Lot 917

HENRY SCOTT TUKE (BRITISH, 1858-1929)

Samwell sitting on a blue dug-out
signed and dated 'H.S. Tuke 1924' (lower right)
oil on canvas
39 x 29cm

Provenance
Geoffrey Sainsbury (The artist's nephew);
Henry Shemilt;
Acquired from the above in 1963 by Brian D. Price;
Acquired from the above by the present owner

Literature
The Diary of Henry Scott Tuke 1923-1925, transcribed by B.D. Price;
Catching the Light - The Art and Life of Henry Scott Tuke, Catherine Wallace, 2008, plate 131.

Estimate: £5,000 - £8,000
Hammer price: £5,500
Bidding ended. Lot has been sold.

Footnote
Tuke painted the present work on 10th January 1924, and recorded the following entry in his diary:

‘Out with Samwell and Ralph again and went further on – nearly got a small nurse shark with the paddle, it was struck several times but eventually got away.  Landed and did a good study of Samwell sitting in a bluish dugout, with flickering shadows from overhanging trees.  Worked hard at it all afternoon at home.’

Unable to resist an adventure, Tuke was 67 when, in November 1923, he set sail for Jamaica on the Fyffe banana-ship, S.S. Coronado; part of an expedition funded by the author and explorer Lilian, Lady Richmond Brown and including Fredrick Albert Mitchell-Hedges, a fellow explorer whom Tuke met at a Lecture in Falmouth.  Mitchell-Hedges is perhaps best remembered for claiming to have discovered a crystal skull in Belize in 1924, but failing to mention the artefact until the mid-1940s, following the sale of a strikingly similar crystal skull at Sothebys in October 1943; modern testing of the skull has revealed the markings of modern machinery rather than Mayan tools.  

 

This illustrious party docked in Port Royal on 10th December before travelling the 100 miles or so to the Black River.  Tuke spent the following two months painting numerous oils and watercolours of the local landscape and people.  Samuel, known as Samwell, was one of his favourite models, whom he described as an ‘…interesting type.  Looks like a fierce savage but as gentle as a dove.’  Samwell appeared in several works, most notably, Black River Boatmen, Jamaica, an oil begun on 9th January, the day before the present work, which went on to be exhibited at The Royal Academy in 1925, no.500, and sold at Christies 2nd-16thDecember 2021, lot 97, for £30,000 hammer.  

Tuke skillfully captures a charmingly uncontrived moment as his subject stares, unselfconsciously, out to sea, the dappled light and heat are beautifully and deftly rendered, strongly evoking the unique atmosphere of the Caribbean.

Condition Report

original canvas; the paint surface is in excellent, clean condition; no sign of retouching under ultraviolet light, held in a plaster gilt frame in fair condition.

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