MARK GERTLER (1891-1939)
MARK GERTLER (1891-1939)
MARK GERTLER (1891-1939)
2 More
This lot has been imported from outside of the UK … Read more PROPERTY OF THE LATE MRS BIDERMAN
MARK GERTLER (1891-1939)

The Jockey

Details
MARK GERTLER (1891-1939)
The Jockey
signed and dated 'Mark/Gertler/June/1921' (upper left)
oil on canvas
28 x 36 in. (71.1 x 91.4 cm.)
Painted in 1921.
Provenance
with The Goupil Gallery, London.
Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 1 March 1974, lot 166.
Purchased by the late Mrs Biderman in the 1980s, and by descent.
Literature
H. Wellington (ed.), 'Mark Gertler', British Artists of To-Day, No. 1, London, 1927, no. 4, illustrated.
J. Woodeson, Mark Gertler Biography of a Painter 1891-1939, London, 1972, p. 347.
Exhibited
London, The Goupil Gallery, Mark Gertler, February 1922, no. 7.
London, The Goupil Gallery, Mark Gertler: Figure Subjects, Landscapes, Still Life, Colour Notes, February 1923, no. 15.
London, The Galleries of the British Society of British Artists, Daily Express: Young Artists' Exhibition, June 1927, no. 71.
Special Notice
This lot has been imported from outside of the UK for sale and placed under the Temporary Admission regime. Import VAT is payable at 5% on the hammer price. VAT at 20% will be added to the buyer’s premium but will not be shown separately on our invoice.

Brought to you by

Pippa Jacomb
Pippa Jacomb Head of Day Sale

Lot Essay

This work is typical of Gertler’s still lives in the 1920s and was probably painted in Penn Studio in June 1921, shortly after he had returned from a six-month stay at Banchory Sanatorium in Scotland, where he had been confined with tuberculosis. It is one of a series of works centred on Staffordshire portrait figurines, popular ornaments of the period which exerted a strong fascination for him. The central figure of a jockey on horseback is probably based on the champion jockey Fred Archer (1857–1886), a three-time Derby winner (see R. Haggar, Staffordshire Chimney Ornaments, New York, 1955, pl. 89). The figure on the far left, squatting, is probably that of Roger Giles, a Devonshire schoolmaster, who advertised on a signboard to sell his fresh eggs, newly laid by him every day (and hence was often comically depicted as though in the act of laying eggs). Mrs. Gordon Stables in her long piece on Gertler in the International Studio, 22 June 1922, drew attention to ‘those rough china ornaments which Gertler loves to collect’. Between the two Stafford figurines is a small wooden sculpture, probably African, of the type Gertler loved to pick up at markets.

We are very grateful to Sarah MacDougall for preparing this catalogue entry.

More from Modern British Art Day Sale

View All
View All