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A multimillion-dollar trove of works by artists including J.M.W. Turner, Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud and Winston Churchill that were owned by poet T.S. Eliot’s widow will be sold in London later this year, Christie’s auction house announced Friday.
Valerie Eliot, who died in November aged 86, bought the artworks with royalties from the hit Andrew Lloyd Webber musical “Cats,” which was based on her husband’s volume of light verse “Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats.”

The musical proved more lucrative than Eliot’s poetry, and allowed his widow to assemble a collection of British art valued at more than 5 million pounds ($7.6 million) in the London home she had shared with her husband.
Orlando Rock, deputy chairman of Christie’s Europe, said Valerie Eliot bought art as “a celebration of the best of British” and a tribute to her U.S.-born husband, who had become a beloved British poet by the time he died in 1965.
“It was done on a very domestic scale,” Rock said. “It all fitted into the flat they lived in ... and became almost a shrine to everything T.S. Eliot had achieved.”
The collection includes drawings and watercolors by 18th- and 19th-century British artists such as Turner, Thomas Gainsborough and John Constable, whose landscape “Helmingham Dell, Suffolk” is valued by Christie’s at between 300,000 and 500,000 pounds.
Eliot’s rich trove of 20th-century art includes valuable works by sculptors Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth and painters Bacon, Freud, David Hockney and L.S. Lowry, a popular chronicler of working-class urban life. Lowry’s seaside painting “Deal Sands” is on sale with an estimate of 150,000 pounds to 200,000 pounds.
There’s also a self-portrait by Stanley Spencer, which the artist sold at a village fair in the 1950s for 11 pounds, now valued at between 200,000 pounds and 300,000 pounds.
“The Cathedral, Hackwood Park,” a tree-lined landscape by Churchill, is expected to fetch between 200,000 pounds and 300,000 pounds.
The sale also includes a collection of portrait miniatures from the 16th through the 19th centuries, and pieces of jewelry and furniture.
Valerie met T.S. Eliot at London publisher Faber & Faber, where the Nobel literature laureate was a director and she a star-struck secretary who had been a fan of his work since her teenage years.
They married in 1957. After the poet’s death, Valerie spent almost four decades as guardian of his literary legacy.
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Articles by Korea Herald