
Description
Ships That Pass In the Night RMS Titanic Under Nocturnal Moon with RMS Olympic
Description
Title “Ships That Pass In the Night” RMS Titanic Under Full Nocturnal Moon with RMS Olympic White Star Line Liner in the Distance by Andrew Grant Kurtis
Subject & Medium
A large dramatic marine mastrepiece painting, collector-grade moonlit maritime nocturne depicting RMS Titanic underway on calm Atlantic waters, her illuminated presence cutting through an inky, reflective sea. In the far distance a second White Star Line liner—RMS Olympic, Titanic’s near-identical sister ship—appears on the horizon, lending the scene an added layer of historic romance and connoisseurship.
Medium: Oil on canvas (late 20th century modern depiction)
Style / School: Contemporary traditional / academic realism within marine painting, treated as a nocturne—romantic, nostalgic historicism emphasising atmosphere, tonal contrast, and reflective light on water ️
Composition & Technique
This is a painting built around light, distance, and stillness—the three pillars of a great nocturne. Kurtis places the moon high in a veil of broken cloud, allowing soft, silvery illumination to fall in a long path across the water. The sea is handled with layered, confident brushwork: deep blue-black passages are lifted by shimmering strokes that catch the moonlight, creating that hypnotic rhythm of night water.
Titanic’s silhouette is composed with strong architectural clarity—hull mass, superstructure, and funnels reading cleanly against the sky—while tiny points of deck illumination provide scale and grandeur. RMS Olympic, set back into the haze of distance, is deliberately quieter and softened by atmospheric perspective, so the viewer experiences her almost like an echo: two White Star giants sharing the same ocean under the same moon.
The overall effect is refined rather than sensational—elegiac, composed, and intensely decorative in the best sense.
About the Ship
RMS Titanic was an Olympic-class White Star Line liner built at Harland & Wolff, Belfast, celebrated in 1912 as a pinnacle of Edwardian engineering and luxury. In this painting she is presented in her most iconic guise: purposeful, steady, and monumental under moonlight—an image of modernity and aspiration.
Importantly, Kurtis includes RMS Olympic on the horizon. Olympic was Titanic’s near-identical sister ship and the lead vessel of the Olympic-class, enjoying a long, successful transatlantic career and becoming one of the best-known liners of her era. Olympic’s presence here subtly expands the narrative: Titanic’s brief, mythic moment is set against the broader White Star legacy and the full sweep of the great ocean-liner age.
Historical Significance
On her maiden voyage from Southampton to New York in April 1912, Titanic struck an iceberg and sank in the early hours of 15 April 1912, with the loss of more than 1,500 lives. The tragedy reshaped maritime regulation and safety standards and has remained—over a century later—a touchstone of collective memory across literature, film, museum culture, and collecting.
Kurtis’s nocturne treatment is especially effective because moonlight naturally suggests themes of fate, distance, and silence. It is icon and elegy in one image—achievement illuminated, history quietly implied. ️
About the Artist
Andrew Grant Kurtis (British, b. 1950) is a contemporary painter known for atmospheric landscapes, cityscapes, and especially nocturnes, executed in a traditional realist manner. His strength lies in tonal control—how he builds darkness without deadening it—and in orchestrating reflected light so it feels natural, not staged.
Here, the palette is confidently restrained: cool blues, smoky greys, and silvery highlights that appear to float across the water. The result has a cinematic presence while remaining classically structured—exactly what high-end collectors look for in a statement maritime nocturne.
Signed
Signed lower left: “A. Grant Kurtis”
Framed
Presented in a substantial, heavy gilt wood frame with applied rococo-style ornamentation. The weight and depth of the carved timber profile give the piece a true “gallery wall” authority, while the gilt finish amplifies the nocturne palette and makes the moonlit highlights read with greater richness in the room.
Dimensions Framed : 120.7 cm (W) × 100.5 cm (H) × 10.5 cm (D)
Provenance
Commissioned directly from the artist, the painting then entered a private Wiltshire collection, later carrying evidence of theatrical association/handling, including a handwritten label reading: “Ships That Pass in the Night (Renegades Theatre) Ilford”, together with white chalk inventory/handling markings including “523” and further chalk notations to the reverse framing members.
It was subsequently sold via a notable southern shire auction house
Exhibition History
Loan exhibition: Famous Lord Hill Museum, January 2026
Exhibition title: “Moonlit Giants: Titanic & the Great Ocean Liners”
Connoisseurship / Dealer’s Opinion
In the opinion of Cheshire Antiques Consultant LTD, this painting represents one of Andrew Grant Kurtis’s finest and most visually commanding works, distinguished by its monumental scale, accomplished nocturne handling, and—above all—the exceptional historical resonance of its subject.
The depiction of RMS Titanic, arguably the most iconic ocean liner of the modern era, elevates the composition beyond a conventional maritime scene and positions it as a significant collector’s piece within both the fine art field and the specialist Titanic / White Star Line collecting world.
Why You’ll Love It
Museum-wall presence — monumental scale with immediate room-anchoring impact
Exceptional nocturne atmosphere — moonlight, reflection, and tonal sophistication that rewards long looking
Titanic + Olympic narrative depth — the horizon liner enriches the White Star story and adds connoisseur appeal
Cross-collecting desirability — fine art collectors and Titanic/White Star specialists converge on works like this
High-end presentation — a heavy gilt wood frame that delivers true collector-level finish
This is the rare combination of decorative power and historical gravitas: the kind of painting that becomes the conversation piece, then the legacy piece.
Condition Report
Overall: Good decorative condition, with the painting presenting strongly and reading cleanly at normal viewing distance. Frame: The ornate gilt frame has had various repairs and shows chips/losses and areas of cracking in places, commensurate with age and usage. It has been recently overpainted, consistent with restorative enhancement to maintain its strong display impact.
Reserve: $8,910.00
Shipping:Domestic: Shipping rates are determined by destination International: Foreign shipping rates are determined by destination. International shipping may be subject to VAT. Combined shipping: Please ask about combined shipping for multiple lots before bidding. Location: This item ships from United Kingdom
Your purchase is protected:
In the rare event that the item did not conform to the lot description in the sale, Chairish Auctions specialists are here to help. Buyers may return the item for a full refund provided you notify Chairish Auctions within 5 days of receiving the item.
Description
Title “Ships That Pass In the Night” RMS Titanic Under Full Nocturnal Moon with RMS Olympic White Star Line Liner in the Distance by Andrew Grant Kurtis
Subject & Medium
A large dramatic marine mastrepiece painting, collector-grade moonlit maritime nocturne depicting RMS Titanic underway on calm Atlantic waters, her illuminated presence cutting through an inky, reflective sea. In the far distance a second White Star Line liner—RMS Olympic, Titanic’s near-identical sister ship—appears on the horizon, lending the scene an added layer of historic romance and connoisseurship.
Medium: Oil on canvas (late 20th century modern depiction)
Style / School: Contemporary traditional / academic realism within marine painting, treated as a nocturne—romantic, nostalgic historicism emphasising atmosphere, tonal contrast, and reflective light on water ️
Composition & Technique
This is a painting built around light, distance, and stillness—the three pillars of a great nocturne. Kurtis places the moon high in a veil of broken cloud, allowing soft, silvery illumination to fall in a long path across the water. The sea is handled with layered, confident brushwork: deep blue-black passages are lifted by shimmering strokes that catch the moonlight, creating that hypnotic rhythm of night water.
Titanic’s silhouette is composed with strong architectural clarity—hull mass, superstructure, and funnels reading cleanly against the sky—while tiny points of deck illumination provide scale and grandeur. RMS Olympic, set back into the haze of distance, is deliberately quieter and softened by atmospheric perspective, so the viewer experiences her almost like an echo: two White Star giants sharing the same ocean under the same moon.
The overall effect is refined rather than sensational—elegiac, composed, and intensely decorative in the best sense.
About the Ship
RMS Titanic was an Olympic-class White Star Line liner built at Harland & Wolff, Belfast, celebrated in 1912 as a pinnacle of Edwardian engineering and luxury. In this painting she is presented in her most iconic guise: purposeful, steady, and monumental under moonlight—an image of modernity and aspiration.
Importantly, Kurtis includes RMS Olympic on the horizon. Olympic was Titanic’s near-identical sister ship and the lead vessel of the Olympic-class, enjoying a long, successful transatlantic career and becoming one of the best-known liners of her era. Olympic’s presence here subtly expands the narrative: Titanic’s brief, mythic moment is set against the broader White Star legacy and the full sweep of the great ocean-liner age.
Historical Significance
On her maiden voyage from Southampton to New York in April 1912, Titanic struck an iceberg and sank in the early hours of 15 April 1912, with the loss of more than 1,500 lives. The tragedy reshaped maritime regulation and safety standards and has remained—over a century later—a touchstone of collective memory across literature, film, museum culture, and collecting.
Kurtis’s nocturne treatment is especially effective because moonlight naturally suggests themes of fate, distance, and silence. It is icon and elegy in one image—achievement illuminated, history quietly implied. ️
About the Artist
Andrew Grant Kurtis (British, b. 1950) is a contemporary painter known for atmospheric landscapes, cityscapes, and especially nocturnes, executed in a traditional realist manner. His strength lies in tonal control—how he builds darkness without deadening it—and in orchestrating reflected light so it feels natural, not staged.
Here, the palette is confidently restrained: cool blues, smoky greys, and silvery highlights that appear to float across the water. The result has a cinematic presence while remaining classically structured—exactly what high-end collectors look for in a statement maritime nocturne.
Signed
Signed lower left: “A. Grant Kurtis”
Framed
Presented in a substantial, heavy gilt wood frame with applied rococo-style ornamentation. The weight and depth of the carved timber profile give the piece a true “gallery wall” authority, while the gilt finish amplifies the nocturne palette and makes the moonlit highlights read with greater richness in the room.
Dimensions Framed : 120.7 cm (W) × 100.5 cm (H) × 10.5 cm (D)
Provenance
Commissioned directly from the artist, the painting then entered a private Wiltshire collection, later carrying evidence of theatrical association/handling, including a handwritten label reading: “Ships That Pass in the Night (Renegades Theatre) Ilford”, together with white chalk inventory/handling markings including “523” and further chalk notations to the reverse framing members.
It was subsequently sold via a notable southern shire auction house
Exhibition History
Loan exhibition: Famous Lord Hill Museum, January 2026
Exhibition title: “Moonlit Giants: Titanic & the Great Ocean Liners”
Connoisseurship / Dealer’s Opinion
In the opinion of Cheshire Antiques Consultant LTD, this painting represents one of Andrew Grant Kurtis’s finest and most visually commanding works, distinguished by its monumental scale, accomplished nocturne handling, and—above all—the exceptional historical resonance of its subject.
The depiction of RMS Titanic, arguably the most iconic ocean liner of the modern era, elevates the composition beyond a conventional maritime scene and positions it as a significant collector’s piece within both the fine art field and the specialist Titanic / White Star Line collecting world.
Why You’ll Love It
Museum-wall presence — monumental scale with immediate room-anchoring impact
Exceptional nocturne atmosphere — moonlight, reflection, and tonal sophistication that rewards long looking
Titanic + Olympic narrative depth — the horizon liner enriches the White Star story and adds connoisseur appeal
Cross-collecting desirability — fine art collectors and Titanic/White Star specialists converge on works like this
High-end presentation — a heavy gilt wood frame that delivers true collector-level finish
This is the rare combination of decorative power and historical gravitas: the kind of painting that becomes the conversation piece, then the legacy piece.
Condition Report
Overall: Good decorative condition, with the painting presenting strongly and reading cleanly at normal viewing distance. Frame: The ornate gilt frame has had various repairs and shows chips/losses and areas of cracking in places, commensurate with age and usage. It has been recently overpainted, consistent with restorative enhancement to maintain its strong display impact.
Reserve: $8,910.00
Shipping:
Your purchase is protected:
In the rare event that the item did not conform to the lot description in the sale, Chairish Auctions specialists are here to help. Buyers may return the item for a full refund provided you notify Chairish Auctions within 5 days of receiving the item.
Condition
Used
Buyer's Premium
20%
Ships That Pass In the Night RMS Titanic Under Nocturnal Moon with RMS Olympic
Estimate $11,000-$13,000
Starting Price
$7,000
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Marine & Naval Art Auction - Nautical Artwork
May 14, 2026 6:00 PM EDTNew York, NY, United States
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