Loading Spinner

Philip Wickstead Sold at Auction Prices

Portrait painter, b. 1763 - d. 1786

See Artist Details

0 Lots

Sort By:

Categories

    Auction Date

    Seller

    Seller Location

    Price Range

    to
    • Philip Wickstead (fl.1763-1786) - The artist sketching in Jamaica
      Oct. 29, 2019

      Philip Wickstead (fl.1763-1786) - The artist sketching in Jamaica

      Est: £8,000 - £12,000

      Philip Wickstead (fl.1763-1786) The artist sketching in Jamaica oil on canvas 30 x 26in. (76.2 x 66cm.)

      Christie's
    • Attributed to Philip Wickstead (1763-1789): Portrait of Mrs. Barratt of Pottley Hall Wearing a Pink Dress in a Classical Garden with a Dog and a Basket of Flowers Beside Her
      Oct. 26, 2019

      Attributed to Philip Wickstead (1763-1789): Portrait of Mrs. Barratt of Pottley Hall Wearing a Pink Dress in a Classical Garden with a Dog and a Basket of Flowers Beside Her

      Est: $1,000 - $1,500

      Oil on canvas, unsigned, lined.29 x 25 in., 34 1/2 x 29 1/2 in. (frame).p> Mrs. Barratt of Pottley Hall, Warwickshire, England; thence by descent; Sold Christie's, London, April 6, 1973, Lot 108 (as by Wickstead); Richard Philp, London.

      STAIR
    • Philip Wickstead (died circa 1790) A portrait of
      Dec. 02, 2009

      Philip Wickstead (died circa 1790) A portrait of

      Est: £10,000 - £15,000

      Philip Wickstead (died circa 1790) A portrait of the family of James Henry of Jamaica (1732-1787) and his wife Elizabeth née Jones, their six children James, John William, Edward, Elizabeth and Josiah, their maternal grandmother Catherine Jones and their tutor All full length seated in an interior, a view of their estate called Southfield in St Ann's Bay, Jamaica beyond Oil on canvas, in the original 18th Century Jamaican frame 123 x 99cm; 44½ x 39in This impressive family group is undoubtedly one of the most elaborate works that Wickstead produced in his career and certainly one of only a few on this scale to have survived from his time in Jamaica. He was there for 17 years and unfortunately much of his work from this time was destroyed in the great hurricane of 1780. It has been in the collection of the Henry family and their descendants since it was painted. Wickstead trained under Zoffany, however his work is closer in style to that of Arthur Devis, who also specialised in the conversation piece and who often depicted similar slim elegant sitters. He went out to Jamaica in 1773 with the landscape painter George Robertson, under the patronage of William Beckford of Somerley, who owned large sugar plantations in Westmoreland Parish. He stayed in Jamaica for the rest of his life and in the 1780's, after a failed attempt at being a planter, he took to drink and died around 1790. The Henry's were Lowland Scots who became prosperous merchants. After the Jacobite Rebellion in 1745/6 James Henry, a surgeon and physician by training, depicted on the right of the picture, set out for the New World. He is recorded as living in Jamaica by 1767. He married the daughter of a wealthy widow, and he accumulated considerable wealth. His eldest son James Henry shown seated at the left hand end of the table was a Captain in the St. Ann's Militia Regiment at the time of his father's death in 1787. He was the only one of the four brothers to marry and produce heirs and it is through his line that the picture has been passed down through the generations. Provenance: James Henry (1732-1787) James Henry (1765-1807) James Henry (1802-1877) James Henry (1836-1916) Elsie Beatrice Sharp neé Henry 1879-1952) Basil Telford Sharp (1917-1988) who gave it to the present owner, a direct descendant of the Henry family In good condition

      Woolley & Wallis
    • Philip Wickstead (died circa 1790) A portrait of
      Jun. 17, 2009

      Philip Wickstead (died circa 1790) A portrait of

      Est: £30,000 - £40,000

      Philip Wickstead (died circa 1790) A portrait of the family of James Henry of Jamaica (1732-1787) and his wife Elizabeth née Jones, their six children James, John, William, Edward, Elizabeth and Josiah, their maternal grandmother Catherine Jones and their tutor All full length seated in an interior, a view of their estate called Southfield in St Ann's Bay, Jamaica beyond Oil on canvas, in the original 18th Century Jamaican frame 123 x 99cm; 44½ x 39in This impressive family group is undoubtedly one of the most elaborate works that Wickstead produced in his career and certainly one of only a few on this scale to have survived from his time in Jamaica. He was there for 17 years and unfortunately much of his work from this time was destroyed in the great hurricane of 1780. It has been in the collection of the Henry family and their descendants since it was painted. Wickstead trained under Zoffany, however his work is closer in style to that of Arthur Devis, who also specialised in the conversation piece and who often depicted similar slim, elegant sitters. He went out to Jamaica in 1773 with the landscape painter George Robertson, under the patronage of William Beckford of Somerley, who owned large sugar plantations in Westmoreland Parish. He stayed in Jamaica for the rest of his life and in the 1780's, after a failed attempt at being a planter, he took to drink and died around 1790. The Henry's were Lowland Scots who became prosperous merchants. After the Jacobite Rebellion in 1745/6 James Henry, a surgeon and physician by training, depicted on the right of the picture, set out for the New World. He is recorded as living in Jamaica by 1767. He married the daughter of a wealthy widow, and he accumulated considerable wealth. His eldest son James Henry shown seated at the left hand end of the table was a Captain in the St. Ann's Militia Regiment at the time of his father's death in 1787. He was the only one of the four brothers to marry and produce heirs and it is through his line that the picture has been passed down through the generations. Provenance: James Henry (1732-1787) James Henry (1765-1807) James Henry (1802-1877) James Henry (1836-1916) Elsie Beatrice Sharp neé Henry 1879-1952) Basil Telford Sharp (1917-1988) who gave it to the present owner, a direct descendent of the Henry family

      Woolley & Wallis
    • Philip Wickstead , fl.1763-1786 Portrait of Ronald Crawford oil on canvas
      Jun. 05, 2008

      Philip Wickstead , fl.1763-1786 Portrait of Ronald Crawford oil on canvas

      Est: £8,000 - £12,000

      full-length, wearing a red coat and pale breeches, standing on a terrace with a spaniel at his feet, holding a walking cane and a hat, a landscape beyond oil on canvas

      Sotheby's
    Lots Per Page: