I love browsing through the auction sites to see what is out there and get a feel for the prices. It’s kind of like dream shopping for luxury homes or cars. I probably won’t ever own a Leighton or Waterhouse (maybe, just maybe…) but it’s fun to think about. Also, the auction houses take great color adjusted and increasingly higher resolution images of the paintings coming up for sale. Christies used to have rather small images. They upped to 2000 px few years ago and I was happy to discover that they now post 3200 px wide or tall images! That’s a great high res image to do some drooling over.
Here are some auction highlights that I have found recently.
Joseph Henri François van Lerius (Belgian, 1823-1876)
Jeanne d’Arc au siège de Paris
What can I say about this painting! Holy cow, it’s amazing! I love the palette, the drama, the expressions!! There is a richness and warmth in these colors that resonates with me. Don’t be surprised if you see something from me in the near future that
CESARE LAPINI (Italian, 1848-1893)
Psiche
Seeing beautifully carved marble always makes me want to throw my paints away and start sculpting. Look at all the different textures created in the piece below.
Odoardo Fantacchiotti (Italian, 1811-1877)
Pandora
Another beautiful work. I love the profile in particular.
Luis Álvarez Catalá (Spanish, 1836-1901)
The Artist’s Model
Vicente Palmaroli y Gonzáles (Spanish, 1834-1896)
An Interesting Chapter
Vicente Palmaroli y Gonzáles (Spanish, 1834-1896)
Rêverie
Victor Gabriel Gilbert (French, 1847-1933)
At the Flower Market
A beautiful and complex little street scene. Looking at the painting and seeing the layers of urban sprawl going off into the horizon, contrasted with the beautiful flowers in the humble little stall makes me grateful to live somewhere with plenty of natural beauty. It must have been a wonderful oasis in the city to come across a flower market, especially as the industrial revolution was getting ramped up.
Peder Mørk Mønsted (Danish, 1859-1941)
Going to Market
I can always spend time looking at Mønsted. Such an incredible landscape painter! He might be better known for his snow scenes, but he was a master of all seasons.
PASQUALE ROMANELLI (Italian, 1812-1887)
Sulamitide
François-Auguste Biard
Le baptême sous la ligne, Painted circa 1834
This painting is so strange. Take some time to look at all the different characters in this painting!
JUANA ROMANI
Italian
1869 – 1924
PORTRAIT OF A WOMAN WITH RED HAIR
GEORGES PICARD
French
1857 – 1946z
FÉES DANSE
HUGUES MERLE
French
1823 – 1881
QUEEN ESTHER
WILLIAM BOUGUEREAU
French
1825 – 1905
LA GRAPPE DE RAISIN (PREMIÈRE RÉDUCTION)
HUGUES MERLE
French
1823 – 1881
LAVEUSE D’ÉTRETAT
CHARLES SPRAGUE PEARCE
American
1851 – 1914
SAINTE GENEVIÈVE
GUILLAUME SEIGNAC
French
1870 – 1924
LA VAGUE
JEAN-JOSEPH BENJAMIN-CONSTANT
French
1845-1902
AT REST
I saved this little gem for the very last. It’s a gorgeous little painting that I would love to own! Not within the budget… or even close to it! Ha! That’s alright. like I said at the start of this post it can be fun to dream and imagine the painting on your own wall. I love the light in this painting and the big simple shapes that drive this composition.
Thanks for giving this post a read and I hope that you enjoyed the images!
Howard
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Which Leighton, though? I can never decide which one I like more 😛
Howard . . . do a copy of that little painting. You’ll get a free art lesson, and a painting you like.
I love it when you do these sort of posts. They always send me down a deep deep rabbit hole to research some artist I’ve never heard of before. Thank you for sharing!
It’s always great to have a look at classical fine art images. Thank you, Howard, for carrying the lit torch.
Howard, The François-Auguste Biard painting shows the ceremony sailors put on when crossing the equator of “Neptune’s” realm. First timers are initiated by being blindfolded, walked off the “plank” to land in a sail full of water on deck, shaved with a rusty wire and tar, etc. It’s a day for the crew to act wild and crazy and escape some of the normal shipboard discipline.