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Sotheby's unveils a group of Modern British art from the Dartington Hall Trust Collection
Ben Nicholson, 1930/1 (Charbon), est. £250,000-350,000. Photo: Sotheby's.
LONDON.- Sotheby's announces the sale of a remarkable group of works by British artists on behalf of The Dartington Hall Trust, to be sold as part of Sotheby’s sale of 20th Century British Art on Wednesday, 16th November 2011. The works, comprising paintings, prints, drawings, sculptures and ceramics by artists including Ben Nicholson, Christopher Wood, Winifred Nicholson and Henri Gaudier-Brzeska, have been carefully selected by The Dartington Hall Trust. The discrete selection of 40 works comes from a much larger and important collection built up by progressive collectors Dorothy and Leonard Elmhirst, the founders of the visionary Dartington Hall Trust, which was established in 1925.

Vaughan Lindsay, Chief Executive Officer of The Dartington Hall Trust, comments: “We have defined a core collection of works which will remain at Dartington and represents the major artists who worked here, whom Dorothy Elmhirst collected or who have some special link to the history of Dartington. The works to be sold at Sotheby's have been selected to raise sufficient funds to allow the Trust to continue its experimental work in the arts, social justice and sustainability, while still retaining a significant and attractive collection to inspire artists and visitors.”

Frances Christie, Sotheby’s Director and Specialist in Modern & Post-War British Art said: “Sotheby’s is honoured to be offering works from such a landmark collection of Modern British Art to the auction market for the first time. Collected by Dorothy and Leonard Elmhirst, the works are compelling visual symbols of their many relationships with some of the most significant artistic figures living and working in this country during the Inter-war period. Many of the works were acquired directly from the artists and have never previously been offered for sale.”

Sale Highlights
In 1931 Dorothy Elmhirst wrote excitedly to her husband about “a young English painter who is the real thing. His name is Ben Nicholson…” She immediately acquired several of his works and invited Nicholson to speak at Dartington in 1935. Ben Nicholson’s 1930/31 (Charbon) is undoubtedly one of the most important works by the artist from this early period ever to come to the market. The painting, (est. £250,000-350,000) marks a key pivotal point in the development of his style. The confident, yet stylized line which simplifies the still life objects to their most pared back form undoubtedly represents a climax of Nicholson's early style. It is a testament to the Elmhirsts’ discerning eye that they bought the painting, an exceptional example of Nicholson’s distinctive reductive treatment of form.

Christopher Wood’s 1930 painting, Pony and trap, Ploaré, Brittany (est. £150,000-250,000) is among a rare group of works which demonstrate the development of Wood's work shortly before his death. Their lyrical qualities, sensual colours and distinct interpretations of mood are redolent of his artistic maturity. Perspective is distorted and proportions exaggerated to express Wood’s own interpretation of the scene. In their vitality, enjoyment and passion, Wood’s works seem to embody a set of values held high by the Elmhirsts. His work is infused with uninhibited feeling and expression, principles which were fundamental to the couple and which they aimed to instil in their pupils at Dartington in a challenge to contemporary education. Explaining his motivations for purchasing Wood’s work, Leonard Elmhirst wrote: “One of the hopes that Mrs Elmhirst and I have of rescuing Mr Wood’s name for posterity, is that two or three people should have enough of his pictures to give a real conception of the breadth of his work…”

Henri Gaudier-Brzeska’s alabaster sculpture Boy (est. £120,000-180,000), executed circa 1913, is among the artist’s most accomplished works from a period in which he turned his primary focus to carving. Prior to this date the majority of his sculptures were modelled in clay. Boy was exhibited at a show with the Grafton Group in 1914 as part of a small group of works that reflected the sculptor’s interest in looking to non-western sources for inspiration, such as the African and Oceanic wooden sculptures he had studied in the British Museum. Jim Ede, founder of Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge, wrote to Dorothy Elmhirst in 1964 requesting the opportunity to cast the present work in bronze, and although this request was initially refused, three casts of the work were produced in December 1968. One of the casts was kept by Ede at Kettle's Yard and another was gifted to the Musée National d'Art Moderne in Paris.

The raw creativity and untutored directness of retired Cornish mariner Alfred Wallis’s work is exemplified in A Fishing Boat off the Coast (estimated £30,000-50,000). In this painting Wallis’ use of scrap materials creates a dynamic interaction between the board, the unpainted background and the paint surface. In 1935, the Elmhirsts’ friend and Tate Curator, Jim Ede wrote to Dorothy: “I wonder if you would like a batch of pictures by Alfred Wallis? Anyhow I sent for some for you and am posting them on. They would be £3 the lot! If you don't like them, forgive me and post them back – but if you would get your people to frame them up like the one I brought you, you will find that they suddenly look no end good.” The Elmhirsts, were thrilled with the works and with Wallis’ instinctive and naïve draughtsmanship.

Winifred Nicholson is best known for her vibrant still lives of flowers and Ragged Robin, (estimated at £50,000-80,000), an oil on canvas, executed circa 1930, demonstrates her distinctively luminous palate and almost Gauguin-esque sense of design. The artist drew on the theme of flowers throughout her career, having become entranced by the subject in the early 1920s while living with her husband Ben Nicholson in Switzerland. She particularly focused on the subject matter during her time spent at Villa Capricco in Lugano and in the rural countryside of Cumberland and this work is a quintessential example of this type. These paintings mark a distinctive period in Winifred’s career, prior to her divorce and to her time spent in Paris, where the focus of her work became briefly more abstracted.

Dartington and the British Studio Ceramics Movement
Dartington’s association with studio pottery dates back to 1932, when Bernard Leach, the most significant figure in the development of studio pottery, set up a studio there at the instigation of Leonard Elmhirst, who was looking for a potter to become part of the community of artists and creators. Combining his passion for the art of pottery, with an interest in producing well-made and functional useable ware, Leach’s work at Dartington forged the blueprint that has become the credo of generations of potters since. The 1952 Dartington Conference of Potters was an important landmark in the history of British ceramics, providing a forum for the discussion of craft in the modern world. The sale features works by many of the leading 20th Century ceramicists working in Britain, including Leach, Lucie Rie, Hans Coper and Shoji Hamada. Highlights include Bernard Leach’s stoneware tenmoku-glaze Tea Caddy estimated at £700-£900 and Hans Coper’s Early and Large Barrel-Shaped Vase Form, executed in the early to mid-1950s, estimated at £6,000-9,000.

The Dartington Hall Trust
Founded in 1925 by Dorothy and Leonard Elmhirst and based near Totnes in South Devon, The Dartington Hall Trust is a pioneering charity − a place of experiment, enterprise and education where the arts, social justice and sustainability come together on a 1200 acre estate in the heart of Devon. The exemplary collection of pictures, sculptures and ceramics which the Elmhirsts put together provides a powerful visual story of what is undoubtedly one of the most progressive and innovative ventures in the arts and education of the inter-war period. During the 1930s, the experimental spirit of Dartington attracted parents such as Bertrand Russell, Aldous Huxley and Ernst Freud to enrol their children at the school. Ben Nicholson and Barbara Hepworth later sent their triplets to Dartington and Hepworth affirmed that “we owe so much to Dartington Hall”.



Last Week News

November 1, 2011

Masterpieces from the Musée d'Orsay on view at the National Museum of Singapore

A ritual bath (Miqve) dating to the Second Temple Period was discovered near Kibbutz Zor'a

Chinese vase "discovered" in Shropshire is expected to fetch £500,000 at auction in London

Museum's paleontologists discover new dinosaur species above the Arctic in far north Alaska

Tate Britain announces Picasso and Modern British Art exhibition for February 2012

Michael Schwartz: Exhibiting four centuries of top-quality European art from Rembrandt to Picasso

Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago names new Senior Curator: Dieter Roelstraete

Phillips de Pury & Company announces the highlights from its New York Contemporary art sales

Sotheby's to offer Art Deco masterpieces in its 20th century decorative arts & design sale

Fall prints auction at Bonhams a success with top lots from Frankenthaler and Warhol

The Museo del Prado is increasing its activities by opening every day of the week

Sotheby's Geneva to auction a superb suite of imperial jewels in Magnificent Jewels sale

Teenie Harris, Photographer: An American Story at the Carnegie Museum of Art

Lalique, Daum, Galle, Tiffany, headline Rare Art Glass at Heritage Auctions

Great start into autumn auction season in Munich

Yona Friedman: Architecture without building at the Ludwig Museum in Budapest

'Nan Goldin: Scopophilia' exhibition at Matthew Marks

Alternative to Artissima: Art event to be held in a former prison, each gallery to show work in a cell!

National Portrait Gallery presents Private Eye: Photographs by Lewis Morley

An early solution to piracy on the high seas, the Blunderbuss, for sale at Bonhams in London

October 31, 2011

For the first time outside Germany: Sigmar Polke's complete graphic works in Sao Paulo

Sotheby's London to sell Waiting to Cross by Albert Moore in Victorian & Edwardian art sale

N.C. Museum of Art presents largest collection of authentic Rembrandts for U.S. audience

Hammer Galleries in New York presents Modern Masters: Paris and Beyond exhibition

Discover the grandeur and mystery of China at the Denver Art Museum this Fall

The Mad Square: Modernity in German Art 1910-37 at the National Gallery of Victoria

Native American influences on 20th century art at Peter Blum Gallery in Soho

The Heckscher Museum of Art presents exhibition "Ripped: The Allure of Collage"

"Burning, Bright: A Short History of the Light Bulb" on view at The Pace Gallery

Major exhibition of the work of American artist Bill Bollinger at The Fruitmarket Gallery

Muammar Gaddafi's son, Saif al-Islam, used his paintings to promote Libyan culture

Exhibition explores early years of vernacular photography through graceful snapshots of female trios

Lacin and Christophel transform water tank into 360° kinetic art installation for City of Davis

University of Richmond Museums celebrates 10th anniversary of print study center with exhibition

New energy in design and art at Museum Boijmans van Beuningen

Bellevue Arts Museum presents first retrospective of design icon George Nelson

Exhibition at Kunsthaus Bregenz rediscovers internationally renowned artist Valie Export

The Art of Invention Explored at the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria

Installations by Jennifer Steinkamp and "Spinal Tap" member Harry Shearer at Honolulu Academy of Arts

New York City museum limits visitors in bathtub-like artwork

October 30, 2011

Works by Lichtenstein, Degas, Rothko, and Still lead Christie's and Sotheby's art auctions

"Landscapes from the Age of Impressionism" exhibition at the Akron Art Museum

Branches of the Louvre and Guggenheim at Abu Dhabi island hit by more delays

"Building the Revolution: Soviet Art and Architecture 1915-1935" at the Royal Academy of Arts

New exhibition features priceless private art collection never before displayed publicly

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International Center of Photography to present Sudden Impact: Photography on the Printed Page

Former Beatle Paul McCartney to help restore 1877 Steinway Motown grand piano

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A selection from The Mezzanin Stiftung für Kunst Collection on view at Kunstmuseum Liechtenstein

Rare early sculpture and important new paintings by Rebecca Horn at Sean Kelly Gallery

Powerhouse Museum presents Korean treasures and the spirit of jang-in

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United States prosecutors settle with ex-Apollo astronaut

Museum of Glass names Susan Warner as Deputy Director/Curator

Doyle New York announces art auction to benefit LaGuardia High School, inspired hit movie Fame

"A Song for the Horse Nation" gallops into Washington

October 29, 2011

Exhibit by Chinese artist Ai Weiwei at the Taipei Fine Arts Museum focuses on his absence

Museum collections at serious risk, a new survey by ICCROM and UNESCO shows

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The main autumn event on Russian antique market opens at the Central House of Artists

The Pace Gallery presents Hiroshi Sugimoto's "Surface of the Third Order"

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Stunning Ferrari 250 GT LWB 'Tour de France' Berlinetta top RM's 13.3 million London auction

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Art Toronto 2011: Canada's only Modern and Contemporary international art fair

Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery hosts The Black List: Portraits by Timothy Greenfield-Sanders

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5th anniversary edition of the Shift Festival of Electronic Arts opens in Basel

Locus Solus: Impressions of Raymond Roussel at the Museo Reina Sofia

William McKeown, who had a highly refined use of colour, died in Edinburgh

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New CEO joining VIP Art Fair from $500M e-commerce company

Kevorkian suicide machine withdrawn from New York City sale

October 28, 2011

National Gallery of Victoria welcomes Her Majesty The Queen for 150th anniversary

Exhibition of masterpieces from the Dutch Golden Age at Pinacothèque de Paris

J. Paul Getty Museum announces acquisition of rare Francesco Primaticcio bronze

Fernando Botero's Via Crucis: The Passion of the Christ at Marlborough in New York

Blain/Di Donna's inaugural exhibition presents survey of paintings by Magritte

Sotheby's in London announces sale of Victorian & Edwardian art in November

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International exhibition of early modern Scandinavian painting opens at Scandinavia House

An eleventh key witness for the theory of evolution by Charles Darwin becomes German Cultural Heritage

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Bonhams inaugural Period Art & Design auction in Los Angeles announced

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Historic 1894 Roper steam-powered motorcycle expected to set new world record at Auctions America

Wayne Gonzales' first solo museum show in the United States opens in New Orleans

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Klara Kristalova's first solo exhibition in New York opens at Lehmann Maupin Gallery

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October 27, 2011

Rijksmuseum installs innovative LED lights that bring out the best of "Night Watch"

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National Portrait Gallery in Washington presents "Seeing Gertrude Stein: Five Stories"

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"Department of Civil Obedience" by Dan Tague for Prospect.2

Precious volumes from a connoisseur's library to be offered at Sotheby's in Paris

Nationalmuseum acquires an armchair, table, and candelabra from the Paris exhibition of 1925

Halloween comes to Bonhams in one-off Wunderkammer sale featuring a spooky ivory skull

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2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

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8.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors

10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD



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