Sir Winston Churchill is most famous for his role as the prime minister of United Kingdom during World War 2. But he also dabbled in painting. One of his landscape works, painted in 1946, is up for auction at Sotheby's. Link:
Sir Winston Churchill, HON. R.A. - Inland View from Choisy, Switzerland
Sotheby's gave it an estimated value of 300,000 - 500,000 GBP. This market resolves YES if the final sale price listed on the Sotheby's website is >500,000 GBP.
Resolution details:
Example from a past auction: This painting by Vigée Le Brun sold for 3,085,000 USD. This is the number I will use. This is the equivalent number I will use.
Note that this final listed sale price typically includes the buyer's premium.
If the lot is withdrawn before the auction, or it fails to sell for any reason (e.g. no bid meets the minimum reserve price), this market resolves NO. It only resolves YES with a listed sale price from this auction of >500,000 GBP.
Painting details
Despite his political life and significant literary commitments, Churchill was an inveterate traveler and would take his paints, brushes and easels wherever he went, from trips abroad, to visits with friends around Britain. For Churchill, painting required a set of precise yet intuitive skills that exercised a totally different part of his mind from that used for the cut and thrust of national politics. It was the challenge and difficulty of capturing satisfactorily the scene before him that proved such a tonic to his mind.
Painted in 1946, the present work depicts the view of the rolling hills from the Villa Choisi on the banks of Lac Léman. Arranged by a group of private Siss individuals, that August Churchill spent a holiday in the villa, which was owned by the banker M. Alfred Kern. Churchill spent the holiday in his ideal manner, producing a series of paintings including a still life which he later gifted to Madame Kern, a landscape which is now in the Studio at Chartwell, as well as the present work.
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love how he does the figures—super interesting dashes of color, so small but the centering gives it real weight in the frame.
so much expression here with such minimal brushstrokes
extremely bored by the background & landscape. feel like he needed a bit more inspiration here than just "well this view of switzerland out my window sure is pretty". yawn