DUBLIN.- There was high drama at Whytes art auction on Monday evening (26 May) when a battle between two telephone bidders started at 50,000 and ended with a private collector with the winning bid of 210,000 for Mainie Jelletts Achill Horses, 1933. This is a new world record for the artist; the previous record of 110,000 was for The Land Éire 1940 at Whytes on 25 November 2019. The latter can be seen at the National Gallery of Irelands current exhibition, Mainie Jellett Evie Hone. The Art of Friendship.
It is the second highest price for a painting by an Irishwoman, the highest being 240,000 for a Sarah Purser portrait of Constance and Eva Gore Booth, in the Lissadell House auction in 2003.
Whytes auction demonstrated the continuing confidence in the market for Irish works of rarity and quality. Paul Henrys West of Ireland Bog sold for 125,000, while Anglesea Market, Dublin, 1933 by Harry Kernoff was hammered for its top estimate of 40,000.
William John Leechs Gardeners Joy nearly doubled its lower estimate of 15,000 to sell at 28,000, and a Louis le Brocquy watercolour Image of Francis Bacon, 1980, made double its lower estimate of 12,000.
Other remarkable results included: Evie Hone watercolour Abstract Composition estimated 2,000 to 3,000 which made 5,400, Charles Vincent Lamb oil West of Ireland Landscape, estimate 1,500 to 2,000 which sold for 3,600, Bridget Riley Magenta And Blue, 2002 lithograph, estimate 8,000 to 12,000 took 14,500.
About 40% of the lots sold for higher than the lower estimates. Overall 80% of the works offered sold for a total of 1.1 million.