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Stealth House

Stealth House © SABAM Belgium 2018

United Kingdom, 1992

Oil on canvas, 199 x 250 cm

signed and dated (on the reverse)

Purchased from the artist in 1992


Born in Scotland, Peter Doig mostly grew up in Trinidad (where he now lives) and Canada before moving to London (1979) where he studied at the Wimbledon School of Art (1979–1980) and the St. Martin’s School of Art (1980–1983). After hesitant beginnings in Britain during which Doig was more focused on finding his marks and a voice than making a name for himself, successive moves back to Canada then Trinidad helped ground his practice. A humble artist, he was catapulted to success thanks to the art market. Indeed, in 2007, his painting White Canoe (1990-91) sold at auction for a record-breaking $7.5 million, making him at the time the most valuable painter in Europe (a title since claimed by Lucian Freud in 2011). Rather than celebrate, Doig was weary of what this symbolised regarding the art market’s scale, health and trajectory. His style is very personal. Unknowing about art before attending art school, Doig had little referents and carved his own lane for lack of aesthetic kinship or preferences. Part romantic part mystical, the painter’s fluid scenes possess a sense of dread and slight sadness. Stealth House embodies these qualities perfectly. The common landscape subject is rendered gloomy by the treatment of the trees, the crimson palette and sinuous lines that suggest the scene was painted after a potentially disastrous event.
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Stealth House

Peter DOIG

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  • 1982

    Piet Dankert

    Piet Dankert served as President of the European Parliament from 19 January 1982 until 24 July 1984.


    Acquisitions

    Acquisitions of artworks from The United Kingdom and Ireland.

  • 1983

    Acquisitions

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    Altiero Spinelli present the draft treaty on European Union.

  • 1984

    Second European elections

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    Pierre Pflimlin

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    EP report on European Union

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  • 1987

    Henry Plumb

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    Single European Act

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    It introduces the cooperation and assent procedures that for the first time give the EP a real say on legislation, and makes the name “European Parliament” official.

  • 1988

    Sakharov Prize

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    South African anti-apartheid activist and future president Nelson Mandela and late Soviet dissident Anatoly Marchenko are the first laureates.

  • 1989

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    Enrique Barón Crespo

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    2nd round of acquisitions

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    Continuation of the 2nd round of acquisitions: the Netherlands and the United Kingdom.

  • 1994

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    1994 European elections

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  • 1995

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  • 1997

    José María Gil-Robles

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  • 1999

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    Article 13.
    Freedom of the arts and sciences. The arts and scientific research shall be free of constraint. Academic freedom shall be respected.

    Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (2000/C 364/01)


    Acquisition programme

    3rd round of acquisitions with Austria, Finland and Sweden.

  • 2001

    National parliaments exhibiton in Brussels and Strasbourg. This exhibition was created at the initiative of President Gil Robles and was officially opened on 17 December 2001 by the then President Nicole Fontaine. It consists of works of art donated or loaned by 15 national parliaments.

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