Oil painting by Francis Newton Souza soars to $235,000 at Weiss Auctions

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Saturday, May 18, 2024


Oil painting by Francis Newton Souza soars to $235,000 at Weiss Auctions
Oil on Masonite painting by the Indian-American artist Francis Newton Souza (1924-2002), titled Head in a Landscape, 35 inches by 47 ½ inches ($235,000).



LYNBROOK, NY.- A large oil on Masonite painting by the Indian-American artist Francis Newton Souza (1924-2002) climbed to $235,000, and three artworks by the Russian artist Mihail Chemiakin (b. 1943) – a painting and two sculptures – combined to bring $44,800 at an auction held May 17th by Weiss Auctions, online and in the firm’s Lynbrook gallery at 74 Merrick Road.

The Souza painting was by far the top lot of the auction. Titled Head in a Landscape, the work was impressive at 35 inches by 47 ½ inches. It was also completely fresh to the market, making the important estate find that much more attractive to the collectors who were eager to bid on it.

Francis Newton Souza was raised by his dressmaker mother in India and attended art school in Mumbai but was expelled in 1942 for supporting the Quit India Movement. Five years later he helped found the Bombay Progressive Artists’ Group, to encourage young Indian artists to become part of the international avant-garde movement. He moved to London, England in 1949.

There, his work was exhibited at the Institute of Contemporary Art. Souza’s style was rooted in Expressionism but was influenced by Art Brut and Neo-Romanticism. His subjects were often female nudes and Christian imagery but also included still-lifes and landscapes. Souza lived and worked in New York from 1967 until shortly before his death, when he returned home to India.

The auction saw more than 500 lots come up for bid and gross around $600,000, including the buyer’s premium. “Internet and phone bidding were both very strong, and approximately 75 people attended in person,” said Philip Weiss of Philip Weiss Auctions. “The sale featured estate jewelry, bronzes, a Philip and Kelvin LaVerne mid-century modern table, porcelains and more.”

Original artwork, however, dominated the day’s list of top lots. The three pieces by Chemiakin included a 50 inch by 50 inch oil on canvas painting, signed and dated (1990) and an excellent example of his work ($18,700); a 29-inch-tall bronze sculpture from his St. Petersburg Carnival series, signed #2 of 8 ($10,500); and a sterling silver sculpture titled Peter the Great perched on a titled marble pedestal, 37 inches tall and with mounted plaques bearing his signature ($15,600).

Mihail Chemiakin (whose name is also spelled Mikhail Shemyakin) is a Russian painter, stage designer, sculptor and publisher, and a controversial representative of the nonconformist art tradition of St. Petersburg. Chemiakin works in a broad range of media and subjects, as seen in the 2010 two-volume book on his art, Mihail Chemiakin (Azbooka publishers, St. Petersburg).

Following are additional highlights from the auction. Internet bidding was provided by Proxibid, Invaluable.com and Auctionzip.com. All prices quoted here are inclusive of a buyer’s premium.

A lithograph and screenprint in colors on Arches paper by renowned American painter, sculptor and graphic artist Robert Rauschenberg (1925-2008), titled People for the American Way (1991), signed lower left, dated and numbered (“44/75”), and housed in a large and heavy 49 inch by 61 inch frame, gaveled for $24,600. It was a new world auction record for a print from that series.

A beautiful and monumental Royal Vienna hand-painted porcelain plaque depicting a religious scene, with an artist’s signature in the lower right appearing to read “E. Sihade”, changed hands for $8,525. The image area was 16 ½ inches by 21 ¼ inches, with an inked beehive mark verso.

A wonderful oil on canvas painting by C. Hjalmar “Cappy” Amundsen (Me./N.Y./Mass, 1911-2001), depicting whalers off the coast in a vivid and colorful marine rendering, brought $6,000. The work, housed in a frame measuring 42 ½ inches by 31 inches, was artist signed lower left.

Philip Weiss Auctions has three big sales lined up for June. The first, slated for Monday, June 11th, will be an on-site auction, to be held in the New York County Public Administrator’s warehouse, at 250 Church Street in Manhattan, starting at 12 noon. Offered will be estate material featuring furniture, paintings, prints, artwork, porcelain, pottery, bronzes, rugs, household bric-a-brac, electronics, musical instruments, lamps, clocks, collectibles and more.

Then, on Wednesday, June 20th, at the Lynbrook gallery, a sale dedicated to toys, trains, battery ops, diecasts, dolls, toy soldiers, pressed steel and more will be held, highlighted by Part 1 of the Kalas Collection but also to include further selections from the Jerry and Nina Green Collection of American and European trains and toys, Part 1 of the massive toy collection of George Dominguez, more of the Pennsylvania “Matchbox Hoard” and a newly arrived doll collection.

The following day, Thursday, June 21st, also in the Lynbrook gallery, Weiss Auctions will hold a sale packed with sports items, comics, comic art, animation and historical material. Featured will be baseball material from the personal secretary to Christy Walsh; old sports posters, documents and ephemera; the white dress shirt worn by JFK at his inauguration as President; original comic art from the Joe Kubert estate; ‘50s-era pulp and paperback covers; comics; and Disney material.










Today's News

May 31, 2018

Claude Monet sister paintings reunited at the National Gallery for first time

Getty Museum acquires bronzes by Claudel and Rodin

Sotheby's Paris to offer historic works by Zao Wou-Ki, Jean Dubuffet & Kazuo Shiraga

Tate Britain to unite Burne-Jones's two great painting cycles for the first time

Library of Congress receives donation of popular art valued in the millions

Design unveiled for historic evolution of the 9/11 Memorial

Temporary exhibition of Salvador Dalí portraits by Robert Whitaker opens at the Dalí Theatre-Museum

Exhibition at Lyndhurst features more than 50 rarely seen works by Louis Comfort Tiffany

Bertoia Auctions' Spring Signature Sale hits $1.9 million with global turnout of enthusiastic bidders

Auction of Rare Books at Ketterer Kunst in Hamburg achieves more than €1.6 million

FIAC 2018 announces list of galleries for its 45th edition

Simon Lee Gallery opens a solo exhibition of new work by Holly Coulis

Erin M. Riley's first solo exhibition with P·P·O·W opens in New York

Burning in Water opens a solo exhibition of recent work by the Oakland-based artist Oliver Lee Jackson

New work by Avril Paton goes on show at Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum

Tomaso Binga and Greta Schödl's first UK exhibition opens at Richard Saltoun Gallery

Galerie Parisa Kind opens exhibition of recent work by Mike Bouchet

Alicja Kwade presents first, large-scale solo commission in the US at Castle Hill on the Crane Estate

Exhibition of 18 prints from the 1970s by Alan Shields on view at Van Doren Waxter

MAXXI BVLGARI Prize: MAXXI and Bvlgari support young art talents

Boscobel names Executive Director

Oil painting by Francis Newton Souza soars to $235,000 at Weiss Auctions

Bonhams appoints April Matteini and Natalie Waechter as representatives

South London Gallery launches Fire Station crowdfunding campaign




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful