מכירה פומבית 001 IMPORTANT JUDAICA AUCTION - Including paintings by Raphael Nouril and Timur Tsaku. Very rare handwritten manuscripts.
Artikot
24.6.21
The Pillar Hotel London, 19 Brent St, London NW4 2EU, United Kingdom
THE NEW LONDON JUDAICA AUCTION HOUSE
המכירה הסתיימה

פריט 120:

Raphael Nouril , Boy Giving Charity,

London 1985,

Extremely ...

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נמכר ב: £60,000 ($83,400)
$83,400 (מחושב לפי השער שנקבע על ידי בית המכירות ביום המכירה)
מחיר פתיחה:
£ 60,000
הערכה :
£100,000
עמלת בית המכירות: 18.5% למידע נוסף
מע"מ: 20% על העמלה בלבד
משתמשים ממדינות אחרות עשויים לקבל פטור ממע"מ בהתאם לחוקי המס המתאימים
תגיות:

Raphael Nouril , Boy Giving Charity,

London 1985,

Extremely Rare.

From a private collection.

Never before seen in auction 

Oil on canvas painting depicting a young boy giving charity

"Repentance Prayer and Charity cancel the Stern Decree"


A shofar and a Tallis lie on the table , This is a scene of a Jewish house in the month of Elul before Rosh Hashanah - The Day of judgement , the boy gives charity and prays to G-d to bless his family and himself with a good happy and healthy year and to tear up any bad decrees that would have been judged against them earlier.


Raphael Nouril was born in Iran and at a young age started painting for the Shah of Iran, subsequently moving with his parents to London where he continued perfecting his artists talents.


Born in 1940 in Tabriz, Iran, Raphael Nouril's early promise as an artist was nurtured throughout his childhood as he drew and painted images gleaned from books, films and other sources which caught his searching eye and enquiring mind. However, to bring some formal shape to his talent, Raphael studied for four years under Reza Samini, an Iranian artist of rare skill and immense reputation. Under Samini's tutelage, his artistic sensibility matured and his reputation grew. But the quest to improve meant he had to abandon narrow national borders and attitudes.


His portrait of the Shah Iran Mohammad Reza Pahlavi hung proudly in the monarch’s palace.


 Leaving Iran, Raphael moved to Paris, where he married his lifetime companion, to study at the world renowned École des Beaux-Arts. In search of new things, he was disappointed when the teachers turned him away because his talent already exceeded classroom expectations. They could do nothing more than advise him and encourage him to study the work of the old masters in various galleries and museums around Paris on his own. On completion of his now mandated self-taught studies, he left Paris to travel again.


Emigrating to London in 1970 proved a master stroke. Exhibitions and commissions followed and important people from the world of politics and business became his subjects. Now, his international reputation was secured.


Raphael has painted portraits of known personalities including Dr. Henry Kissinger and the renowned portrait of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, World leader of the Chabad movement. He was commissioned by the Western Marble Arch Synagogue to paint the portrait of the Chief Rabbi, Sir Jonathan Sacks, which was presented in 1998. In 2000, also in London, he was commissioned to paint a portrait of Lord Immanuel Jakobovits (the late Emeritus Chief Rabbi) by the Friends of Bar Ilan University, Tel Aviv, for permanent display in the university.


Raphael has exhibited internationally including exhibitions at the National Heritage Gallery of Fine Art, Los Angeles (1986-1990), The Park Walk Gallery, Harrods, London, Library of Oxford University and the House of Commons, London. He was honoured in February 1998 to have received an invitation to exhibit at the Yeshiva University Museum in New York. Following his success in New York, he was chosen to stage a solo exhibition in London at the Julian Simon Fine Art Gallery.

As with all artists, words come to an end and the images must be allowed to speak for themselves. 


Raphael did not produce many paintings during his career and therefore his paintings are extremely rare and valuable.  He died June 11, 2020.



The owner of this painting will have a piece of Jewish history at his fingertips.


signed and framed


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