Scottish Colourist painting sells for more than £381,000 at auction
The sale at Bonhams in Edinburgh also featured works by the late Jack Vettriano.

A “masterful” painting by Scottish Colourist Samuel John Peploe which once hung in his patron’s drawing room has sold for more than £381,000 at auction.
Roses In A Green Jug went under the hammer in the Scottish art sale at Bonhams in Edinburgh on Wednesday.
It sold for £381,400 including buyer’s premium, above the estimate of £250,000-£350,000.
Paintings by fellow Scottish Colourist Francis Campbell Boileau Cadell and by the late Jack Vettriano also featured in the sale.

Peploe once characterised his career as a search for the perfect still life, and was influenced by his time in Paris from 1910-12 where he studied the work of Post-Impressionist masters.
Major Ion R Harrison, a Scottish shipping magnate, first encountered Peploe’s work at an exhibition in Glasgow in the 1920s and soon became a close friend and patron of the painter and the Scottish Colourists.
May Matthews, managing director of Bonhams Scotland, said: “Roses in a Green Jug is an exceptional example of the skilfully executed still lives which made Peploe one of the most highly admired of Scottish Colourists.
“Having come to auction for the first time with remarkable provenance – having once hung in the drawing room of Croft House, home of noted Scottish Colourist patron Ion R Harrison – it is not surprising this work attracted such interest.
“Bonhams had shown a real strength in achieving impressive results for works Sottish Colourists and we are delighted with today’s result for Peploe.”
She said the work takes “inspiration from Paul Cezanne and French Post-Impressionism, while maintaining the artist’s distinctive individual style”.
She added: “Peploe’s still lifes were meticulously planned and executed, creating the dialogue between object and space for which he and his fellow Colourists were renowned.”
Roses In A Green Jug can be seen hanging in the background of Cadell’s Portrait Of Mrs Ion R Harrison of 1932.

Six works by Vettriano, who died earlier this year, also went under the hammer.
Pendine Beach (Study), which was painted in 1996, sold for £44,800, including buyer’s premium, above the estimate of £20,000-£30,000.
The painting once hung in the late Sir Terence Conran’s Bluebird restaurant in London, after he bought the picture in 1996, Bonhams said.
A selection of landscapes of the island of Iona were also sold.
They included Peploe’s paintings of The White Strand, Iona, which went for £74,060.
All prices included buyer’s premium.