Philip Mould | |
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Born | Philip Jonathan Clifford Mould March 1960 (age 63) |
Education | University of East Anglia |
Occupations | |
Website | www |
Philip Jonathan Clifford Mould OBE (born March 1960) is an English art dealer, London gallery owner, art historian, writer and broadcaster. [2] He has made a number of major art discoveries, including works of Thomas Gainsborough, Anthony Van Dyck and Thomas Lawrence.
Mould is the author of two books on art discovery and is widely consulted by the media on the subject. He co-presents the BBC television programme Fake or Fortune? , an arts programme, with journalist and broadcaster Fiona Bruce. [3]
Mould was born in Wirral, Cheshire and educated at Kingsmead School, Hoylake, Worth School and the University of East Anglia, from which he graduated with a BA in History of Art in 1981. [4]
Mould's father owned a factory in Liverpool and his family was based in the Wirral Peninsula. [5] Mould made friends with the owner of a local antiques shop, who taught him to read hallmarks on silver when he was just 11 or 12 years old, and by the age of 14 he was dealing in antique silver. [5]
Mould began art dealing in his early teens and has since established an art dealership specialising in British art, a subject on which he is internationally consulted. [6] He has sold works to public institutions such as The Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York), [7] National Portrait Gallery (London), Museum of Fine Arts Boston, [8] Tate, [9] The Huntington Library (California), [10] and the Royal Albert Memorial Museum. [11]
Mould has worked as a valuer for the Heritage Lottery Fund and the Government's Acceptance in Lieu scheme. Between 1988 and 2010 he acted as honorary art adviser to the House of Commons and the House of Lords. [12] He is president of the charity Kids in Museums, [13] president and ex-chairman of Plantlife International, [14] a patron of Fight for Sight, [15] and a trustee and director of the Tony Banks Memorial Trust for the acquisition of historical works for museums. [16] [17] Mould is also a supporter of CleanupUK, and Pond Conservation. [18] He was elected as a fellow of the Linnean Society in 2012. [19]
Mould has made a number of major art discoveries, including some of Thomas Gainsborough's earliest known works, [20] the only known portrait of Arthur, Prince of Wales [21] and lost works by Anthony van Dyck and Thomas Lawrence. [22] In January 2021, Mould found a miniature portrait of French king Henri III by Jean Decourt. [23]
Mould is a regular broadcaster, reviewer and writer for the national press. His television work includes writing and presenting the Channel 4 series Changing Faces, and featuring as an expert on the Antiques Roadshow. In 2011, he began co-hosting the television programme Fake or Fortune? with Fiona Bruce. [24] Fake or Fortune? has regularly drawn an audience of 5 million. [3] He has authored two critically acclaimed books on art discovery. [25]
In recognition of his art world expertise and contribution to portrait heritage, he was created OBE in the 2005 New Year Honours list. [26] For his achievements in his field, as well as his involvement with numerous charities and broadcasting, Mould received an honorary doctorate in July 2013 at his former university, the University of East Anglia. [27] In 2019, he received the EVCOM (Event and Visual Communication Association) Fellowship award. The citation stated: "His expertise has shaped our understanding and knowledge of art today, and how we communicate about it". [28]
In January 2014, Mould warned of the increasing prevalence of what he termed "trapping" in which crooked sellers misleadingly hint that fake artworks have genuine provenance, without actually making false descriptions or asserting attributions. [29]
Mould and his wife, Catherine, have a son born in 1997. [30] Since 2002 they have owned Duck End House in Oxfordshire, close to Chipping Norton. The property was once owned by the seventeenth-century politician Sir William Cope. [31] [32] [33] In 2009, false allegations against him of infidelity and financial insolvency were planted in newspapers by a rival art dealer, later disgraced. [34]
In August 2014, Mould was one of 200 public figures who were signatories to a letter to The Guardian opposing Scottish independence in the run-up to September's referendum on that issue. [35] In October 2015, Mould appeared on BBC's Gardeners' World , in the garden of his home, discussing his passion for nature and talked of his interest in varieties of rose which would have been grown in the time of Sir Anthony van Dyck. He also discussed the work of one of his favourite artists, Cedric Morris, who was also a great plantsman. [36] Mould is a keen collector of Morris's work (for his private collection), and champions modern British artists in general; he cites the Bloomsbury Group amongst his favourites. [5]
In April 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Mould started recording a series of short videos he calls Art in Isolation, where the viewer is invited into his home of Duck End and given personal musings on one of his collected artworks. [37] [38] [39]
He is president of the wild plant conservation charity Plantlife . [40]
Thomas Gainsborough was an English portrait and landscape painter, draughtsman, and printmaker. Along with his rival Sir Joshua Reynolds, he is considered one of the most important British artists of the second half of the 18th century. He painted quickly, and the works of his maturity are characterised by a light palette and easy strokes. Despite being a prolific portrait painter, Gainsborough gained greater satisfaction from his landscapes. He is credited as the originator of the 18th-century British landscape school. Gainsborough was a founding member of the Royal Academy.
Laurence Stephen Lowry was an English artist. His drawings and paintings mainly depict Pendlebury, Greater Manchester as well as Salford and its vicinity.
Sir Anthony van Dyck was a Flemish Baroque artist who became the leading court painter in England after success in the Spanish Netherlands and Italy.
English art is the body of visual arts made in England. England has Europe's earliest and northernmost ice-age cave art. Prehistoric art in England largely corresponds with art made elsewhere in contemporary Britain, but early medieval Anglo-Saxon art saw the development of a distinctly English style, and English art continued thereafter to have a distinct character. English art made after the formation in 1707 of the Kingdom of Great Britain may be regarded in most respects simultaneously as art of the United Kingdom.
A catalogue raisonné is a comprehensive, annotated listing of all the known artworks by an artist either in a particular medium or all media. The works are described in such a way that they may be reliably identified by third parties, and such listings play an important role in authentification.
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Sir Cedric Lockwood Morris, 9th Baronet was a British artist, art teacher and plantsman. He was born in Swansea in South Wales, but worked mainly in East Anglia. As an artist he is best known for his portraits, flower paintings and landscapes.
The Soviet sale of Hermitage paintings in 1930 and 1931 resulted in the departure of some of the most valuable paintings from the collection of the State Hermitage Museum in Leningrad to Western museums. Several of the paintings had been in the Hermitage Collection since its creation by Empress Catherine the Great. About 250 paintings were sold, including masterpieces by Jan van Eyck, Titian, Rembrandt, Rubens, Raphael, and other important artists. Andrew Mellon donated the twenty-one paintings he purchased from the Hermitage to the United States government in 1937, which became the nucleus of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.
Iwan Wirth is a Swiss art dealer and the president and co-founder of Hauser & Wirth, a contemporary art gallery.
Bords de la Seine à Argenteuil is an oil painting by an unknown artist. The painting is a landscape depicting the River Seine at Argenteuil in France. It is owned by Englishman David Joel.
Fake or Fortune? is a BBC One documentary television series which examines the provenance and attribution of notable artworks. Since the first series aired in 2011, Fake or Fortune? has drawn audiences of up to 5 million viewers in the UK, the highest for an arts show in that country.
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Portrait of Queen Henrietta Maria, as St Catherine is a painting by Sir Anthony van Dyck.
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Portrait of Mai (Omai) (also known as Portrait of Omai, Omai of the Friendly Isles or simply Omai) is an oil-on-canvas portrait of Omai, a Polynesian visitor to England, by Sir Joshua Reynolds, completed about 1776.
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Simon Rollo Gillespie is a British conservator-restorer of fine art, and an art historian. He is known particularly for his work with Early British and Tudor portraits, although his practice extends across all periods from early paintings to contemporary artworks. Gillespie has been restoring art since 1978, and he appears frequently on the BBC Four series Britain's Lost Masterpieces, having previously appeared on the BBC1 art programme Fake or Fortune.
Yvonne Alix Hackenbroch (1912–2012), was a British museum curator and historian of jewellery.