefully controlled composition with a relaxed snapshot, almost cinematic quality, and a contrast of strong sunlight and shadow. The figures, of the girl in the foreground, the boy with donkey or mule, and the silhouetted person behind, are sheltering from the heat of the day, and stand in deep shadow. As in several of Osbornes pictures, the little girl is viewed in profile or from behind, looking back at the other figures, creating a relationship with them, and inviting the viewers interest. Are these children brother and sister, what sort of rural lives do they lead, and who is the figure in the background ? In contrast, the upper part of the picture, showing the square and farm buildings, is in bright sunlight. The contrast of bright light and deep shadow, the donkey and sun-baked square, and the hot reds and oranges, give the painting a slightly Spanish atmosphere. Yet the costumes of the children: girl wi

Auction archive: Lot number 28
Auction:
Datum:
20 Oct 2020
Auction house:
Adams's
St Stephens Green 26
D02 X665 Dublin 2
Ireland
info@adams.ie
+353-1-6760261)
Try LotSearch

Try LotSearch and its premium features for 7 days - without any costs!

  • Search lots and bid
  • Price database and artist analysis
  • Alerts for your searches
Create an alert now!

Be notified automatically about new items in upcoming auctions.

Create an alert