Christie's Impressionist &
Modern Art Evening Sale held on June 24, 2015 realised £71,461,000 with strong
sell-through rates of 84% by lot and 92% by value.
Bidders from 32 countries across 5 continents
competed in the room and on the telephone for works including Claude Monet and Pablo Picasso. In
total, 24 works of art sold for over £1 million / 29 for over $1 million.
Jay Vincze, International Director and
Head of The Impressionist & Modern Art Department, Christie's London said
that sale saw notable demand for highly covetable works by the masters of late
19th and 20th century art, led by Claude Monet's remarkable ‘Iris mauves'. Once
again, this auction attracted global participation from bidders around the
world, further evidencing the deep international demand for the category
witnessed in our New York Sales in May. This resulted in strong prices across
the full breadth of the category, from the birth of Impressionism - illustrated
by the rare 1872 work by Alfred Sisley - to the energy of the late 1969
portrait by Pablo Picasso.
The sale was led by Iris mauves,
1914-1917, by Claude Monet which sold, after four minutes of head-to-head
bidding, for £10,834,500 (estimate: £6-9 million). Offered from a Private
European Collection this work dates from the artist's first concerted campaign
of work on the most ambitious undertaking of his career: the Grandes
decorations.
Further leading highlights of the sale:
- Painted on 14 December 1969, "Tête" by Pablo Picasso sold for
£4,450,500 (estimate: £4.8-6.5 million). A youthful masculine portrait - an
alter ego of the artist's late work - this painting was included in the last
major lifetime exhibition of Picasso's work, held in May-October 1970 at the
Palais des Papes in Avignon.
A highly charged, sensuous
celebration of the Parisian demi-monde in the first decade of the 20th century,
Anita en almée by Kees van Dongen, 1908, sold for £4,114,500 (estimate: £4-7
million). -La tige de la fleur rouge pousse vers la lune (The Stem of the Red
Flower Grows Toward the Moon) by Joan Miró (1893- 1983), painted in 1952, a
pivotal year in the artist's oeuvre when he created some of his most
revolutionary and acclaimed pictures, sold for £3,778,500 (estimate: £3.5-4.5
million). and "Marseille, Le Port", 1934, by Paul Signac realised
£3,666,500 (estimate: £2-3 million). Depicting one of Signac's favourite
subjects, a maritime scene, this is an exuberant painting that bursts with
radiant light and movement that captures the bustling port of Marseille.
"Bouquet près de la fenêtre"
by Marc Chagall, painted from 1959 to 1960, realised £3,218,500 (estimate:
£2.5-3.5 million). Acquired by the family of the present owner 35 years ago
from Galerie Maeght in Paris, this monumental work has been identified as one
of the finest flower paintings of this period by the author of the artist's
definitive biography and catalogue raisonné, Franz Meyer.
"Après le bain, femme s'essuyant
la jambe" (le peignoir rouge) executed by Edgar Degas (1834-1917) circa
1893,went for £2,882,500. "Chevauchée céleste",
painted in 1957 by Salvador Dali sold for £2,882,500. "The 'Laakmolen'
near The Hague" (The Windmill), executed by Vincent Van gogh in The Hague in
July 1882 fetched £2,322,500 and
"Le Potager" painted in 1872 by Alfred Sisley (1839-1899) was hammered down at £2,210,500.