Modern British Day Auction

Modern British Day Auction

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 259. Notley Abbey, Thame.

Tristram Hillier, R.A.

Notley Abbey, Thame

Auction Closed

June 30, 10:59 AM GMT

Estimate

8,000 - 12,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

Tristram Hillier, R.A.

1905 - 1983

Notley Abbey, Thame


signed Hillier. and dated 1955. (lower right)

oil on canvas 

unframed: 61 by 81cm.; 23½ by 81in.

framed: 81 by 102cm.; 32 by 40in.

Executed in 1955.


We are grateful to The Estate of Tristram Hillier for their kind assistance with the cataloguing of the present work. The Estate is preparing a forthcoming catalogue raisonné of the Artist's paintings and would like to hear from owners of any works by Hillier. Please write to The Estate of Tristram Hillier, c/o Modern British Art Department, Sotheby’s, 34-35 New Bond Street, London, W1A 2AA.

Commissioned directly from the Artist by Vivien Leigh, thence by descent to her daughter by whom gifted to the present owner

Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh acquired their ultimate home, Notley Abbey, in 1944. The house was a remnant of the once vast 12th century abbey and originally the Medieval Abbot’s Lodge. It was to provide a respite from their busy lives and the ravages of war-torn London and became an intoxicating project: ‘It was absolutely enchanting, and it enchanted me. At Notley I had an affair with the past. For me it had mesmeric power; I could easily drown in its atmosphere. I could not leave it alone, I was a child lost in its history. Perhaps I loved it too much, if that is possible’ (Laurence Olivier, Confessions of an Actor, London 1982, p.115). In addition to its great age and romance, there was also a sense of theatre about Notley as Cecil Beaton noted in a letter to Greta Garbo: ‘the life they lead is most suitable for Shakespearean actors. The whole atmosphere of the place is suitable for performances of Twelfth Night, Midsummer Night’s Dream and Hamlet’ (quoted in Philip Ziegler, Olivier, London, 2013, p.175).


Olivier took charge of the grounds and gardens whilst Leigh collaborated with John Fowler, legendary founder of Colefax and Fowler, on the interior decoration and the walls were richly hung with her art collection. Whilst on tour around the world, Vivien famously brought her favourite pictures with her – visitors to her dressing room were as likely to experience a masterpiece by Degas or Renoir as they were the iconic actress herself. She became close friends with Sir Kenneth Clark who introduced her to many of his protégés such as John Piper who also painted Notley. He may well also have introduced her to Tristram Hillier who painted the present work in the mid 1950s.