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Thursday, March 28, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

Churchill’s Painting of Favorite Whisky Goes on Sale

LONDON (AFP) — A painting by Winston Churchill featuring the famously bibulous British World War II leader's favorite brand of whisky is to go on sale at Sotheby's auction house.

The signature W.S.C. appears in the lower right corner of this oil painting by the late British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. (Sotheby's image via Courthouse News)

The oil painting of a bottle of Johnny Walker's Black label whisky and a bottle of brandy with a jug and glasses reflects Churchill's fondness for the blend, which he often drank first thing in the morning with soda water, the auction house said.

Painted at Churchill's country house of Chartwell, in southeast England, the still life called "Jug with Bottles" is expected to sell for up to £250,000 ($330,000). 

Bidding opens online on Tuesday.

Churchill, who was a keen amateur artist, created the work in the 1930s and later gave it to the American businessman W. Averell Harriman, who acted as US special envoy to Europe in the 1940s.

Harriman was photographed sitting between Churchill and Stalin in Moscow in 1942, and the gift of the painting suggests he shared convivial drams with Churchill.

The politician would give paintings to "like-minded people," said Simon Hucker, co-head of modern and post-war British art at Sotheby's.

It is unclear whether Churchill knew that the wife of his son Randolph, Pamela Churchill, was having an affair with Harriman during this period, The Times newspaper reported.

Pamela Churchill married Harriman decades later in the 1970s and the painting was sold following her death in 1997.

It is going back on sale after the deaths of its current owners, the U.S. collectors Barbara and Ira Lipman.

FILE - In this May 26, 1945 file photo, Britain's Prime Minister Winston Churchill and his wife Clementine tour Churchill's constituency of Woodford, in Essex, England, as part of the Conservative's General Election campaign. Britain is facing the most testing and significant, some would say tortuous, period in its modern history since World War II. The polarized electorate now has a critical choice to make _but it seems unlikely the result, whatever it may be, will heal deep and toxic divisions that could last a generation or more. (AP Photo/Eddie Worth, File)

'Private meditation'

A similar work by Churchill, featuring a collection of bottles and called "Bottlescape" hangs at Chartwell.

Churchill "was obviously an amateur painter but he got lessons off really great painters," said Hucker.

"This particular still life is actually quite unusual because he usually did landscapes."

While it seems unlikely that a modern politician would depict their favorite tipple in such a recognizable way, Churchill was probably more focused on capturing the reflection and transparency of glass, the art expert said.

In any case, "he didn't do these for the public, he did them for himself."

Some have disputed Churchill's artistic talents, with The New York Times once describing "Bottlescape" as "truly hideous."

Yet his paintings have reached high prices at auction. 

"The Goldfish Pool at Chartwell", which came from the collection of his daughter Mary Soames, sold for a record £1.8 million at Sotheby's in 2014.

Painting was a form of "private meditation" for Churchill, said Hucker.

"He did it all his life, even in his darkest hour he was still painting if he could."


by Anna MALPAS
© Agence France-Presse

Categories / Arts, Entertainment, International

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