27th May, 2021 9:30

Fine Art, Antiques & Asian Art

 
Lot 43
 

Harold Riley (b.1934) British, 'View of Manchester', a large oil on panel, signed and dated '71, 72 cm x 96 cm in a gilt frame, with a hand-written letter of provenance from the artist.

Provenance: Private collection. The accompanying letter, on Leigh Gallery (Sale, Cheshire) headed paper, written and signed by the artist to the owners, gives a 'current value' of £650 for the work (dated January 1972).

'Our grandmother died in the late sixties and left my brother and I a little money. We were teenagers and our parents encouraged us to invest it in some art as a permanent reminder of her. At the time, in Manchester, our mother had seen and liked some work by Harold Riley. She contacted him and we went to see him in his studio in Salford. The works were primarily of industrial scenes of the North West and my parents bought two landscapes which stayed with my mother until her recent death. My brother bought two charcoal pictures of Salford which are still in his possession and was given a small sketch as a gift.

I was less keen on the bleakness of the works.

Harold suggested I sit for him and if I liked the result, I could buy it and if I didn’t it was also ok. I was 15 and loved the idea. In the end he did 3 pictures. One hangs in my dining room and my mother bought the other two.

Now, with 2 staying in the family, it is enough hence the sale of the third.'

Sold for £6,800


Condition Report

No apparent faults to the panel / paint. Some light wear to the frame.

 

Harold Riley (b.1934) British, 'View of Manchester', a large oil on panel, signed and dated '71, 72 cm x 96 cm in a gilt frame, with a hand-written letter of provenance from the artist.

Provenance

Provenance: Private collection. The accompanying letter, on Leigh Gallery (Sale, Cheshire) headed paper, written and signed by the artist to the owners, gives a 'current value' of £650 for the work (dated January 1972).

'Our grandmother died in the late sixties and left my brother and I a little money. We were teenagers and our parents encouraged us to invest it in some art as a permanent reminder of her. At the time, in Manchester, our mother had seen and liked some work by Harold Riley. She contacted him and we went to see him in his studio in Salford. The works were primarily of industrial scenes of the North West and my parents bought two landscapes which stayed with my mother until her recent death. My brother bought two charcoal pictures of Salford which are still in his possession and was given a small sketch as a gift.

I was less keen on the bleakness of the works.

Harold suggested I sit for him and if I liked the result, I could buy it and if I didn’t it was also ok. I was 15 and loved the idea. In the end he did 3 pictures. One hangs in my dining room and my mother bought the other two.

Now, with 2 staying in the family, it is enough hence the sale of the third.'

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