Winston Churchill's 'most important' painting sells for £7m

Three of the former British leader's paintings sold for total of £9.4m at Christie's in London on Monday

FILE - In this Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2021 file photo, Christie's employees adjust an oil on canvas painting by Sir Winston Churchill painted in Jan. 1943 called 'Tower of the Koutoubia Mosque' during an Art pre-sale photo call at Christie's auction house in London. The Moroccan landscape painted by Winston Churchill and owned by Angelina Jolie sold at auction on Monday March 1, 2021, for more than $11.5 million, smashing the previous record for a work by Britain’s World War II leader. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein, File)
Powered by automated translation

A painting of Marrakesh by Britain's wartime prime minister Winston Churchill smashed expectations to sell for £7 million ($9.75m) at auction in London on Monday.

Churchill, a keen artist, took inspiration from the Moroccan city and painted Tower of the Koutoubia Mosque in oil during a visit in 1943.

He gave the finished article to fellow wartime leader, US president Franklin Roosevelt. On Monday, it was sold by Hollywood star Angelina Jolie.

Auction house Christie's called it "Churchill's most important work".

"Aside from its distinguished provenance, it is the only landscape he made" during the war, it said.

After frenzied bidding, much of it over the phone, the gavel eventually came down at £7m ($9.7m), smashing the pre-sale expectations of between £1.5m ($2.1m) and £2.5m ($3.5m).

Two more of his paintings also went under the hammer, with the three works together fetching £9.43m ($13.1m).

A career army officer before entering politics, Churchill started to paint relatively late, at the age of 40.

His passion for the translucent light of Marrakesh, far from the political storms and drab skies of London, dates to the 1930s when most of Morocco was a French protectorate.

He made six visits to the North African country over the course of 23 years.

"Here in these spacious palm groves rising from the desert the traveller can be sure of perennial sunshine ... and can contemplate with ceaseless satisfaction the stately and snow-clad panorama of the Atlas Mountains," Churchill wrote in 1936 in Britain's Daily Mail.

He would set up his easel on the balconies of the grandiose La Mamounia hotel or the city's Villa Taylor, beloved by the European jet set of the 1970s.

It was from the villa, after a historic January 1943 conference in Casablanca with Roosevelt and France's Charles de Gaulle, that he painted what came to be regarded as his finest work.

It was of the minaret behind the ramparts of the Old City, with mountains behind and tiny colourful figures in front.

"You cannot come all this way to North Africa without seeing Marrakesh," he is reputed to have told Roosevelt.

"I must be with you when you see the sun set on the Atlas Mountains."

A newspaper photograph taken at the time shows the two wartime Allied leaders admiring the sunset.

After the US delegation left, Churchill stayed on an extra day and painted the view of the Koutoubia Mosque framed by the mountains and sent it to Roosevelt for his birthday.

"This is Churchill's diplomacy at its most personal and intense," said Christie's head of modern British and Irish art, Nick Orchard.

"It is not an ordinary gift between leaders. This is soft power and it is what the special relationship is all about."

A second Churchill landscape, "Scene in Marrakech", painted on his first visit to Morocco in 1935, earlier sold for £1.5m.

That was painted while on a stay at La Mamounia, where he marvelled at the "truly remarkable panorama over the tops of orange trees and olives", in a letter to his wife Clementine.

Churchill's painting of London's St Paul's Cathedral sold for £880,000 ($1.2m).