36
Seán Keating PPRHA HRA HRSA (1889-1977)
Estimate:
€30,000 - €50,000
Sold
€48,000
Live Auction
Irish & International Art
Size
28.25 by 36in. (71.8 by 91.4cm)
Description
Title: GOOD OLD STUFF, c.1928
Note: Known for his overtly nationalist paintings made between 1915 and 1924, the series of images of citizen heroes that Seán Keating made after that date indicate a lot about his unceasing confidence in the Irish people, even if he was relentlessly disappointed with the governing classes. Keating's choice to use the common people as models in non-commissioned work from the 1920s onwards was an expression of his democratic spirit, and in doing so, he was determinedly placing himself on the progressive side of the political divide in Europe at that time. Good Old Stuff is one of a group of paintings made in the late 1920s in which the artist was investigating both the process, and the inherited wisdom of old age, but through the lens of allegory. Other paintings in the sequence include Past Definite, Future Perfect (1928), Old Kitty (1928), The Turf Gatherer (1928) and two versions of Don Quixote (1927 and 1932). The old man in Good Old Stuff is shown seated at a table on which there is a tea cup, a tea pot and a bottle of some sort of alcohol - whiskey perhaps. However, given the artist's predisposition to the use of symbolism, there is far more to this image than simple witticism. The old man is shown seated in a secluded space. Stories from years long past are inscribed into the creases of his face, and the veins in his hands. He is not actually looking at the containers on the table; he is in reflective mood and lost in his own world. Yet, his far-off gaze is reassuring, calming, and gentle. The old man is good old stuff itself, and he has much to offer anyone who cares to listen, or to see. Thus, Good Old Stuff was also a tribute to the wisdom and experience of old age, which, as far as Keating was concerned, was equally as important to New Ireland as the exuberance and inexperience of youth. The model for Keating's Good Old Stuff remains unidentified, but he appeared in several paintings made by the artist in the late 1920s, including The Models' Interval (1927) and the first version of Don Quixote (1927). In 1927, when Keating was working on Don Quixote, he took several photographs of the old man seated at a table. The artist appears to have been very happy with that composition, and when he began Good Old Stuff the following year, he used those photographs to recreate the exact same pose, but placed his model holding a teacup instead of the infamous helmet that is central to the story of Don Quixote. Dr Éimear O'Connor HRHA Resident Director, The Tyrone Guthrie Centre
Frame dimensions: 35.5 by 43in. (90.2 by 109.2cm)
Note: Known for his overtly nationalist paintings made between 1915 and 1924, the series of images of citizen heroes that Seán Keating made after that date indicate a lot about his unceasing confidence in the Irish people, even if he was relentlessly disappointed with the governing classes. Keating's choice to use the common people as models in non-commissioned work from the 1920s onwards was an expression of his democratic spirit, and in doing so, he was determinedly placing himself on the progressive side of the political divide in Europe at that time. Good Old Stuff is one of a group of paintings made in the late 1920s in which the artist was investigating both the process, and the inherited wisdom of old age, but through the lens of allegory. Other paintings in the sequence include Past Definite, Future Perfect (1928), Old Kitty (1928), The Turf Gatherer (1928) and two versions of Don Quixote (1927 and 1932). The old man in Good Old Stuff is shown seated at a table on which there is a tea cup, a tea pot and a bottle of some sort of alcohol - whiskey perhaps. However, given the artist's predisposition to the use of symbolism, there is far more to this image than simple witticism. The old man is shown seated in a secluded space. Stories from years long past are inscribed into the creases of his face, and the veins in his hands. He is not actually looking at the containers on the table; he is in reflective mood and lost in his own world. Yet, his far-off gaze is reassuring, calming, and gentle. The old man is good old stuff itself, and he has much to offer anyone who cares to listen, or to see. Thus, Good Old Stuff was also a tribute to the wisdom and experience of old age, which, as far as Keating was concerned, was equally as important to New Ireland as the exuberance and inexperience of youth. The model for Keating's Good Old Stuff remains unidentified, but he appeared in several paintings made by the artist in the late 1920s, including The Models' Interval (1927) and the first version of Don Quixote (1927). In 1927, when Keating was working on Don Quixote, he took several photographs of the old man seated at a table. The artist appears to have been very happy with that composition, and when he began Good Old Stuff the following year, he used those photographs to recreate the exact same pose, but placed his model holding a teacup instead of the infamous helmet that is central to the story of Don Quixote. Dr Éimear O'Connor HRHA Resident Director, The Tyrone Guthrie Centre
Frame dimensions: 35.5 by 43in. (90.2 by 109.2cm)
Condition
Slight cracking visible lower left. Area appears stable. Otherwise very good condition.
Medium
oil on board
Signature
signed lower right
Provenance
Adam's, 4 December 2013, lot 86;Private collection
Literature
'Ireland Painters, 1600-1940', Anne Crookshank and The Knight of Glin, fig. 385 on p. 281; 'Seán Keating; In Focus', Dr. Éimear O'Connor, 2009, illustrated p. 21 and again p. 53;'Seán Keating: Art, Politics and Building the Irish Nation', Dr. Éimear O'Connor, Kildare, 2012, p. 91, illustrated p. 92
Exhibited
'Annual Exhibition', Royal Academy, London,1928, catalogue no. 217;Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool, 1928;'Annual Exhibition', RHA, Dublin, 1929, catalogue no. 14;Helen Hackett Gallery, New York, 1929; Museum of Irish Art, New York, 1931/2; 'Seán Keating Exhibition', Victor Waddington Galleries, Dublin, 1947; 'Seán Keating Retrospective Exhibition', Municipal Gallery, Dublin, 1963, catalogue no. 24; 'Seán Keating: In Focus', Hunt Museum, Limerick, June to September 2009