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Christina Rees

Christina Rees

Director of Public Relations and Communications

CRees@HA.com
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Steve Lansdale

Senior Public Relations and Communications Specialist

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Rhonda Reinhart

Intelligent Collector Editor and Communications Specialist

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Press Release - November 6, 2025

Journeys Through Nature and Imagination Define Heritage’s November Fine European Art Auction

The Nov. 18 event celebrates landscape, travel and artistic discovery from the Barbizon pioneers to the Modernists

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Tobeen (Félix Bonnet) (French, 1880-1938)
DALLAS, Texas (Nov. 6, 2025) — Heritage invites collectors and connoisseurs to travel across centuries of European creativity in its Nov. 18 Fine European Art Signature® Auction, a sweeping event that celebrates the enduring beauty of the landscape and the spirit of exploration that has long defined European painting.

From the serene forest of Fontainebleau, in Barbizon, and the rugged hills of Wales to the sunlit shores of the Basque Country, the auction’s works chart an artistic journey through France, Britain and beyond. The auction unites artists who transformed the landscape into a medium of expression, among them Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot, Paul Huet, Sidney Richard Percy, William Stewart MacGeorge and Tobeen (Félix Bonnet), whose Paysage de Ciboure avec le chemin du vieux cimetière et le clocher graces the auction’s catalog cover.

“This is one of the most beautiful and cohesive European Art sales we’ve had in recent memory,” says Seth Armitage, Co-Director of European Art at Heritage Auctions. “It’s an invitation to travel, not only through geography but through time and artistic vision. These paintings remind us that, for generations of artists, the landscape was more than a subject. It was a revelation.”

Landscapes as Journeys: From Barbizon to the Scottish Coast

Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot (French, 1796-1875) Le torrent pierreux (crépuscule), circa 1865-1870
Landscape painting anchors this auction both thematically and historically. Painted in 1825, Paul Huet’s Goatherds Resting with Their Flockexplores the limestone caverns of the Ardèche and Auvergne southern regions of France and proved deeply influential to generations of French landscapists. The Barbizon School, whose artists abandoned their studios to paint directly from life around the Forest of Fontainebleau, established a foundation for modern art’s fascination with nature. Corot’s Le torrent pierreux (crepuscule) captures the immediacy and intimacy of rural France, where light and atmosphere become central protagonists.

British artists likewise embraced the call of the open air. Percy’s A Woodland Clearing, North Wales reveals the Romantic grandeur of the British countryside, while Scottish Impressionist William Stewart MacGeorge’s Summer on the shore translates sea breeze and sunlight into flickering color and texture. Each work becomes both an observation of nature and a meditation on travel — the act of leaving the studio, seeking discovery and finding poetry in the world beyond.

At the turn of the century, painters like Tobeen and Robert Antoine Pinchon carried this lineage forward, transforming plein-air naturalism into modern expression. Tobeen’s Paysage de Ciboure avec le chemin du vieux cimetière et le clocher marries Cubist structure with the lyricism of the Basque landscape, a testament to how travel can inspire reinvention.

Faces, Places, and Journeys Beyond the Horizon

Daniel Ridgway Knight (American, 1839-1924). Jeune fille mettant caraco, or Lavandière, 1889
Beyond landscape, the sale captures the spirit of those who lived with the land, from Daniel Ridgway Knight’s Jeune fille mettant des fleurs à son corsage, an ode to pastoral labor in rural France, to Victor Pierre Huguet’s luminous At the Oasis, Algeria, which reflects the late 19th century’s fascination with North Africa.

The fantastical joins the voyage in John Simmons’ There sleeps Titania, a masterpiece of Victorian fairy painting that whisks viewers into Shakespeare’s dreamscape. Georges Jules Victor Clairin’s Study for the ceiling of the Eden Theater, Paris offers a soaring vision of Belle Époque grandeur, a reminder that artistic imagination can also lean toward opulence. Together, these works illustrate how European artists, from the forest floor to the celestial ceiling, redefined the boundaries of the real and the imagined.

“So many paintings in this auction are a testament to the powerful result of working directly from nature while immersed in it,” says Marianne Berardi, Co-Director of European Art at Heritage Auctions. “Whether portraying an ancient stand of trees in the French countryside, craggy dunes on the Firth of Forth or mythic worlds, these artists translated the specificity of their individual experience into a new conception of painting. And paradoxically, the more precisely they recorded the particulars of place, weather and time of day, the more profoundly universal their vision seemed to be.”

A Panoramic View of European Art

Complementing the landscape and travel theme is a broad survey of genres and eras: Old Master drawings, oils and prints from Dürer to Rembrandt, to detailed views of 19th-century daily life by Victor Gilbert and Joseph Bail, while Francois Brunery, Ferdinand Heilbuth and Henry Somm reveal visions of the Belle Époque. Adding to the vibrant diversity of the sale is a group of Modernist paintings by the Fauvre painter Henri Charles Manguin, the avant-garde Jean-Pierre Cassigneul and Le Pho, known for his delicate fusion of traditional Vietnamese themes with French Impressionist technique. The result is an auction that invites collectors to experience Europe as the artists themselves did, one brushstroke and journey at a time.

Heritage’s Fine European Art Signature® Auction will be held Nov. 18, 2025, in Dallas and online here, where the auction is now open for bidding.

An auction preview takes place, by appointment, at Heritage’s Dallas headquarters Nov. 13-14 and 17. Please go here and scroll down for more information.

Heritage Auctions is the largest fine art and collectibles auction house founded in the United States, and the world's largest collectibles auctioneer. Heritage maintains offices in New York, Dallas, Beverly Hills, Chicago, Palm Beach, London, Paris, Amsterdam, Brussels, Hong Kong and Tokyo.

Heritage also enjoys the highest Online traffic and dollar volume of any auction house on earth (source: SimilarWeb and Hiscox Report). The Internet's most popular auction-house website, HA.com, has more than 2 million registered bidder-members and searchable free archives of 7,000,000 past auction records with prices realized, descriptions and enlargeable photos. Reproduction rights routinely granted to media for photo credit.

For breaking stories, follow us: HA.com/Facebook and HA.com/Twitter . Link to this release or view prior press releases .

Hi-Res images available:
Christina Rees, Director of Public Relations and Communications
214-409-1341; CRees@HA.com