Skip to main content

This auction has ended. View lot details

You may also be interested in

Own a similar item?

Submit your item online for a free auction estimate.

Henry John Stock, RI, ROI (British, 1853-1930) Influences image 1
Henry John Stock, RI, ROI (British, 1853-1930) Influences image 2
Henry John Stock, RI, ROI (British, 1853-1930) Influences image 3
Lot 53

Henry John Stock, RI, ROI
(British, 1853-1930)
Influences

29 March 2023, 14:00 BST
London, New Bond Street

Sold for £25,500 inc. premium

Own a similar item?

Submit your item online for a free auction estimate.

How to sell

Looking for a similar item?

Our 19th Century & Orientalist Paintings specialists can help you find a similar item at an auction or via a private sale.

Find your local specialist

Ask about this lot

Henry John Stock, RI, ROI (British, 1853-1930)

Influences
signed and dated 'H. J. STOCK/1905' (lower right)
oil on canvas
110.5 x 143.8cm (43 1/2 x 56 5/8in).

Footnotes

Exhibited
London, Royal Academy, 1905, no. 707.
Tokyo, Bunkamura Museum of Art, The Victorian Imagination, 1998, no. 65. (Subsequently Shizuoka Prefectural Museum of Art, Daimaru Museum, Kobe, and Tsukuba Museum of Art, Ibaraki).

Born in London, Henry John Stock was virtually blind as a child but overcoming this adversity he completed his education at St Martin's School of Art and subsequently at the Royal Academy Schools. He was later taken on by the wood engraver and radical W.J. Linton, with whom he made a visit to Italy. Stock would go on to exhibit in London from 1874 at the Royal Academy, also at the Grosvenor Gallery, and at the the Royal Institute of Painters in Oil Colours, of which he became a member in 1880. He became best known for his imaginative and symbolist works, which took their subjects from literature or were invented entirely by the artist, taking influence in this type of work from William Blake and George Frederic Watts.

These influences can clearly been seen in the present work, a slightly sinister subject depicting a woman who has momentarily put down a book she has been reading to stare vacantly into space. She seems unaware of the three threatening male figures that extend their arms towards her, touching her clothes. Although Stock was widely read, and particularly loved Dante, Coleridge, Goethe and Walt Whitman, the symbolism of this work appears to be entirely of his own invention. The present oil is the definitive version of the subject. Stock showed a similar watercolour at the Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours in 1904.

Additional information

Bid now on these items

Sidney Richard Percy(British, 1821-1886)The Barnmouth Water near Dolgelly, North Wales

Julius Olsson(British, 1864-1942)Summer Sea, Newquay

Edward Seago, RWS, RBA(British, 1910-1974)Old houses, Istanbul

Alois Arnegger(Austrian, 1879-1967)Sunset, Untersberg

Jean Joseph Benjamin Constant(French, 1845-1902)On the roofs

Louis Monro Grier(Australian, 1864-1920) St Ives, Cornwall

Edward Seago, RWS, RBA(British, 1910-1974)The lion of S. Mark - Venice

Sir Alfred James Munnings, PRA, RWS(British, 1878-1959)The leading horses of the Royal Carriage before the Ascot Procession, June 1925

Sir Edward Coley Burne-Jones, Bt., ARA, RWS(British, 1833-1898)Portrait of Elsie York

Franz von Defregger(Austrian, 1835-1921)Touristen auf der Alm

John McGhie(British, 1867-1952)Dutch Fisherwomen and Child

Louis-François Cassas(Azay-le-Ferron 1756-1827 Versailles)Studies of Egyptian figures

Ken Howard R.A.(British, 1932-2022)Debora