Investing

Signs of Strength and Weakness in Christie’s 20th-Century and Newhouse Sales

The first auctions to kick-start the major May sales in New York revealed a mixed picture for the market’s strength during a time of higher interest rates and continued economic uncertainty. 

Consider results for two major paintings by
Pablo Picasso
at Christie’s 20th-century evening auction.

Nature morte à la fenêtre, an early work of the artist’s lover and muse Marie-Thérèse Walter sold for US$36 million, nearly US$42 million with fees, while another painting of Marie-Thérèse from 1938, Femme assise au chapeau de paille (Marie-Thérèse), couldn’t catch a bid above US$18.5 million (below US$20 million low estimate) and so, wasn’t sold.

Neither painting had a presale guarantee from the auction house or a third party. 

A third Picasso, L’Arlésienne (Lee Miller), painted in 1937, sold for nearly US$24.6 million, with fees, during a dedicated sale of 16 works (all guaranteed) from the collection of media scion S.I. Newhouse. The final result for the Picasso was within an estimate range between US$20 million and US$30 million. Presale estimates do not include fees. 

Overall, the 20th-century sale was 86% sold by lot, with 10 works failing to find buyers. In all, the sale realized nearly US$329 million, Christie’s said. 

The Newhouse auction, chock full of masterpieces, fared far better, with 100% of lots sold, led by Francis Bacon’s 1969 Self-Portrait, which sold for US$34.6 million, and Willem de Kooning’s Orestes, 1947, which realized nearly US$31 million. Both sales figures include fees. In all the sale brought in nearly US$178 million.

The 20th-century auction included some major sales, including the top lot of the night—Henri Rousseau’s Les Flamants, 1910, which shattered the artist’s three-decade record of US$4.4 million by selling above its high estimate for US$37.5 million after nearly eight minutes of intense bidding. The total with fees was US$43.5 million. 

It also included some spirited bidding for paintings by Pierre-Auguste Renoir. Square de la Trinité, 1878-1879, sold for US$11.9 million, with fees, nearly double a high estimate of US$6 million, after more than six minutes of bidding, while La Seine à Argenteuil, 1888, sold for US$4.5 million, with fees, above a high estimate of US$1.5 million. 

Square de la Trinité was from the estate of Sophie Danforth, a collection that throughout the evening achieved US$23.8 million. The total included the sale of Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec’s Au cirque: Éléphant en liberté, 1899, a drawing that achieved US$2.7 million, far above a US$600,000 high estimate, and Francisco de Goya y Lucientes’ A horse covering a she-donkey, while straddling a monk riding it, which achieved US$3.2 million, with fees, above a US$1.2 million high estimate. 

The sale also proved the value of good provenance in results for works by David Hockney and Georgia O’Keeffe from the collection of the late Microsoft co-founder
Paul Allen.
 

O’Keeffe’s Black Iris VI, 1936, sold for US$21.1 million, with fees, sailing past a US$7 million high estimate, while White Calico Rose, 1930, sold for US$13 million, above a US$8 million high estimate. 

Hockney’s Early Blossom, Woldgate, 2009, sold for US$19.4 million, with fees, above a US$7 million high estimate, while The Gate, 2000, sold for US$14.7 million, with fees, above an US$8 million high estimate. Felled Trees, 2009, sold for US$10.8 million, with fees, above a US$6 million high estimate. 

In all, the Allen collection achieved nearly US$89 million Thursday evening. 

The estate of the late Chicago commodities trader Alan Press and his wife, Dorothy, which included nine works in the 20th-century sale, achieved nearly US$44.5 million. The collection included Ed Ruscha’s Burning Gas Station, 1966-69, which realized US$22.3 million, within a presale estimate range, and Henri Matisse’s Jeune fille accoudée, 1947, which fetched US$1.6 million, above a US$700,00 high estimate. 

Other highlights of the Newhouse auction included Cy Twombly’s Untitled (Bolsena), which achieved nearly US$20 million, with fees, within presale expectations, and Picasso’s Cafetière, tasse et pipe, 1911, which sold for US$11.3 million, with fees, also within expectations. 

Among works that failed to find buyers was Yves Klein’s Anthropométrie sans titre, (ANT 80), with an estimate range between US$8 million and US$12 million, Fernand Leger’s Femme portant une statuette, with an estimate between US$5 million and US$8 million, and Picasso’s Bougie et masque, with an estimate between US$1.5 million and US$2.5 million. 

Read the full article here

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Videos

Watch full video on YouTube

Videos

Watch full video on YouTube

Videos

Watch full video on YouTube

News

Introduction One of the interesting elements of preferred shares in Canada is that some of the issues (and then predominantly preferred equity issued by...

Copyright © 2023 Repay Down. All Rights Reserved.

Exit mobile version