For this purpose, I work in oil as well as acrylics, both of which medium will allow for flow in the moment.” TRINE CHURCHILL received her BFA from Otis College of Art and Design in Los Angles and studied for a semester at l´Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris. It is this duality in the painting process that I feel very passionate about, finding a real pleasure in applying the paint to the surface. My painting process also entails loose handling of the paint in areas that are more abstract along with other areas that are rendered realistically. In this way, I allow for mistakes to happen, aware that these mistakes can sometimes take the painting to the next level. I approach the canvas with little planning. The images can be somewhat mundane to begin with but used as a mere steppingstone into the process of making a painting, my physical world becomes more of a psychological, and symbolic one. “I FIND INSPIRATION in the everyday life, using vintage imagery (often selected from my family’s photos) and snap shots from life around me or current events. The daughter of a Danish cartoonist and from a family of dreamers, art and imagination was part of growing up. Like Life & Style on Facebook, follow on Twitter for the latest in fashion, gossip and entertainment.TRINE CHURCHILL is a Danish painter living in Los Angeles. Published in The Express Tribune, December 23 rd, 2014. The photograph was a gift to the 32nd president of the US from Lady Soames.īeneath the picture are inscribed the words: ‘For Mary, from her friend the other naval person, Franklin D Roosevelt’.įollowing the sale of his items, 38 of Churchill’s paintings will be dispatched to Chatwell, the family’s home, which is now a National Trust site with the paintings being displayed proudly to be admired by those who visit the estate in Westerham, Kent, where the former British leader spent his life between 1924 to the year of his death in 1965. On the other hand, Churchill’s despatch, which is made of scarlet leather and has the words, “The Rt Hon Winston S Churchill MP” inscribed on it in gold, fetched £158,000 a price, 30 times more than its estimated value.Īn interesting aspect about the box is that it is one of the seven boxes the wartime prime minister used during his time in office, whereas the other boxes are at display in The House of Commons War Rooms.Īnother politician’s possession to nab a high price was former US president Franklin D Roosevelt’s photograph, which was sold for £32,500 despite being estimated at somewhere between £2,500 and £3,500. The painting was sold for almost 10 times its estimated value - £1.4 million.Īccording to the Daily Mail, more than 4,000 people had arrived at the auction to view and admire the artworks that were up for sale.Īnother of Sir Winston’s artifacts that went for a high price was an ivory-mounted wooden humidor box, which he used to keep cigars dry was sold for £20,000. Another major surprise at the auction was the portrait of Sir Winston, which was painted by Sir Oswal Birley in 1950. The identity of the other four buyers remains anonymous.Ī representative for Sotheby said that the auction celebrated “Churchill’s exceptional ability as a painter”. The painting, which had been termed ‘extremely personal’ by auctioneers, was reported to be worth around £400,000 to £600,000.Įleven pieces of artwork were reportedly sold at the auction at Sotheby’s in London with five of them being purchased by American buyers, whereas only two were bought by UK buyers. The painting set a record price for a work of art by the former British prime minister.Īccording to BBC News, the painting, which is titled ‘The Goldfish Pool at Chartwell’, was painted in 1932 and is a depiction of the pond in his Kent home. A painting by British politician Sir Winston Churchill was sold for £1.8 million, reported the Daily Mail.
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