LONDON.- This summer,
Christies London presents a stellar collection of Pre-Raphaelite and Victorian drawings and paintings one of the very best collections in private hands with museum-quality works, some of which have not been seen for decades. Offered as part of the Victorian, Pre-Raphaelite & British Impressionist Art sale on 16 June 2015, this beautiful collection features 45 works and is expected to realise in the region of £2 million. Leading the collection is one of eight works by Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828-1882), Beatrice: A Portrait of Jane Morris (estimate: £700,000-£1 million). The collection presents the opportunity for both established and new collectors alike to acquire works at a wide range of price points with estimates ranging from £1,000 to £700,000.
Harriet Drummond, International Head of British Drawings & Watercolours, Christies: Christie's is delighted to be handling this important and breath-takingly beautiful collection of paintings and drawings brought together by a couple of anglophile art lovers, who combined their passion for the aesthetic of the Victorian Period with the discerning eye of the connoisseur collector. It is the art of this Victorian era celebrating beauty through its depiction of largely female figures, from the monumentality of Desdemona to the intimacy of Fanny Cornforth, asleep on a chaise-longue that so strongly influenced our idea of beauty today.
With the recent re-emergence of interest in the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, led by Tates Pre-Raphaelites: Victorian Avant-Garde exhibition in 2012, this collection represents many of the Stunners who inspired their paintings and made their work truly romantic, including eight beguiling works by Rossetti. The fine selection of works on paper is led by Rossettis impressive life-size study for the protagonist in Desdemonas Death Song (estimate: £500,000-800,000). Modelled by Alexa Wilding, the composition is based on Shakespeares Othello, and shows the hauntingly beautiful Desdemona preparing for bed on the fatal night she is murdered by her estranged husband. These women informed the paintings they modelled for and introduced a new concept of female beauty to the Victorian public. It is the art of this period startling realism, intimacy and feminine beauty that indelibly defines our images of nineteenth-century England, and transformed British art forever.
A Stunner who proved irresistible to Rossetti, and dominated the artists imagination in the early and mid1860s, was Fanny Cornforth (1835-1906). After an exhausting day of modelling, Fanny Cornforth, asleep on a chaiselongue shows her resting between sittings and provides an insight into Rossettis domestic arrangements in Chelsea, where Fanny had been installed as his housekeeper (estimate: £120,000-180,000). This captivating drawing has formed part of the worlds most renowned collections, given by Rossetti to his friend, patron and fellow artist G.P. Boyce in 1862, it has since belonged to four well-known connoisseurs: Herbert Horne, Edward Marsh, Sir Brinsley Ford, and the novelist Sir Hugh Walpole.
It is clear that the two collectors have focused on drawings, most of which exemplify the romance, imagination, and soul of the Pre-Raphaelites, their contemporaries and the artists they influenced. Alongside the seven drawings by Rossetti himself, are three by Edward Burne-Jones, four by Simeon Solomon, two by Frederick Sandys, and an example by Charles Fairfax Murray, Evelyn De Morgan and Emma Sandys. Proud Maisie by Sandys is one of the artists most popular subjects and this present composition is charged with sexual tension and raw emotion (estimate: £50,000-70,000). The model for Proud Maisie was Mary Emma Jones, an actress who had ten children with Sandys and was his principal muse, inspiring countless works which celebrate her distinctive profile and luxuriant tresses.
Three of the Pre-Raphaelites contemporaries who celebrated classicism Frederic Leighton, E.J. Poynter, and William Blake Richmond are also present. Poynters painting of Judith (estimate: £80,000-120,000) depicts the story when the Hebrew heroine saves her people by seducing and beheading Holofernes. Exhibited at the Grosvenor Gallery in 1881 and still in the original tabernacle frame, it is a magnificent study of character and intent, this painting has not been on the market for three decades.