Women artists put in a particularly strong showing at our recent auction of Modern British and 20th Century Art. Works by Mary Fedden, Bridget Riley and Paula Rego contributed handsomely to the April 20 sale total of £676,000.
A trio of ‘Op Art’ works by Bridget Riley (b.1931) included two screen prints made in 1965 as she arrived at her signature black and white style.
The 'Fragments' series of seven prints were published by the Robert Fraser Gallery in an edition of 75, each printed on the back of a clear perspex sheet with a brilliant white background then printed over the top. At the time Riley was experimenting with these new, modern materials and the result is very sharp and bold.
Fragment 5 signed and dated 65 I.I sold to a London dealer at £39,000 while Fragment 3, also signed and dated 65 l.l. sold for £31,850 to private bidder in the Netherlands.

Bridget Riley CH (b.1931)
'Fragment 5'
screenprint on perspex, signed and dated '65 l.l., from an edition of 75
60 x 78.5cm
SOLD £39,000
Riley began investigating colour in 1967, the year in which she produced her first stripe painting. Coloured Greys 1, a screenprint in colours, signed, inscribed and dated '72 was also numbered 44/125 in pencil. It sold for £16,250 to a UK private buyer.
‘Two Pears’ by Mary Fedden (1915-2012) had been donated by the artist to raise future funds for the Curwen Print Study Centre. Fedden first became involved in printmaking at the Curwen Studio when she and husband Julian Trevelyan were commissioned to produce work by the Waddington Gallery in Cork St. When, aged 95, she returned to the studio and donated this oil painting on the understanding it would be sold to further plans for the Study Centre. ‘Two Pears’, a late work signed and dated 2010, will now contribute £13,000 to a worthy cause.

Mary Fedden RA (1915-2012)
Two Pears
signed and dated '10 l.r., oil on canvas
35.5 x 45.5cm, unframed
SOLD £13,000
Ten lots in the sale came from writer and academic Germaine Greer. They included eight prints by Paula Rego (b.1935) from her sometimes disconcerting Nursery Rhymes series published in 1989. Rego based the 30-print series on a series of drawings she made for her granddaughter on her second birthday. However, in typical Rego style, she took the anthology of traditional childhood verse and imbued it with the darker themes of power, rebellion, sexuality and gender, that run through her work.

Paula Rego RA (Portuguese-British, b.1935)
'Baa Baa Black Sheep', from Nursery Rhymes
etching and aquatint, 1989, signed and inscribed 'A/P' in pencil, 32.5 x 21.5cm
SOLD £4,940
All of these, published by Marlborough Graphics in an edition of 50 with 14 artist's proofs, were eagerly contested above estimates of £500-800 each. Seven sold for prices between £1,690 and £2,600, but Baa Baa Black Sheep, with its disturbing sexual take on a childhood favourite, sold to a London private buyer at £4,940.
Buyers also responded well to the inclusion of an oil on copper by Celia Paul (b.1959) and a pencil, watercolour and collage by Florence Henri (1893-1982).
Paul’s ‘My Mother and Frank’ (1990), a typical portrait of two family members worked in thick impasto, had a provenance of the London dealer Marlborough Fine Art. It sold at £19,500 (estimate £4,000-6,000).

Celia Paul (b.1959)
My Mother and Frank (1990)
oil on copper
55.9 x 45.7cm
SOLD £19,500
Henri’s ‘Composition’, betraying her training under Fernand Leger and at the Bauhaus, had been acquired at the Hanover Gallery in 1967. Estimated at £1,500-2,500, it sold to the London trade at £13,500.

Florence Henri (American, 1893-1982)
Composition
signed 'F Henri' l.r., pencil, watercolour and collage
25.5 x 33cm
SOLD £13,500
All prices shown include fees
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