Digital Editions
Newsletters
Subscribe
Digital Editions
Newsletters
Art market
Museums & heritage
Exhibitions
Books
Podcasts
Columns
Art of Luxury
Adventures with Van Gogh
Venice Biennale
Art market
Museums & heritage
Exhibitions
Books
Podcasts
Columns
Art of Luxury
Adventures with Van Gogh
Venice Biennale
Auctions
news

The Fine Art Society closes Mayfair gallery after 142 years with 'emotional' sale at Sotheby’s

Sculpture of Peter Pan and painting by Gluck were among the stars of five-hour long auction

Gareth Harris
6 February 2019
Share
Gluck’s Flora’s Cloak (around 1923) sold for £100,000 (est £80,000-£120,000) Courtesy of Sotheby's

Gluck’s Flora’s Cloak (around 1923) sold for £100,000 (est £80,000-£120,000) Courtesy of Sotheby's

The sale at Sotheby’s London yesterday (5 February) of items consigned by the longstanding commercial gallery, The Fine Art Society (FAS), was tinged with nostalgia—even sadness. Early 2018, after 142 years, the FAS gave up its distinctive five-storey premises on New Bond Street in Mayfair, just across the road from the auction house.

The gallery championed artists such as John Singer Sargent and James McNeill Whistler, staging key shows such as the Leigh Bowery Memorial Exhibition co-organised by Lucian Freud in 1995 and Hokusai’s Drawings and Engravings in 1890.

Rising rents, which have been largely attributed to an influx of international fashion houses, led to the relocation of the street’s stalwart art and antique dealerships including Colnaghi. The Fine Art Society subsequently relocated to Chelsea where it runs an office space; it also has a gallery in Edinburgh. “We are looking at doing private sales and re-evaluating our core strengths. We want to keep the core bits, focusing on good British art and design,” says Annamarie Phelps, chair of The Fine Art Society.

The vast Sotheby’s sale included 312 lots—ranging from 17th-century furniture to Victorian sculpture and contemporary painting—with 77.2% sold by lot and 86.1% by value. The top lot, a bronze sculptural model of Peter Pan by Sir George James Frampton (cast in 1987), sold for £346,000 (with buyer’s premium; est £80,000-£120,000).

Other lots in the over £100,000 category included Ivon Hitchens’s painting Trees and Bushes (1952) which exceeded its high estimate (£50,000-£80,000) to fetch £112,500 (with buyer’s premium). Flora’s Cloak (around 1923) by Gluck, the queer artist whose market has picked up in recent years, sold for £100,000 (est £80,000-£120,000). The work, which was owned by Gluck’s lover Constance Spry, is thought to be the artist’s only nude. A source close to the sale says that the work was purchased on behalf of a UK museum.

Phelps says that the sale “was well attended. At the start, there was a full house and it was quite emotional. There were some very interesting responses to a wide range of objects. The [lower] estimates were designed to pull people in.”

The artist Peter Blake, whose digital print of the Fine Art Society Flag (2013) sold for £1,063 (with buyer’s premium; est £700-£1,000), was in attendance along with the London-based dealer Rupert Maas. Asked if he had bought or bid, Maas says that “the prices are low but I had a sense of restraint”, adding that FAS’s departure “leaves New Bond Street looking like a toothless, painted whore”.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

AuctionsCommercial galleriesArt marketThe Fine Art Society
Share
Subscribe to The Art Newspaper’s digital newsletter for your daily digest of essential news, views and analysis from the international art world delivered directly to your inbox.
Newsletter subscribe
Information
About
Contact
Cookie policy
Data protection
Privacy policy
Frequently Asked Questions
Subscription T&Cs
Terms and conditions
Advertise
Sister Papers
Sponsorship policy
Follow us
Instagram
Bluesky
LinkedIn
Facebook
TikTok
YouTube
© The Art Newspaper

Related content

Art marketanalysis
29 June 2026

Why one season of successful auctions won't transform the art market

While impressive results in New York and London suggest buoyancy at the very top end, further news of closures and downsizing illustrates the soaring costs facing bricks-and-mortar galleries

Scott Reyburn
Art marketanalysis
25 June 2026

Sotheby's auction of Joe Lewis collection breaks record for most expensive sold in UK

Led by a once-scandalous Modigliani painting, the £296.3m London evening sale provided a bright spot for a market struggling with concerns of Brexit and overseas competition

Anny Shaw
Art marketnews
30 June 2021

Lucian Freud's portrait of David Hockney fetches £14.9m in strong hybrid sales at Sotheby’s in London

Asian bidders and British art boosted figures to make auction house's highest summer total since 2018

Anny Shaw
Art marketnews
27 June 2018

Lucian Freud’s late reclining nude makes London record at £22.5m

Artist was 80 years old when he began the painting of a former Tate cataloguer

Anny Shaw