26th Aug, 2020 14:00

The British & International Pictures Auction

 
Lot 35
 

BURMESE DANCING GIRLS, AN OIL BY EDWARD ATKINSON HORNEL

EDWARD ATKINSON HORNEL (SCOTTISH 1864 - 1933),
BURMESE DANCING GIRLS
oil on canvas laid down on panel
56cm x 23cm
Framed and under glass.
Provenance: Sotheby's, Scottish Silver and Jewels, Scottish and Sporting Paintings, Drawings and Watercolours. Gleneagles, Monday 25th August and 26th August, 1986 Lot 882. Deceased estate.
Note: Hornel was born in Bacchus Marsh, Victoria Australia, on 17 July 1864 of Scottish parents, and he was brought up and lived practically all his life in Scotland after his family moved back to Kirkcudbright in 1866. He studied for three years at the art school at Edinburgh, and for two years at Antwerp under Professor Verlat. Returning from Antwerp in 1885, he met George Henry and associated himself with the Glasgow Boys. Hornel and Henry collaborated upon The Druids Bringing in the Mistletoe (1890), a procession of druidic priests bringing in the sacred mistletoe, gorgeous with polychrome and gold. The two worked side by side to achieve decorative splendour of colour, Hornel boldly and freely employing texture effects produced by loading and scraping, roughening, smoothing, and staining. In 1893–94 the two artists spent a year and a half in Japan, where Hornel learned much about decorative design and spacing. Towards the close of the nineties his colours, while preserving their glow and richness, became more refined and more Verlat atmospheric, and his drawing more naturalistic, combining sensuous appeal with emotional and poetic significance. In 1901 he declined election to the Royal Scottish Academy. A member of Glasgow Art Club, Hornel exhibited in the club's annual exhibitions.In 1901 he acquired Broughton House, a townhouse and garden in Kirkcudbright, which was his main residence for the rest of his life with his sister Elizabeth. There he made several modifications to the house and designed garden taking inspiration from his travels in Japan. he also made an addition of a gallery for his paintings. On his death the house and library were donated for the benefit of the citizens of Kirkcudbright and Broughton House is now administered by the National Trust for Scotland.183 examples of Hornel's work are held in UK public collections and an unknown number in major museums around the world, including in the USA and Canada.

 

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Sold for £3,600
Estimated at £4,000 - £6,000


 
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