Artwork by Berthe Des Clayes Wanted for Purchase and Consignment
For over 30 years Mayberry Fine Art has quietly brokered sales for countless Canadian and International works of art from private collections.
We provide complete services to confidentially assist you with the sale of complete collections or single works of art.
What to expect when selling or consigning your artwork with Mayberry Fine Art
- Use our Appraisal and Valuation form to send us details on the work(s) of art you may wish to sell. Some of the details we will need include.
- Artist Name
- Size (measurements)
- Date
- Signature
- When and where aquired
- Condition
- Good quality photograph
- After a fair market value has been agreed upon, we may need to examine the artwork for condition and authentication.
- In the case of larger works or collections which may be awkward to transport, we will visit your location to view the works.
- Crating and shipping is available when needed.
- Purchase options include outright purchase or consignment sale.
- Commission with regard to consignment sales is an agreed-upon percentage between Mayberry Fine Art and the seller. It is based on the value of the artwork. Commission on higher valued works can be as low as 5%.
- Unless specifically expressed otherwise all values and prices discussed or published are in Canadian funds.
Click here to complete the valuation form.
Berthe Des Clayes
1877 - 1968Born in Aberdeen, Scotland, in 1877, Berthe Des Clayes studied at the Bushey School of Art, Bushey England. She later attended the Académie Julian, in Paris. She returned to Britain and lived for a short time in London, England, before moving to Canada with her sister, Gertrude, in 1912. Their younger sister, Alice, also an artist, joined them two years later. They settled in Montreal, setting up a studio in Beaver Hall Square, a favourite haunt for artists and architects. Berthe travelled around England and France after the First World War. Throughout her life, she divided her time between England and Montreal and died in Devon, England in 1968.
Berthe Des Clayes was primarily a landscape painter, working in oils, watercolour and chalk pastels. Her style was impressionistic and she was a two-time winner of the Jessie Dow Prize. She participated in the Spring Exhibitions of the Montreal Museum of Fine Art and with the Royal Canadian Academy. Her works are represented in the collection of the National Gallery of Canada.



