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Lot 26AR

Laurence Stephen Lowry R.A.
(British, 1887-1976)
Figures with a Dog 14 x 13.7 cm. (5 1/2 x 5 3/8 in.)

13 June 2018, 15:00 BST
London, New Bond Street

Sold for £118,750 inc. premium

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Laurence Stephen Lowry R.A. (British, 1887-1976)

Figures with a Dog
signed and dated 'L. S. Lowry 1957.' (lower left)
oil on board
14 x 13.7 cm. (5 1/2 x 5 3/8 in.)

Footnotes

Provenance
With The Lefevre Gallery, London
Sale; Sotheby's, London, 17 March 1976, lot 91
Walter William 'Max' Bygraves OBE
His sale; Christie's, London, 11 November 1988, lot 474
Sale; Sotheby's, London, 10 October 1990, lot 127, where acquired by the present owner
Private Collection, U.K.

In 1964, when asked by a group of students from Stafford College of Art what has impressed him more than anything else, Lowry replied simply "People every time" (Shelly Rohde, L.S. Lowry, A Life, 2007, Haus, London, p.228).

People, their characters, habits, oddities and eccentricities lie at the heart of Lowry's work from his formative to his final years. This aspect of Lowry's output is perhaps at its sharpest in the stand alone figurative pictures that emerge in the 1950s and subsequently become one of his dominant practices. In these usually small scale works, people, either single or grouped, are presented with the scantest suggestions of environment. Through deft yet rich brushwork Lowry masterfully captures individual gesture and, by way of his characteristic melancholic wit, recalls witnessed moments of amusement. These scenes are often steeped in ambiguity, and as with the present work, purposefully vague in their titling. In Figures with a Dog Lowry does not comment on the dynamic of our group. Perhaps we are observing a family in mild dispute. Perhaps two adult acquaintances, their restless children bored of the conversation. Or perhaps just four strangers at a chance crossing of paths. Decoding these pictures may be key to their appeal to us but as Lowry insisted, conclusions are best avoided; "I'm not trying to say anything. I have no message at all – it's simply my way of looking at things" (Op.Cit.).

Max Bygraves OBE (1922-2012), the veteran entertainer perhaps best known for the Singalongamax series of LPs and as a regular fixture on British television in the 1970s, assembled a collection of L.S. Lowry oils including The Old Middlesbrough Town Hall (1962), Lady with a Dog and a Half (1963) (both later Frederick Forsyth collection) and Four People and a Dog (1957) in addition to the present lot.

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