Return to WHYTES.IE
19 of 131 lots
19
Paul Henry RHA (1876-1958)
Estimate:
€200,000 - €300,000
Sold
€280,000
Live Auction
Important Irish Art
Size
25 by 30in. (63.5 by 76.2cm)
Description
Title: A VILLAGE IN THE WEST, 1916-17
Note: A cluster of long, low, thatched cottages teeters precariously on the brim of a bright hill, sandwichedbetween a huge wall of mountain and sky and earth. They are seen from a distance allowing the viewer a glimpse of a cottage disappearing over the brow of the hill. A band of warm colour stretches across the canvas and leaps out from the cold mountain and sky in instant communication. The yellow ochre patchwork of small fields and haystacks and thatches creates a rich Klimt-like decoration against thePrussian blue background of the mountain. There are no trees, just touches of green vegetation on the fields with grey walls and the scene is lit from the right.Clouds rise up and over an immense pale blue sky with striated lines in the top left. Grey clouds muster in the top right corner, gathering the evaporated water from the unseen lake or sea on the other side of the hill. The curve of the spiralling clouds continues through the rounded hills of the foreground winding up in the golden section of the haystacks at the still centre of a permanently moving cosmos.The oil paint is applied in directional strokes throughout. A little blue mixed with white is laid on thinly for the sky, Prussian blue for the mountain and burnt umber for the band of earth in the foreground. White is mixed with blue for a small area of the sky and for the right hand side of the mountain. Warm yellows and ochres are applied thickly over the umber in parallel squares and rectangles in the middle band leaving curved stripes of umber as dividing walls. A little yellow ochre is mixed with umber and applied over the umber foreground. The cottages are painted with umber and overlaid with white for the walls and chimneys facing the light. A little blue and yellow is added to the white for the shaded gables. Yellow ochre is applied to the roofs and used to create the haystacks. The umber is left as edges, doorways, windows, and turf stacks. A little blue added to the yellow is scattered over the fields as patches of green vegetation and grey is painted over the walls in-between. The clouds are built up in layers of blue, thengrey and pink and finally pure white. Fine dark and light edges are drawn in delicately to separate theclouds in places.A Village in the West was painted in the initial period of the artist’s stay in the west of Ireland in 1910 and was probably exhibited and sold in Dublin in 1917. [1] The painting is a nod to the sublime picturesque that lured tourists to the western region of Ireland from the early nineteenth century when its remoteness was already easily accessed by rail. Henry at first involuntarily adopted the gaze of the tourist In Achill. “Everywhere I went I saw strange new beauty.” [2]Such a painting provided a vision of space, quietude and beauty in contrast to the political turbulence of Dublin City and the horrors of the first world war. The classicism of Henry’s modernism was co-opted for the war effort and order in Ireland. His reminder of all that was beautiful could be seen also as symbolic as well as realistic. Henry captured a landscape that was as much an evocation of an historical time as a place where the bright ray of life prevented the sky from falling.Dr Mary Cosgrove,April 2024[1] Kennedy, S.B., “Paul Henry Catalogue Raisonné” 2007 p.189[2] Henry, P. “An Irish Portrait” 1951, p.5
Frame dimensions: 30.5 by 35.5in. (77.5 by 90.2cm)
Condition
This work appears to be in very good condition. There is some linear and radial craquellure throughout, predominantly in the upper two thirds of the work. The work has been relined. Examination under UV light revealed minor regions of overpainting or cleaning along the upper and left edges. The painted surface appears clean and stable.
Medium
oil on canvas
Signature
signed lower left
Provenance
Hugh Martin, and by descent to family member;Christie's, London, The Irish Sale, 8 May 2008, lot 78;Oriel Gallery, Dublin, 2008;Private collection
Literature
Kennedy, Dr S.B., Paul Henry: Paintings, Drawings and Illustrations, Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 2007, p.189, catalogue no. 441
Exhibited
'Pictures of the West of Ireland by Mr and Mrs Paul Henry', Mills' Hall, Dublin, April 1917, catalogue no. 36;'Paintings and Charcoals: Paul Henry', Waddington Galleries, Dublin, February to March 1952, catalogue no. 14;'Oriel Gallery,' Irish Antique Dealer Association Art Fair, Dublin, September, 2008