Sunday, 3 September 2023

Results of the sale at Banbury (and what you did not see there)

                                                                         




I would like to say that any one of the colour prints you see here came up for sale at Banbury rather than the ones that did, but all of them are as rare as anything is going to be and would attract any serious collector. But I have brought them up from my records and thought it was a good idea to let readers see some of the work that does not come up for sale at all often. This is not to disparage the prints that were sold. I would have bought any of them but I needed to a bookcase and fridge instead.



I have been warned to let you know that online buyers needed to pay 40% more than the hammer price. The buyers premium of 31.2% includes VAT and on top of that online sales are subject to a further fee of  8.2%, also including VAT. The effect was to depress prices and meant that once the vendor had paid their own fee, they would not be getting very much. Overall it probably means you would be better off selling on ebay if you did not have to pack up all the stuff you have sold.



I was surprised Allen Seaby's woodcut Pewits was the most expensive at £500 (and altogether you would almost pay £700 which is not all that cheap for a piece of work that I personally think falls flat). The barn owl print was much better value at £240 and more attractive than a fridge. It would end up costing you about £330 and as I could have got to Banbury on the train I could have picked it up.



The Phillips went cheap at £420 although the auctioneers did themselves and their vendors no favours by putting up poor photographs. Considering the photos have to be paid for by the vendor, it makes the whole situation even worse. It's all a bit of a stunt but there you are, and going by what you can pay for a Phillips from a dealer, someone will be pleased.



As predicted, John Hall Thorpe's prices are going nowhere and are well below what they were in their heyday ten years ago. We all knew he was overpriced then and scoffed but I would have gladly paid £130 for this pair of prints. The fuss over Hall Thorpe tended to obscure the fact that his work is well-made indeed. He had been a professional block-cutter in Australian before he came to Britain and had a good eye for colour. What he did not do was print the work himself, something the labels make clear. This never seemed to put buyers off in the past and for that type of decorative work it hardly matters.




The Urushibara was another reasonable buy at £250. Read's Venetian shawl was even better at £270 given the poor condition of so many of the proofs I have seen and the place the woodcut has in British colour woodcut history. Read was the only British colour woodcut artists to pull portraiture off. Not only that, he singlehandedly reinvented the medium for a post-war audience who no longer wanted the earnest work of the pre-war arts and crafts movement.



I have no doubt you will also want to know what the prints are that did not come up for sale at Banbury (and which will probably not come up for sale anywhere soon). First of all comes S. G. Boxsius' diminutive masterpiece Bowsprits. Despite the poor quality of the reproduction, the work stands out as Boxsius at his most Boxsius, with all that that means. Far more rare is Phyllis Platt's stylish portrait of her daughter, Una, lying reading on a sofa. This has never appeared online until today and very few people  have ever seen it. I found the illustration in a catalogue that was sent to me. I probably don't need to say she was the wife of John Platt but typically we know very little about her. The third print is Seaby's Karnack from 1925, followed by a more interesting early colour woodcut of a St Ives shop window by the Scottish artist, Frances Blair. Below that is Edward Ashendens's Old Icelander. He is best known as a designer of dioramas but here is making a creditable colour woodcut. Continuing the theme of ships and the sea, there is Hugo Henneberg's important colour linocut Dalmatia and then Kenneth Broad with all his originality and sense of style to the fore in a subtle and sensitive colour woodcut he simply called Hastings.




2 comments:

  1. Here are some price comparisons for some of the artists and prints sold at Banbury;
    I don`t agree that the print by Walter Phillips was cheap at £420 .The outlier is Jim King`s Wharf which made £3400 at Dominic Winter on 8 March 2023. The norm is represented by
    Totems Alert bay BC - £320 at Ramsay Cornish, Edinburgh on 7 December 2019 ; Summer Night Canada - £460 ,and Lake McArthur - £550 both at McTears ,Glasgow on 19 July 2023.
    The Rigden Read of The Venetian Shawl seems cheap at £270 when compared with the £450 it took at Catherine Southon on 2 February 2022.
    I have no direct comparison for the 1920s version of Lapwings by Seaby which made £500, however an example of his earlier print of the same subject, thought to be from 1905, took an identical sum at Dominic Winter on 8 March 2023 .The lot at Winters also included three other makeweight prints.
    The Hall Thorpes of floral subjects have indeed declined in value , but for interested readers , there are a further three to be sold at Great Western Auctions Glasgow on 16 September.
    It should be noted that all the prices quoted above are hammer prices to which Premium required to be added.

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  2. As people know I'm not a fan of Phillips so I don't know much about current prices though I suspect one would pay far more at a gallery but many thanks for that list of recent prices. As I always say it is condition that counts with works on paper.

    Modern Printmakers will be following up your tip for the Glasgow auction. I am also waiting to see whether the wind of change will affect the price of Eric Slater prints. I expect it will. The people who used to buy art deco are now in their seventies and spending the winter in Spain.

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