Stained glass adds colour to the last major auction of the summer season

There were strong prices and big surprises at the Chatsworth sale at Fonsie Mealy Auctioneers


There were some very strong prices – and some big surprises – during the two-day Chatsworth fine art sale at Fonsie Mealy Auctioneers which ended on Wednesday afternoon and turned out to be the most interesting auction of the year to date.

A collection of stained glass church windows made by the Harry Clarke Studios in Dublin, sold in seven separate lots, made a combined total of €88,500 – surging above the collective top estimate of €25,000. The auctioneers said that all had been acquired by Irish bidders and look likely, therefore, to remain in Ireland.

The two top lots were acquired by the Jesuits – and depict the Catholic Order's co-founder, St Francis Xavier. A single panel titled 'Saint Francis Xavier preaching in the Orient' made €31,000 – 10 times the estimate (€2,500-€3,500); and a three-panelled window, 'Saint Francis Xavier' measuring about 8ft by 2ft, made €21,000 (the estimate was €7,000-€9,000).

Selection of paintings

A window depicting Adam and Eve – catalogued as "moody, sensuous and truly lovely" made €9,500 (€3,000-€4,000); and, a single panel for a window, 'St Bernadette and Our Lady of Lourdes', sold for €6,500 – 13 times the top estimate (€400-€500).

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In the furniture section, a 19th-century Killarney-ware collector’s cabinet sold for €34,000 – more than double the top estimate (€10,000 – €15,000).

A collection of the personal belongings of Irish first World War officer Major EF Farrell, of Co Meath, who served with the Leinster Regiment, sold for €7,250 after intense bidding that went way beyond the estimate (€1,000-€1,500). A Half-length Portrait of Lady Gregory by Sir Gerald Festus Kelly sold for €15,000 – again comfortably above estimate (€8,000-€12,000).

A selection of paintings owned by the late Judge James A Murnaghan – on the market for the first time – included a 16th-century Italian School oil-on-panel titled The Holy Family and John the Baptist that sold for €7,000 (€800-€1,200); and, a 19th-century Neapolitan School gouache of Mount Vesuvius erupting that made €3,400 (€700-€1,000).

A rare, painted bronze car mascot in the shape of a falcon on a perch and signed AV Miller sold to an online bidder in the USA for €2,700 – almost eight times the highest estimate (€250-€350).

Bleeding bowl

A very early Russian icon depicting the Nativity of Christ with the visiting shepherds and the three kings sold for €1,600 (€220-€130).

A late 19th-century silver “bleeding bowl” – once used by doctors for blood-letting when treating certain ailments – sold for €670 – three times the highest estimate (€160 –€220).

Not all estimates were exceeded. An Edwardian carved oak Cuckoo Clock – in working order – was estimated at €200-€300 but sold to the only bidder for €160.