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Home HRArt and auctions Onassis Family Collection’s Lost Winston Churchill Painting to be Offered at Phillips

Onassis Family Collection’s Lost Winston Churchill Painting to be Offered at Phillips

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Onassis Family Collection’s Lost Winston Churchill Painting to be Offered at Phillips

Property from the Onassis Family Collection, Sir Winston L.S. Churchill The Moat, Breccles, Painted circa August 1921. Estimate: $1,500,000-2,000,000

Lost Painting by Sir Winston Churchill Gifted to Aristotle Onassis, to be Offered by Phillips on 23 June in New York, From the Onassis Family Collection

The Moat, Breccles, A Gift of Warm Affection and Friendship

Hung in Pride of Place on the Onassis Yacht the Christina, the First Super Yacht

Still from the documentary “The Other World of Winston Churchill,” showing the work in situ on the Christina

NEW YORK – 4 JUNE 2021 – An extraordinary emblem of the celebrated friendship between British Prime
Minister Sir Winston Churchill and Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis, The Moat, Breccles will be
offered in Phillips’ 20th Century and Contemporary Art Evening Sale on 23 June 2021, estimated at $1.5-2
million. Painted in August 1921, the painting by Churchill was gifted to Aristotle Onassis in 1961, and hung in
the saloon of the Onassis yacht, the Christina.

Jean-Paul Engelen, Deputy Chairman and Worldwide Co-Head of 20th Century & Contemporary Art, said,
“Two of the most influential figures of the 20th century, Churchill and Onassis formed a remarkable friendship, which Churchill sought to honor by gifting a work that he treasured in his own private collection for forty years. Long thought to have been lost, The Moat, Breccles was in fact aboard the Christina and is now being sold by the Onassis Family a century after its creation and fifty years after it was generously gifted by the statesman to the family.”

A Story of Friendship
Churchill’s son, Randolph, introduced Churchill to Onassis at a dinner in La Pausa, France, on 16 January 1956. The introduction sparked a friendship that would prompt Onassis to invite Churchill and his wife, Clementine, to a dinner party on his yacht the Christina. Churchill was not only impressed by Onassis’ hospitality, but also the yacht which he described once in a letter to his wife, Clementine, of 8 February
1956, as: “the most beautiful structure I have seen afloat.”

Winston Churchill And Aristotle Onassis, July 29, 1959. Photo by Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images

A close friendship between the two men developed. During the period 1958-1963 Churchill, often accompanied by his wife, made eight cruises in the Mediterranean and the Atlantic on the Christina. Onassis went to great lengths to make each cruise as easy and comfortable for the elder statesman. Celia, Sir Winston’s granddaughter, observed that her grandfather had aged considerably after his retirement and was wonderfully happy on the yacht and those pleasurable holidays appeared to give him renewed life. Onassis, apart from being one of Churchill’s great admirers, enjoyed his company and could often be found in deep conversation with Churchill, listening to his views.

Aristotle Onassis’ yacht, Christina, off the coast of his private island of Skorpios, 1968. Photo credit Bettmann / Getty Images

While onboard the Christina, Churchill visited many locations, and it was on the yacht that he made his final visit to the United States in 1961. Onassis and his celebrated guest crossed the Atlantic from Gibraltar and cruised the West Indies before proceeding to New York City.

The Christina’s fame and allure as the original “superyacht” owes itself to such illustrious and glamorous guests as Maria Callas, The Begum of Aga Kahn, John Paul Getty, John D Rockefeller, Eva Peron, Richard Burton, Elizabeth Taylor, Marilyn Monroe, Frank Sinatra, Rudolf Nureyev, John Wayne, Greta Garbo, Dame Margot Fonteyn, Prince Rainier and Princess Grace, and John F Kennedy and Jacqueline Kennedy, later Jackie Onassis, whom first met Churchill on the Christina.

About the Artwork
The Moat, Breccles was first mentioned in “Painting as a Pastime,” an essay written by Sir Winston Churchill,
which was first published in The Strand Magazine, December 1921. Painting became his lifelong hobby and he
freely admitted that it revived his spirits and, as with writing, became an antidote to his frequent bouts of depression.
Churchill explained painting “as a means to relieve his mind from the demands of leadership.” He began with watercolor but soon applied himself to oils. The Moat, Breccles was one of several paintings personally selected by Churchill to be included in the essay and in 1964, was prominently featured in a film documentary, “The Other World of Winston Churchill” on the Christina.

Opening on 15 June, leading up to the auction, Phillips will recreate Aristotle Onassis’ iconic bar on the
Christina, affectionately known to its many guests as Ari’s Bar, in the auction house’s new headquarters at
432 Park Avenue, with The Moat, Breccles taking center stage.

N.B. Permission for the use of any image is granted by the holder of the intellectual property rights for timely reporting and auction review purposes only. The underlying intellectual property rights in any property depicted remain the property of the rights holder. Phillips does not make any representations with respect to or accept any responsibility for any third party uses.

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