It never ceases to amaze me how what are, frankly, in my opinion a series of unattractive daubs flung together in the name of Contemporary art can make millions at auction when highly accomplished and rather beautiful Victorian landscapes can be had for buttons.
A recent trip to see the excellent Courtauld exhibition, Seurat and the Sea, was a useful reminder that back in the 1880s, they were also breaking new ground in art. Seurat, with Pointillism, or Neo-Impressionism as it was also called, was miles ahead of his time in showing how blending complementary but opposite colours on the spectrum could create all the light, shade, depth and life a painting needed. He died at just 31, having completed no more than 45 major paintings – all of them a treat for the eye on any wall.
I suppose that fashions change and, with them, tastes. Don’t get me wrong, I think a great deal of Modern and Contemporary art has a lot to offer, but it is also rife with mountebanks. However, despite the marvels of Seurat and the leading lights of late 19th century art, the flipside of what has been a rather subdued market for late Victorian and Edwardian painting is that you can pick up stunning art for very little indeed.
Just browsing through one of the online auction platforms the other day, I worked out that, with a fair wind behind me, I could fill a whole wall with stunning Victorian and Edwardian watercolours for less than £2000. Some of the pictures looked a bit tired, but closer inspection revealed that they simply needed a new mount and frame, and at these prices this was very much a realistic option.
I have no idea whether art like this will enjoy a renaissance in years to come – although it certainly deserves to – but those cherry picking now will be in the best position to capitalise if it does. And if prices remain in the doldrums, well they will have a fantastic selection of art gracing their walls, which they will never tire of.