Last year I wrote about my email exchange with Canon Edward Gardner from the Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest, based in Bayerisch Gmain, Germany, in which he told me about a commemorative plaque to Theodor Kern on the institute’s memorial wall, and about the recent purchase of two of Kern’s paintings by one of his fellow priests.
Just recently that priest, Father Andrew Marlborough, emailed to let me know about a ‘significant collection’ of Kern’s paintings being sold by a dealer in Salzburg – the same dealer from whom he had bought one of the pictures he now owns. Fr Andrew informed me that the paintings all come from a gallery that recently closed. They include some that have been shown in recent exhibitions and that I’ve written about on this site. One can’t help thinking that they should really be in a public gallery rather than private ownership. Fr Andrew has kindly sent me reproductions of the paintings and has given me permission to post them here.
The largest group among these paintings is a set of depictions of the Virgin and Child, one of Kern’s favourite subjects, while there are two semi-abstract pictures of the Nativity, one of which resembles other post-1950 paintings in Kern’s ‘Madonna Cycle’ and the other a design for a stained glass window. There are four completely abstract paintings, representing the range of styles with which Kern experimented in his later years. The street scene is one of the series that Kern painted during his sojourn in Sicily. The portrait of a young girl dates from 1920 and is featured in Karl Heinz Ritschel’s book about Kern. Like the auction at Roseberys mentioned in my last post, the collection includes a series of sketches for Stations of the Cross, while the depiction of the Crucifixion immediately below may also have been a sketch for an ecclesiastical commission.
For those who may be interested, the paintings are being sold by the Salzburg art dealer Robert Rath, who is in the process of downsizing prior to retirement. Telephone number: +43 650 5007130.
















Although he doesn’t say so in his emails to me, I’m fairly sure that Fr Andrew is the same Andrew Marlborough who was ordained in the diocese of Plymouth in 2022, after a number of years working in the art and antiques business, primarily in auctions. Interestingly, this is a background he shares with Fr Patrick Van Der Vorst, the founder of the popular Christian Art website, who before his ordination in 2023 worked for 25 years in the art trade, rising to the position of Director of Sotheby’s Europe.





















