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Everything comes up roses for Mrs Mac



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Published Date: 01 May 2008
A PAINTED panel by the wife of the architect and designer Charles Rennie Mackintosh yesterday set a world auction record for a Scottish work of art.
The White Rose and the Red Rose, painted in 1902 by Margaret Macdonald Mackintosh, sold for £1,700,500 in London yesterday. Bought by a private US collector, what was called a consummate example of the Glasgow avant-garde smashed the expected price of between £200,000 and £300,000.

A companion panel, The Heart of the Rose, sold for a more modest £490,900, though that was double its estimate. Mackintosh, who lived from 1865 to 1933, was an artist whose design work was called one of the defining features of the "Glasgow Style".

The Scotsman's art critic, Duncan MacMillan, said: "It would be a very fine thing on your wall. It's a beautiful thing by a rare artist of high reputation."

Her artwork appears to have doubled the previous auction record for a Scottish artist, set by the former coalminer Jack Vettriano when his painting The Singing Butler sold at a Sotheby's auction in 2004 for £744,800.

Featured in a Christie's auction of 20th-century decorative art and design, there was little hint that the Mackintosh panels would break records, but they have a rich history. The panels were shown at the International Exhibition of Modern Decorative Art in Turin, Italy, in 1902, picked by Francis Newbury, head of the Glasgow School of Art.

They featured in the exhibition's "Rose Boudoir", in a collaboration of Mackintosh and his wife. It was seen as the height of the couple's work together.

They both trained under Mr Newbury, who also commissioned Mackintosh to design the GSA, one of his most famous buildings. After Turin, the panels were bought by Fritz Wärndorfer, the famous patron of the Viennese avant-garde and an admirer of the Mackintoshes.

Philippe Garner, a Christie's specialist, said: "We are thrilled to have set a world auction record. There was fiercely competitive international bidding throughout the sale in the room, on the telephone and online." The Christie's sale of art nouveau, art deco and early modernist work totalled £3,666,650.

THE FINE ART OF BREAKING RECORDS

WHEN Jack Vettriano's The Singing Butler, left, was sold for £744,800 in 2004 it was described by Sotheby's as "the record for any Scottish painting".

Sotheby's old rival, Christie's, appears to have smashed that record yesterday with the sale of The White Rose and the Red Rose for £1,700,500, claiming "a new world auction record for any Scottish work of art". The Scottish colourist SJ Peploe was the closest contender behind Vettriano in the price wars, with top works commanding about £500,000. In 2007 a painting by Scottish-born Peter Doig sold for £5.7 million, a record for a living artist, but Doig left Edinburgh as a baby for the Caribbean and North America.


The full article contains 494 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 30 April 2008 9:46 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

senza nome,

01/05/2008 00:35:16
I wish journalists would stop referring to Jack Vettriano as an ex-coal miner.He was a mining engineer,which is a white collar job.
2

Robin Banks,

01/05/2008 01:22:56
#1

Snob!

Working class made good is a good seller for p1ss-poor newspapers.

Then you can slag them for being rich b4st4rds for never helping the people from their origins.

That's how tabloid journalism works.
3

Sile,

Land of Ditch and Bitchiness 01/05/2008 08:08:43
Why not revel in the wonder that these people have given you as a nation,It matters not what Vettriano did, its what he is now that counts, there is and has been REAL talent in your country be proud of it, I have visited Glasgow on a few occasions to enjoy what your city has got in the way of art, what a shame the only comments deal on the pettiness of tabloids..
Yes there is snobbery in art as there is in all walks of life but that is life, rise above it.. I am just sorry her work will now go to America to be enjoyed..
4

Red Tower,

Dunoon 01/05/2008 08:13:26
One of the tragedies of Scottish art has been the fact that the genius, Charles Rennie MacIntosh , has overshadowed the lady artists who were his contemporaries. Perhaps this record price for the work of one of them will will spark off a reappraisal of their significance.
5

Campo,

01/05/2008 09:57:41
#4 You might be right, but it is possible that even Charles Rennie MacIntosh would have disagreed with you. He's quoted as saying: "I have talent, but Margaret has genius."
6

r chee bold,

01/05/2008 10:03:20
Time to get the painting by numbers oot.
7

Paul S.,

Mauricetown, NJ, USA 01/05/2008 15:16:56
I looked up the full piece on Google Images. It is a stunning work. It is, indeed, a shame that it will now be owned by someone over here in America, but do we know the actual arrangement for custody? Perhaps some agreement has been or can be made to have it periodically or even permanantly exhibited in its home in Glasgow.

In the music world there are those who own great instuments by Stradivarius, Guarneri, et al., yet who arrange for great musicians to have custody of them. It sounds like a humane plan satisfying the collector's need to own something great and the public's need to have great art available, especially on its native soil.

Let us hope that it was purchased by someone who appreciates it beyond its mere monetary value and will be willing to share it with a wide public.
8

Proud to have Scots blood,

Brooklyn New York 01/05/2008 23:06:54
I really love Jack Vettriano's work and I really love

the MacIntosh's works. What talented people they are.

9

voltaire's janny,

02/05/2008 09:08:11
#1

What a peculiar and bitter life you must lead. Is a mining engineeer not a coal miner then? Only mindless proletariat who are covered in sh!t qualify? With this Pythonesque view of an artisan's worth you reveal much about yourself. All those capitalist lackeys who invented the conveyor, the detection of fire damp, the hydraulic pit-prop, effective drainage, health and safety processes; they weren't REAL miners....

And now those robber Barons' heirs are buying up all wur paintings. Flying pickets tae Turnhoose!
10

Rothiemurchus 55,

USA 06/05/2008 06:33:55
My congradulations to the MacIntosh's success..and may it continue/Scotland Forever-Clan Shaw

 

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