Homes Antiques

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
T

here’s a well-known
story’ says Michael
Lake head of
European sculpture
and works of art at
Bonhams ‘about an occasion during the
early 1960s when Andrew Lloyd Webber
walked past a dealer’s in London with his
grandmother and saw the painting Flaming
June by Frederic Lord Leighton in the
window. He asked her to lend him the £50
he needed to buy it but she refused saying
something along the lines of: “Who would
want that Victorian rubbish in their home?”’
How times change. After almost a
century in the doldrums in the 21st century
work by the English artist (1830–1896)
is firmly back in favour. One of his major
paintings can fetch well over £1m at auction
these days (see page 135) and other works
by the artist that once sold for a song are
commanding enormous sums. On 5th April
this year a bronze cast of his sculpture
An Athlete Wrestling with a Python – one
of only three sculptures he made – sold at
Bonhams for a hammer price of £85000
(estimate £50000 to £80000). It was
bought for an important private collection
in Baltimore Maryland. The piece had been
in the vendor’s family since 1934 when
it was purchased in an estate sale for 57
shillings and 17 pence (somewhere between
£200 and £400 in today’s money).
‘It had come up for sale in 1934 at
Hartford Hall Cheshire and whoever
bought it must have fallen in love with it’
says Lake. At this time Leighton’s name
would still have been known but his day
had passed by then and he had completely
fallen from favour Lake explains. When the
sculpture came to Bonhams the vendor was

OUR EXPERTS


Daniel Robbins
Senior curator at Leighton House
Museum Lord Leighton’s former
residence and studio on Holland
Park Road London

Michael Lake
Head of European sculpture
and works of art
pre-1900 at Bonhams
international auction house

aware it was a compelling piece and there
was plenty of interest in it from the UK
Europe and America. ‘Today Leighton is an
internationally collected artist’ continues
Lake. ‘His major works as a painter are
in public galleries and major collections.
No one is going to get to buy an original
sculpture by him and of the reproductions
made Athlete is by far the rarest which is
why it did so well. It’s the only one I’ve sold
in 20 years.’

A later life interest
Leighton was 47 when he first turned his
hand to sculpture. The year was 1877 and
he was already an established and successful
painter who in 1855 had been lucky
enough to sell his first major painting to
Queen Victoria for the Royal Collection.
He became an associate of the Royal
Academy in 1864 (going on to become its
president in 1878 the year he also received a
knighthood). According to Daniel Robbins
senior curator at Leighton House Museum
Leighton was however familiar with the
modelling process as he liked to make small
maquettes of the figures in his paintings as
part of his creative process.
‘He would make models and arrange
them in groups when deciding on a final
composition for a painting’ says Robbins.
‘They were made just for that purpose in

LEFT Leighton’s
sculpture was
inspired by the
Greek Laocoön
Group which
shows Laocoön a
priest of Apollo
and his two sons
being attacked by
sea serpents sent
by Athena and
Poseidon. It is
displayed in the
Octagonal Court
of the Vatican
Museum and is
believed to date
from 40–30BC
BELOW At
just 50cm tall
Needless Alarms
(1886) depicts
a girl surprised
by a toad. It
was Leighton’s
third and nal
sculpture

‘


132 H&A SUMMER 2017

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