LONDON.- Sothebys is to offer a painting by Danish artist Vilhelm Hammershøi that is rare if not unique in the artists oeuvre, in the Companys sale of 19th Century European Paintings on 22 May 2014. Sun over the Sea, estimated at £100,000-150,000, is one of the only known marines by the artist, and in which he paints directly into the sun. The auction will feature a second painting by Hammershøi with a maritime subject, The Old Warehouse in Christianshavn (estimate: £80,000-120,000). Both pictures, from Danish private collections, come to the auction market for the first time.
Claude Piening, Senior Director, Sothebys 19th Century European Paintings Department, said: Hammershøis timeless and quietly understated images continue to cast their spell on today's collectors. For our upcoming sale in May, we are fortunate to be offering two exterior views painted in Copenhagen. Sun over the Sea is an especially exciting rediscovery, arguably the only painting by Hammershøi to depict not only the open ocean, but the glowing orb of the sun, the source of light in so many of his more familiar interior scenes.
Nina Wedell-Wedellsborg, Head of Sothebys Denmark, continued: Sun over the Sea and The Old Warehouse belong to the significant body of outdoor views by Hammershøi, which have been generating strong interest in our sales over recent years. Both are exciting discoveries: the former is unique in the artists oeuvre, the latter - formerly in the collection of Hammershøis patron Alfred Bramsen - a smaller version of the iconic painting in the Hamburger Kunsthalle.
Sun over the Sea, dated to circa 1902, is comparable to Hammershøis signature interior scenes in its masterly evocation of space and light, though the closure and introversion that characterises so much of his output is cast aside here to reveal a vast and sublime vista. The picture leaves much open to interpretation, but it echoes the spiritual connotations of the German Romantic marines and landscapes by Caspar David Friedrich painted a century earlier. Hammershøi often sought inspiration from the past, most notably from Vermeer in his interiors, and both the German Romantics and Danish Golden painters resonated deeply throughout Scandinavia. At the same time, the painting is extremely modern in its conception, with the uncompromisingly cropped ships and the horizontal tonal layers. In this respect, it is akin to the watery nocturnes of Hammershøis contemporary James McNeill Whistler, an artist whose work he admired but to his great regret never met.
In other paintings by Hammershøi, the sea is hinted at in the form of masts visible behind high walls, as evident in The Old Warehouse in Christianshavn, which is estimated to bring £80,000-120,000. Painted in 1909, this is one of two oil studies for a larger composition now in the Hamburger Kunsthalle. It shows the front of the old warehouse at Christianshavn, which stood not far from the artists home at Strandgade 30. The hermetic character of the image evokes a mood of haunting mystery: all the doors and windows are closed, and the wall cropped by the edge of the picture obstructs the view to the left. The two masts towering above the wall are the only visual clues to the presence of a canal running alongside the warehouse.
The paintings first owner was Alfred Bramsen, who became Hammershøis foremost patron. By 1918, he owned over 60 oils, one fifth of the artists oeuvre; in 1903, he had sold the majority of his collection of 19th-century European art to museums and public institutions in order to focus exclusively on collecting works by Hammershøi. Bramsen was the artists first biographer, and co-publisher of a catalogue raisonné, as well as the organiser of three one-man exhibitions in Copenhagen.