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News
CHRISTIE'S POST-WAR AND CONTEMPORARY ART SALE REACHES RECORD TOTAL
15 November 2012 Catégorie : MARKET
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Christie's Post-War and Contemporary Art sale held in New York on November 14, 2012 became the most valuable auction ever in the category, at $412,253,100 (£259,719,453/ €321,557,418) with several world record prices registered for several famous artists. Bidders from around the world convened in the saleroom to compete for the sale's exceptional roster of works by the top artists of the category, including Andy Warhol, Franz Kline, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Mark Rothko, Jeff Koons, and Roy Lichtenstein, among others. Eight new auction records were established, 11 works sold for over $10 million, 16 for over $5 million and 56 for over $1 million. The sale was 93% sold by value and 92% sold by lot. "This evening's sale set a new record total for any Post-War and Contemporary Art sale. Over the past six years, Christie's has led this market first over the $200 million, then over the $300 million, and now over the $400 million barrier," said Brett Gorvy, Chairman and International Head of Post-War and Contemporary Art. "We curated the sale around a rich variety of the highest quality works and most coveted artists in order to serve our broad international base of collectors in their quest to find the next iconic work, whether it is Pop Art, Abstract Expressionism, or cutting-edge contemporary." He added Andy Warhol shone throughout the sale and the results confirm that he remains the dominant star of the contemporary art market. The epicenter of the sale was his 3-D Statue of Liberty, which achieved $43,762,500 (£27,570,375/ €34,134,750). The iconic Statue of Liberty was part of his seminal Death and Disaster series and was one of the most important pictures by the artist ever to come to auction. Warhol's Lady Liberty is a symbol of hope painted at a time of crisis in America. It is a famous icon of the American dream, alongside Warhol's most popular American subjects such as the Coca-Cola bottle, the Campbell's soup cans, and his Marilyn and Elvis portraits. Statue of Liberty is also a pioneering example of 3-D painting, the first of its kind. The sale offered one of the most famous of Warhol's portraits of Hollywood celebrities, a powerful, brooding portrait of Marlon Brando from 1966 which sold for $23,714,500 (£14,940,135/ € 18,497,310) after a nine minute bidding battle. Marlon is an unforgettable image of a leather-clad Marlon Brando resting on his Triumph Thunderbird motorbike from a publicity still taken for the 1953 movie, The Wild One. Among the other highlights, "Nude with Red Shirt" by Roy Lichtenstein sold to a bidder on the phone for $28,082,500 (£17,691,975/ €21,904,350), far exceeding its estimate of $12-18 million. The work marked the artist's triumphal return to comic-book sources from the 1960s, which defined him as one of the major painters of the twentieth century. It was the highest price fetched for a post-1960s work by the artist. The sale included the most important flock of sheep by French artist François-Xavier Lalanne ever to come to market, from the East Hampton estate of Adelaide de Menil and her late husband, Edmund Carpenter. Conceived by the artist in 1965 and acquired directly from Alexander Iolas in 1976, this flock of eight standing sheep and sixteen grazing sheep, as well as an extremely rare black sheep sold for $5,682,500 (£3,579,975/ €4,432,350). Yves Klein, another master of French Post-War art, was represented this season by "Accord Bleu" (Sponge Relief), one of his earliest celebrated sponge reliefs. Unseen on the market since 1960, "Accord Bleu" sold for $7,586,500 (£4,779,495/ €5,917,470), was consigned by the Brooklyn Museum. All proceeds from the sale will be directed to the creation of a board- designated fund for the purchase of work by contemporary artists. The Schulhof name is one that has resonated in the international art community for over sixty years and has come to signify the passion and exceptional connoisseurship of two of the greatest collectors of their time, Hannelore and Rudolph Schulhof. The couple created an unrivalled collection of paintings, sculpture and works on paper that captured not only the momentous changes that were happening within the art world, but also demonstrated their personal commitment to supporting both the careers of artists and also the museum community. 100% of the ten works from the collection included in the evening sale were sold for a totaled of $18,950,600. The Schulhof's vision extended from the powerful elegance of Richard Serra's "Schulhof's Curve" which realized $2,882,500 (£1,815,975/ €2,248,350) and set a world auction record for the artist, and the striking Ellsworth Kelly's outdoor sculpture fetched $3,778,500 (£2,380,455/ €2,947,230) to Agnes Martin's spiritual minimalism, with Untitled #7 sold for $4,002,500 (£2,521,575/ €3,121,950). Douglas S. Cramer is one of the most successful production executives in television history. He has been responsible for producing and developing many of the defining programs on U.S.television from the 1960s through the 1980s. Cramer exemplifies an art connoisseur with an incredible curiosity and passion for the new, while being faithful to the leading artists of the late 20th century – many of whom he has counted as his close friends. This first part of the collection totalled $18,617,000 and was led by major artists including Ellsworth Kelly's "Orange, Blue I", which sold for $3,218,500 (£2,027,655/ €2,510,430), and Mark Grotjahn's Untitled (Red Butterfly II Yellow), which sold for $4,170,500 (£2,627,415/ €3,252,990) and broke the world auction record price for the artist. Cramer has also been a passionate collector of works on paper, with works as diverse as Willem de Kooning, Roy Lichtenstein, Frank Stella, David Hockney and Marlene Dumas which is being sold in the afternoon session of the Post-War and Contemporary Day sale, November 15th . After the tremendous records achieved last season for Alexander Calder, Christie's was pleased to offer an exceptional array of seven innovative sculptures from the 1920s to the 1960s, which reflects the artist's diverse and prolific career. Created in 1928, the figure of the Policeman made entirely from wire was sold for the auction record price for a wire sculpture by the artist at $4,226,500 (£2,662,695/ €3,296,670). This 1928 work demonstrates Calder's debt to his time working as an illustrator and caricaturist for publications including New York's National Police Gazette. He subtly exaggerates the essential few features of the policeman's dress and physiognomy for comic effect. Christie's holds the overall world record prices for work by Alexander Calder, including standing mobile, hanging mobile, outdoor sculpture, wire sculpture, and jewelry by the artist. ARTISTS' WORLD AUCTION RECORDS Lot 12 Richard Serra Schulhof's Curve, 1984. Sold $2,882,500 Lot 17 Franz Kline Untitled, 1957. Sold $40,402,500 Lot 19 Richard Diebenkorn Ocean Park # 48, 1971. Sold: $13,522,500 Lot 38 Jeff Koons Tulips 1995-2004. Sold $33,682,500 Lot 41 George Condo The Manhattan Strip Club, 2010. Sold $1,314,500 Lot 42 Jean-Michel Basquiat Untitled, 1981. Sold $26,402,500 Lot 49 Mark Grotjahn Untitled (Red Butterfly II Yellow…). Sold $4,170,500 Lot 58 Donald Judd Untitled, 1989 (Bernstein 89-24), 1989. Sold $10,162,500 RECORDS FOR THE MEDIUM Lot 2 Alexander Calder Policeman, 1928. Sold $4,226,500 Record for a Wire Sculpture by the Artist Lot 4 Jean Dubuffet La Congratule, 1962. Sold $1,684,100 Record for a Work on Paper by the Artist Lot 34 Cy Twombly Untitled, 1945. Sold $5,010,500 Record for a Work on Paper by the Artist Lot 37 Jean-Michel Basquiat Untitled, 1983. Sold $3,666,500 Record for a Work on Paper by the Artist
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Christie's Post-War and Contemporary Art sale held in New York on November 14, 2012 became the most valuable auction ever in the category, at $412,253,100 (£259,719,453/ €321,557,418) with several world record prices registered for several famous artists. Bidders from around the world convened in the saleroom to compete for the sale's exceptional roster of works by the top artists of the category, including Andy Warhol, Franz Kline, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Mark Rothko, Jeff Koons, and Roy Lichtenstein, among others. Eight new auction records were established, 11 works sold for over $10 million, 16 for over $5 million and 56 for over $1 million. The sale was 93% sold by value and 92% sold by lot. "This evening's sale set a new record total for any Post-War and Contemporary Art sale. Over the past six years, Christie's has led this market first over the $200 million, then over the $300 million, and now over the $400 million barrier," said Brett Gorvy, Chairman and International Head of Post-War and Contemporary Art. "We curated the sale around a rich variety of the highest quality works and most coveted artists in order to serve our broad international base of collectors in their quest to find the next iconic work, whether it is Pop Art, Abstract Expressionism, or cutting-edge contemporary." He added Andy Warhol shone throughout the sale and the results confirm that he remains the dominant star of the contemporary art market. The epicenter of the sale was his 3-D Statue of Liberty, which achieved $43,762,500 (£27,570,375/ €34,134,750). The iconic Statue of Liberty was part of his seminal Death and Disaster series and was one of the most important pictures by the artist ever to come to auction. Warhol's Lady Liberty is a symbol of hope painted at a time of crisis in America. It is a famous icon of the American dream, alongside Warhol's most popular American subjects such as the Coca-Cola bottle, the Campbell's soup cans, and his Marilyn and Elvis portraits. Statue of Liberty is also a pioneering example of 3-D painting, the first of its kind. The sale offered one of the most famous of Warhol's portraits of Hollywood celebrities, a powerful, brooding portrait of Marlon Brando from 1966 which sold for $23,714,500 (£14,940,135/ € 18,497,310) after a nine minute bidding battle. Marlon is an unforgettable image of a leather-clad Marlon Brando resting on his Triumph Thunderbird motorbike from a publicity still taken for the 1953 movie, The Wild One. Among the other highlights, "Nude with Red Shirt" by Roy Lichtenstein sold to a bidder on the phone for $28,082,500 (£17,691,975/ €21,904,350), far exceeding its estimate of $12-18 million. The work marked the artist's triumphal return to comic-book sources from the 1960s, which defined him as one of the major painters of the twentieth century. It was the highest price fetched for a post-1960s work by the artist. The sale included the most important flock of sheep by French artist François-Xavier Lalanne ever to come to market, from the East Hampton estate of Adelaide de Menil and her late husband, Edmund Carpenter. Conceived by the artist in 1965 and acquired directly from Alexander Iolas in 1976, this flock of eight standing sheep and sixteen grazing sheep, as well as an extremely rare black sheep sold for $5,682,500 (£3,579,975/ €4,432,350). Yves Klein, another master of French Post-War art, was represented this season by "Accord Bleu" (Sponge Relief), one of his earliest celebrated sponge reliefs. Unseen on the market since 1960, "Accord Bleu" sold for $7,586,500 (£4,779,495/ €5,917,470), was consigned by the Brooklyn Museum. All proceeds from the sale will be directed to the creation of a board- designated fund for the purchase of work by contemporary artists. The Schulhof name is one that has resonated in the international art community for over sixty years and has come to signify the passion and exceptional connoisseurship of two of the greatest collectors of their time, Hannelore and Rudolph Schulhof. The couple created an unrivalled collection of paintings, sculpture and works on paper that captured not only the momentous changes that were happening within the art world, but also demonstrated their personal commitment to supporting both the careers of artists and also the museum community. 100% of the ten works from the collection included in the evening sale were sold for a totaled of $18,950,600. The Schulhof's vision extended from the powerful elegance of Richard Serra's "Schulhof's Curve" which realized $2,882,500 (£1,815,975/ €2,248,350) and set a world auction record for the artist, and the striking Ellsworth Kelly's outdoor sculpture fetched $3,778,500 (£2,380,455/ €2,947,230) to Agnes Martin's spiritual minimalism, with Untitled #7 sold for $4,002,500 (£2,521,575/ €3,121,950). Douglas S. Cramer is one of the most successful production executives in television history. He has been responsible for producing and developing many of the defining programs on U.S.television from the 1960s through the 1980s. Cramer exemplifies an art connoisseur with an incredible curiosity and passion for the new, while being faithful to the leading artists of the late 20th century – many of whom he has counted as his close friends. This first part of the collection totalled $18,617,000 and was led by major artists including Ellsworth Kelly's "Orange, Blue I", which sold for $3,218,500 (£2,027,655/ €2,510,430), and Mark Grotjahn's Untitled (Red Butterfly II Yellow), which sold for $4,170,500 (£2,627,415/ €3,252,990) and broke the world auction record price for the artist. Cramer has also been a passionate collector of works on paper, with works as diverse as Willem de Kooning, Roy Lichtenstein, Frank Stella, David Hockney and Marlene Dumas which is being sold in the afternoon session of the Post-War and Contemporary Day sale, November 15th . After the tremendous records achieved last season for Alexander Calder, Christie's was pleased to offer an exceptional array of seven innovative sculptures from the 1920s to the 1960s, which reflects the artist's diverse and prolific career. Created in 1928, the figure of the Policeman made entirely from wire was sold for the auction record price for a wire sculpture by the artist at $4,226,500 (£2,662,695/ €3,296,670). This 1928 work demonstrates Calder's debt to his time working as an illustrator and caricaturist for publications including New York's National Police Gazette. He subtly exaggerates the essential few features of the policeman's dress and physiognomy for comic effect. Christie's holds the overall world record prices for work by Alexander Calder, including standing mobile, hanging mobile, outdoor sculpture, wire sculpture, and jewelry by the artist. ARTISTS' WORLD AUCTION RECORDS Lot 12 Richard Serra Schulhof's Curve, 1984. Sold $2,882,500 Lot 17 Franz Kline Untitled, 1957. Sold $40,402,500 Lot 19 Richard Diebenkorn Ocean Park # 48, 1971. Sold: $13,522,500 Lot 38 Jeff Koons Tulips 1995-2004. Sold $33,682,500 Lot 41 George Condo The Manhattan Strip Club, 2010. Sold $1,314,500 Lot 42 Jean-Michel Basquiat Untitled, 1981. Sold $26,402,500 Lot 49 Mark Grotjahn Untitled (Red Butterfly II Yellow…). Sold $4,170,500 Lot 58 Donald Judd Untitled, 1989 (Bernstein 89-24), 1989. Sold $10,162,500 RECORDS FOR THE MEDIUM Lot 2 Alexander Calder Policeman, 1928. Sold $4,226,500 Record for a Wire Sculpture by the Artist Lot 4 Jean Dubuffet La Congratule, 1962. Sold $1,684,100 Record for a Work on Paper by the Artist Lot 34 Cy Twombly Untitled, 1945. Sold $5,010,500 Record for a Work on Paper by the Artist Lot 37 Jean-Michel Basquiat Untitled, 1983. Sold $3,666,500 Record for a Work on Paper by the Artist
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