No takers for £25,000 portrait of Nigel Farage
- Published
A £25,000 portrait of Nigel Farage, on display as part of the Royal Academy's prestigious summer exhibition, has failed to attract any buyers.
The oil painting, signed by the artist David Griffiths, was one of thousands of works of art available for sale during the Academy's 250th summer show, which closed on Tuesday.
The academy said the work would now return to the artist.
Mr Griffiths has said that he hoped it would "find a good home".
"These things ebb and flow," he said. "Prices of paintings like everything else, aren't set in stone. He is a major figure, whatever you think of him. He's Mr Brexit, isn't he?"
The commission was suggested by a mutual friend of the artist, whose other subjects have included Prince Charles and rugby star Shane Williams.
A key figure in the 2016 referendum campaign, Mr Farage has pledged to return to frontline British politics this autumn to fight for Brexit,
The portrait of the MEP and former UKIP leader, in his trademark tan-coloured coat and striped tie, was not the only politically-themed work not to find a buyer.
A £350m work by the artist Banksy entitled Vote to Love, featuring a heart-shaped balloon superimposed over a UKIP referendum poster, also remained unsold.
But a painting of another prominent Brexiteer, Conservative MP Jacob Rees-Mogg, did fetch £450. The portrait was the work of Paul Selley.