Premium pages left without account:

Auction archive: Lot number 54

Walter Frederick Osborne RHA ROI

Estimate
€40,000 - €60,000
ca. US$48,443 - US$72,665
Price realised:
€90,000
ca. US$108,997
Auction archive: Lot number 54

Walter Frederick Osborne RHA ROI

Estimate
€40,000 - €60,000
ca. US$48,443 - US$72,665
Price realised:
€90,000
ca. US$108,997
Beschreibung:

Walter Frederick Osborne RHA ROI (1859-1903) Loiterers (1888) Oil on panel, 35.5 x 25.4cm (14 x 10'') Signed and dated (18)'88 Exhibited: Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin 1889, Catalogue No.220; Institute of Painters in Oil Colours, undated; 'The Irish Revival', Pyms Gallery, London May/June 1982, Catalogue No.2, colour illustration; 'Walter Osborne', National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin November/December 1983, Catalogue No.27, illustrated; 'Walter Osborne', Ulster Museum, Belfast January/February 1984, Catalogue No.27. Literature: Jeanne Sheehy, 'Walter Osborne', Ballycotton 1974, Catalogue No.220. In his paintingLoiterersWalter Osborne shows an encounter between three people in a village street, with a pair of horses and a dog, and a hilly landscape behind lit by rosy evening sunlight. A realistic scene, the painting has a particular lyricism and warmth of colour.The boy in the foreground, holding a stick, sheepdog by his side,pauses to observe the man seated upon a white horse and a standing woman who are chatting. Each figure wears the plain clothing of English country people, the boy for instance, in a white smock. Buteach has distinctive head ware: the man a conical straw hat, the woman a bonnet, and the boy a deerstalker cap. In the background arethatched cottages and a small cart, while a basket and cloth has been left on the grassy verge on the right. The foreground is inshadow, but a strip of sunlight falls across the road, and beautiful sunlight also lights up the chimney stacks, tops of the roofs and hedge, and the hat of the mounted figure, while the hills behind and two cloudsare illuminated by a warm, roseate light. The picture is dated 1888; in this period Osborne was working in Hampshire, Oxfordshire and Berkshire, often in the company of fellow-artists, such as Blandford Fletcher and painting some of the finest pictures of his career. He painted in villages along the riversKennett and Thames, and "he visited that part of the English countrysidewhich lies to the north and south of the Berkshire Downs", (J. Sheehy, 1974, p.22).Loiterersmay be set in Uffington or near Newbury. Osborne admired the rustic styles of village buildings, forexample, the cottages with steep thatched roofs or stepped gables, small windows and red brick chimneys. The diagonal roofs to the right add adynamic energy to the composition. In spite of its title, the people in the picture are not 'loitering' but relaxing, perhaps exchanging news after a day's work in the fields. In many pictures Osborne presented such people in the village street, stopping to talk, or simply observing the scene. He often usedpencil studies from his sketchbooks, or juxtaposed figures from otherpictures, to create interesting ensembles of local characters. For example, the figure of a boy in the foreground, viewed from behind and looking into the picture, becomes an archetypical image inseveral works. The woman, the boy in his smock, and the patient white and black plough horses also appear in a contemporary pictureTheLock Gate, while a faithful sheepdog is present in several of Osborne paintings. The woman in the bonnet is also a familiarfigure from many of Fletcher's Village scenes. The cottages and the landscape behind, the Downs and clouds, lit by beautiful evening light, are as much characters of the picture as the human figures. As SimonJenkins writes : "There is a gently rolling quality to the Berkshire chalk lands... The curves are more enfolding, the slopes more wooded... Yet they can still be wild and...mysterious". (England's 100 Best Views, 2019, p. 140.) If we look closely at Osborne's picture we see some surprising details: light paint is visible behind the boy, suggesting that his figure was added after the background was completed; and there are traces of pentimento on the grassy bank, where the figure of a seatedwoman may have been painted over. The picture is crisply executed yetOsborne's brushwork is lively, as for example in the 'blurred' trea

Auction archive: Lot number 54
Auction:
Datum:
9 Dec 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) Loiterers (1888) Oil on panel, 35.5 x 25.4cm (14 x 10'') Signed and dated (18)'88 Exhibited: Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin 1889, Catalogue No.220; Institute of Painters in Oil Colours, undated; 'The Irish Revival', Pyms Gallery, London May/June 1982, Catalogue No.2, colour illustration; 'Walter Osborne', National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin November/December 1983, Catalogue No.27, illustrated; 'Walter Osborne', Ulster Museum, Belfast January/February 1984, Catalogue No.27. Literature: Jeanne Sheehy, 'Walter Osborne', Ballycotton 1974, Catalogue No.220. In his paintingLoiterersWalter Osborne shows an encounter between three people in a village street, with a pair of horses and a dog, and a hilly landscape behind lit by rosy evening sunlight. A realistic scene, the painting has a particular lyricism and warmth of colour.The boy in the foreground, holding a stick, sheepdog by his side,pauses to observe the man seated upon a white horse and a standing woman who are chatting. Each figure wears the plain clothing of English country people, the boy for instance, in a white smock. Buteach has distinctive head ware: the man a conical straw hat, the woman a bonnet, and the boy a deerstalker cap. In the background arethatched cottages and a small cart, while a basket and cloth has been left on the grassy verge on the right. The foreground is inshadow, but a strip of sunlight falls across the road, and beautiful sunlight also lights up the chimney stacks, tops of the roofs and hedge, and the hat of the mounted figure, while the hills behind and two cloudsare illuminated by a warm, roseate light. The picture is dated 1888; in this period Osborne was working in Hampshire, Oxfordshire and Berkshire, often in the company of fellow-artists, such as Blandford Fletcher and painting some of the finest pictures of his career. He painted in villages along the riversKennett and Thames, and "he visited that part of the English countrysidewhich lies to the north and south of the Berkshire Downs", (J. Sheehy, 1974, p.22).Loiterersmay be set in Uffington or near Newbury. Osborne admired the rustic styles of village buildings, forexample, the cottages with steep thatched roofs or stepped gables, small windows and red brick chimneys. The diagonal roofs to the right add adynamic energy to the composition. In spite of its title, the people in the picture are not 'loitering' but relaxing, perhaps exchanging news after a day's work in the fields. In many pictures Osborne presented such people in the village street, stopping to talk, or simply observing the scene. He often usedpencil studies from his sketchbooks, or juxtaposed figures from otherpictures, to create interesting ensembles of local characters. For example, the figure of a boy in the foreground, viewed from behind and looking into the picture, becomes an archetypical image inseveral works. The woman, the boy in his smock, and the patient white and black plough horses also appear in a contemporary pictureTheLock Gate, while a faithful sheepdog is present in several of Osborne paintings. The woman in the bonnet is also a familiarfigure from many of Fletcher's Village scenes. The cottages and the landscape behind, the Downs and clouds, lit by beautiful evening light, are as much characters of the picture as the human figures. As SimonJenkins writes : "There is a gently rolling quality to the Berkshire chalk lands... The curves are more enfolding, the slopes more wooded... Yet they can still be wild and...mysterious". (England's 100 Best Views, 2019, p. 140.) If we look closely at Osborne's picture we see some surprising details: light paint is visible behind the boy, suggesting that his figure was added after the background was completed; and there are traces of pentimento on the grassy bank, where the figure of a seatedwoman may have been painted over. The picture is crisply executed yetOsborne's brushwork is lively, as for example in the 'blurred' trea

Auction archive: Lot number 54
Auction:
Datum:
9 Dec 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