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Valletta painting sells for record price

A painting of Valletta Harbour by Girolamo Gianni has been auctioned in Lincoln, England, and sold to a Maltese collector living in the UK for a 'record price' of £14,250, the auctioneers said.

The 19th century oil painting of Valletta Harbour by the ‘great painter of Maltese scenery’ was estimated to fetch between £2,000 and £4,000.

Sarah Winstanley on behalf of auctioneers Thomas Mawer and Son, Lincoln, said the painting attracted a huge amount of interest with three bids left by Maltese buyers on the books before the sale, four telephone bidders from Malta, London, Scotland and Surrey and another buyer in the room competing for the lot.

Bidding started at £4,500 and rose rapidly until only one buyer was left on the phone and another in the room. Finally, the painting was sold to the buyer in the room, who was originally from Malta but now lives in England.

The vendor of the painting, who does not wish to be named, lives in Lincolnshire and inherited it from a relative. She was ‘very pleased and surprised’ with the price achieved and intends to donate some of the proceeds to two charities, the St Barnabus Hospice on Nettleham Road, Lincoln, and Marie Curie Cancer Care, Ms Winstanley said.

Girolamo Gianni (1837-1895) was born in Naples and initially visited Malta in 1866. Two years later he returned with his family to live and work in Valletta where he produced many paintings of the harbour and other views of the country.

In 1886, Gianni was commissioned by the Duke of Edinburgh, the Commander-in-Chief of the Mediterranean Fleet in Malta, to paint the ships of the fleet. For the next two decades, he painted landscapes and marine paintings and the majority of these works were bought by army and navy officers.

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Comments

Arthur Ellul (on 20/9/08)
@joseph Schembri

Want to know who stoilov is, enter Valletta every day and between 10AM till 3.30pm, in front of the law courts, and you will see Darko Stoilov painting the Valletta and its baroque in water colours, his studio is in Old theatre Street infront of Teatru Manoel.

One Day when we are all dead, his paintings will sell like gianni's and like schranz, or like alfons maria galea sell today. (ps not those that he sells to tourists, but those made to order, very delicate and detailed in water colours, exceptional)
Joseph Schembri (on 20/9/08)
There is another Gianni for sale on ebay for US $9,500, owned by someone living in Malta. As some have said I don't see exceptional artistic merit in this work and it would probably only interest us Maltese for its, let's say, nostalgic value.

@arthur ellul: Who is Stoilov? I've never heard of him.
arthur ellul (on 20/9/08)
@ everone
I will not mind having a gianni hanging on my wall, or a schranz, or an alfons maria galea, for whatever price it may be. Presently i can only afford Stoilov, j a caruana and a guzeppi cassar. My dream is that one day I will be able to afford 1 piece of each. Lucky are those who can afford a stefano erardi, or a francesco zahra, I envy them.
J. Parnis (on 20/9/08)
@ c Gatt

You are right. If you just look at Fort St. Angelo and Senglea point it's totally not accurate, let alone that the view from the picture was painted, the perspective should have been very different.
Tanja Cilia (on 19/9/08)
It's the principle of the thing. Having woken up to this selfsame view, give or take a couple of feet, for twenty-four years, I would not have paid anything, let alone that much, for the picture.
But people who know the cost of everything sometimes do not know the value of anything... which is why some silly girls go asking for €1,000,000 for something that is priceless, on the Web.
c gatt (on 19/9/08)
Ms. Vella is right, The Gianni woudl have fetched more in Malta. Only a Maltese would pay such amounts for what is basically Neapolitan landscape painting. I think the auctioneers had it right £2 to 4,000 is more realistic for this type of painting. Only in Malta would Gianni's work be considered of much value. Inflated by the limited taste of many collectors. The work is hardly ever accurate even in historic terms and his dimensions are quite askew. Look closely at the picture and you will see what i mean. The perspective is all wrong. But to each his own cup of poison.

This story reminds me of when the BBC brought the Antiques Roadshow to Malta. My favourite moment was always when the valuer would give an estimate far less then expected (this is particularly the case with Maltese silver which is horribly overpriced) and as for the furniture...
Tanja Cilia (on 19/9/08)
How many of us bother to walk down to the bastions to enjoy the modern version of this view, whenever we are in the City? As the advert has it - having a Gianni on your wall: £14,250; Home Thoughts From Abroad: the price of an airline ticket; being able to enjoy this view as often as one wants...priceless!
Christine Vella (on 18/9/08)
In Malta a painting like that would easily have fetched much more.
Abel Abela (on 18/9/08)
a real bargain
Joe Vassallo (on 18/9/08)
"RECORD PRICE" !!!!!!!!!!
20 years ago a pair of Giannis were sole for double that amount!!!!

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