LONDON.- Early Italian paintings and Flemish masterworks have become two of the most desirable areas in the Old Masters market, often finding their way into wide-ranging collections, often alongside Contemporary Art.
Sothebys Old Masters Evening sale in London on 7 December will present collectors with a rich selection of Italian Renaissance masterworks and Dutch and Flemish paintings from the Golden Age, many of which have remained in prestigious European private collections for centuries. Among these works are two exceptional early Italian Renaissance portraits: one by Titian and his studio, another by an artist rarely seen at auction, Lorenzo Lotto. These feature alongside a magnificent flower still life by Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder and two magnificent Italian 15th century gold-grounds, unseen on the market for over 100 years. The sale also includes a section entirely dedicated to the Dutch and Flemish painters influenced by Pieter Brueghel the Elder, led by one of the finest known versions of Pieter Brueghel the Youngers most popular compositions: a more-than-merry procession of villagers returning from a village fête.
Commenting on the forthcoming sale, Alex Bell, Joint International Head and Co-Chairman of Sothebys Old Master Paintings Department said: Collectors from past and present share a continuity of vision and a thirst for works with powerful imagery and timeless beauty. Many works in the sale will no doubt resonate with todays audience: Titians creative genius and the bond he captures between two brothers are as strong today as when Sir William Forbes acquired the work in the early 19th century; Lottos wonderfully quirky image of an architect has the same unconventional and dominating presence as it had 500 years ago. It is also fascinating to see what enticed a painter like Franz von Lenbach to buy the two fabulous Italian goldgrounds in the sale and how Pieter Brueghel the Youngers superb draughtsmanship and understanding of composition are still so evocative.
EARLY ITALIAN PAINTINGS
Two Exceptional Italian Renaissance Portraits
At the core of this winters sale is a group of ten paintings of impressive quality from the collection formed by Sir William Forbes, the 7th Baronet of Pitsligo (17731828), a Scottish banker who gave much of his fortune to various charitable establishments in Edinburgh. All of the works in the sale were acquired in Italy by the art dealer James Irvine on Forbes behalf between May 1827 and November 1828 and have never appeared on the market since then.
Leading this group is a Portrait of two boys, said to be members of the Pesaro family painted by Titian (1485/90 - 1576) with some assistance from his studio, probably in the early 1540s. This striking work is a rarity in the genre of portraiture for it is one of the first and very few double portraits in Renaissance painting. Its originality also lies in its intensely expressive representation of childhood, rarely seen in Titians oeuvre which only comprises a small group of portraits of children. Not until the following century would something comparable be attempted by Rubens when painting his sons (est. £1 - 1.5 million).
From the same collection is a stunning Portrait of an architect by Lorenzo Lotto (1480-1556), a recently discovered addition to the artist's uvre and one of some forty-odd surviving portraits, nearly all of which are now in public collections. Lottos portraits are among the most inventive and expressive of the first half of the 16th century and often break with conventions in portraiture. Probably painted in the 1540s, this work is remarkable for the sparseness of its composition, as well as the pose and expression of the sitter who engages directly with the viewer (est. £200,000-300,000).
TWO MAGNIFICENT ITALIAN GOLD-GROUNDS
The sale is further distinguished by a fine selection of early Italian Renaissance paintings, and most notably two magnificent 15thcentury Italian gold-grounds which have been in the collection formed by the famous German painter Franz von Lenbach (18361904) for over a century. Both works beautifully exemplify the artistic production in two of the principal cities in Tuscany in the late Middle Ages and Early Renaissance.
The first is one of the most arresting gabella panels ever created. Gabelle are inextricably linked to the history of Siena which was already a fully-functioning democracy in the 15th century. These small painted panels, produced between the mid13th century and the last quarter of the 17th century, served as file covers for the officials leaving office after their six-month fixed term in the Republic (when they had to make all their paperwork public as an anti-corruption requirement). These files and their covers were then hung on the city walls so that the population might have access to them.
A work of considerable rarity, this Flagellation was made in 1441 by the Master of the Osservanza, now recognised as Sano di Pietro (14051481), one of the most prominent Sienese artists of the first half of the 15th century. Today, most Gabelle covers are in Siena, and a handful are scattered among museums. With its highly inventive design, the present work is therefore one of the very few and most stunning Gabella panels still in private hands outside Italy (est. £400,000-600,000, pictured above).
The other major gold-ground in the sale is a luminous work by Bicci di Lorenzo, one of the most important painters of early 15th-century Florence. Painted in the early 1430s, this Nativity is a fine example of Bicci's distinctly traditionalist style that ensured a longlasting demand for his paintings (est. £300,000-500,000).
DUTCH AND FLEMISH MASTERWORKS FROM THE "GOLDEN AGE"
Following the auction record set for a still life by Jan Brueghel the Elder in London in July 1, the sale will feature a magnificent flower painting by another pioneer in the genre, Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder. Bosschaert was wholly responsible for the sudden outburst of flower painting in the Netherlands at the start of the 17th century and this beautifully preserved Still life of tulips, wild roses, cyclamen, yellow ranunculus, forget-me-not and other flowers, in a glass beaker is a very fine example of his early works. Dating from circa 16081610, it is little known, having only been exhibited once, in 1970, and only ever published in the catalogue of that exhibition (est. £800,000-1,200,000).
The sale will also provide a fascinating insight into the extraordinary impact that the work of Pieter Bruegel the Elder (c. 1525-1569) had upon Netherlandish landscape and genre painting in his own century, and equally how his influence was still being felt in the following century, as witnessed by the work of his son Pieter Brueghel the Younger (1564-1637/8) and his contemporaries, including Maerten van Cleve (c. 1527-1581).
The highlight of this section is one of the finest known versions of Pieter Brueghel the Youngers Return from the Kermesse, a composition that enjoyed great popularity during the artists lifetime and which appears to have been entirely of his own design. Its beautiful state of preservation allows us to fully appreciate the superb draughtsmanship, understanding of gesture, colour, composition and story-telling that have ensured for Brueghel a lasting reputation (est. £2-3 million).
THE IMPRIMATUR OF PRESTIGIOUS EUROPEAN PRIVATE COLLECTIONS
The December sale is further distinguished by a large number of works coming from prestigious private collections. In addition to the works from the Forbes and Von Lenbach collections, the selection includes Italian Renaissance and Dutch cabinet pictures from the collection formed by successive generations of the Earls and Marquesses of Lothian, as well as a group of 16th- and 17th-century Dutch paintings from the Rutter collection, assembled by the Viennese businessman Ing. Karl Rutter largely in the 1950s and 1960s.
1 Still Life of flowers in a stoneware vase, one of the greatest flower still lifes by left in private hands, sold for £3,845,000 ($4,970,816) (est. £3-5 million).