Master Paintings and Drawings

Master Paintings and Drawings

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 221. The wise men's offering.

Benjamin West, P.R.A.

The wise men's offering

Lot Closed

October 22, 04:20 PM GMT

Estimate

7,000 - 9,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Benjamin West, P.R.A.

Swarthmore 1738 - 1820 London

The wise men's offering


oil on canvas

canvas: 27 by 22 in.; 68.5 by 56 cm.

framed: 33¾ by 29¼ in.; 85.7 by 74.3 cm. 

Offered by West's sons to the United States in 1826 (no. 95), but sold by them at London, Robins, 22-25 May 1829, lot 18, for £23.2.0 to Dolman;
With Childs Gallery, Boston, 1957;
Mrs. Wendell P. Colton;
By whose Estate sold, New York, Parke-Bernet Galleries, 13 May 1966, lot 13 (as dated and inscribed 1799 Windsor);
With Ira Spanierman Gallery, New York;
Robert D. Draper, Miami, Florida, by 1968;
Private collector, New York;
From whom acquired by the present owner in 1996.
"A Correct Catalogue of the Works of Mr. West," in Public Characters of 1805, London 1805 (actually published in 1804), p. 564 ("The Kings Bringing Presents to our Saviour," West's House at Windsor);
"A Correct List of the Works of Mr. West," in Universal Magazine, III, 1805, p. 529;
J. Barlow, The Columbiad, A Poem, Philadelphia 1807, p. 434, under note 45;
"A Correct Catalogue of the Works of Benjamin West, Esq.," in La Belle Assemblée or Bell's Court and Fashionable Magazine, IV, 1808, supplement, p. 16;
J. Galt, "A Catalogue of the Works of Mr. West," in The Life, Studies, and Works of Benjamin West, Esq., President of the Royal Academy of London, London 1820, Appendix II, p. 225;
J. Dillenberger, Benjamin West: The Context of His Life's Work, San Antonio 1977, p. 166, cat. no. 271;
H. von Effra and A. Staley, The Paintings of Benjamin West, New Haven 1986, p. 332, cat. no. 311, reproduced p. 333 (as signed lower left: B. West (?) 1799 Windsor, location unknown).
According to the 1966 sale catalogue (see Provenance), this painting bore a date and inscription of 1799 Windsor which is no longer visible. This painting relates, with differences, to West’s composition for a window commissioned by George III for St. George’s Chapel, Windsor, which was installed in 1796.  The window has since been removed, but the composition is known from old descriptions and the existence of an oil sketch.2  Staley speculated that if the purported 1799 dating was correct, the present work was probably painted as a modified replica rather than as a preliminary study.

 

1.  West's Gallery was the artist's home and studio at 14 Newman Street that was converted by his sons after his death into a gallery for the display of his works.

1.  Staley 1986, cat. no. 310.