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ALMOST 205 MILLION USD FOR CHRISTIE'S NOVEMBER 7, 2012 SALE OF IMPRESSIONIST AND MODERN ART
08 November 2012
Catégorie : MARKET

Rare masterpieces   by  Claude Monet, Wassily   Kandinsky and  Constantin  Brancusi  led   the  November 7 2012 Evening Sale of Impressionist & Modern Art at Christie's New York,  realizing a grand total  of  $204,800,000 (£129,024,000/  € 159,744,000)

A  diverse audience of  clients from  around the world participated in the sale, which achieved sell-through rates of 70% by lot and 80% by value. Of the 69 works offered, 5 lots sold for over $10 million, 10 for over $5 million and 31 for over $1 million.

"Tonight we were all reminded of the enduring power and appeal of great works of art. In the context of profound world events such as the presidential election in the United States, a transition of leadership in China, the tumult of the stock markets globally, and even the   shock of  the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy, the art market united in enthusiasm for Impressionist & Modern masterworks by  artists  as  varied as  Claude Monet, Wassily   Kandinsky  and  Constantin Brancusi. We are honored and grateful to have stewarded these gems on behalf of private sellers and various nonprofit institutions alike," noted Brooke Lampley, Head of Impressionist & Modern Art at Christie's New York.

The top price for the evening was achieved by Claude Monet's Impressionist masterpiece Nymphéas (The Water Lilies), a view of the lily pond at Giverny from the iconic series that was the crowning achievement of the artist's career. The painting dates from 1905, the year Monet began his most intensive work on a dazzling array of paintings of the lily pond at the heart of his garden. Working feverishly, he would complete more than 60 increasingly abstract views of the pond between 1905  and 1908, or  about  one every three  weeks. The   best   works of  the series  – includind Nymphéas – were selected for his 1909 exhibition at Galerie Durand-Ruel in Paris, which proved to be an unprecedented commercial and critical success for Monet.  The work sold for $43,762,500 (£27,570,375 /  €34,134,750)  to an American  private bidder on the telephone, achieving the second highest price for the artist at auction.


The Monet, along with two Impressionist landscapes by Camille Pissarro and Alfred Sisley, were offered at the auction by Hackley School, a not-for-profit K-12 independent school in Tarrytown, NY.  The paintings were a bequest to the school from Ethel Strong Allen, a gift in keeping with the Allen family's long tradition of charitable support. Three generations of the Allen family have attended the school, and Mrs. Allen's late husband served as a trustee and honorary trustee of Hackley for nearly 45 years. The sale of the three paintings raised a combined total of $50,871,500, making it one of the largest donations ever made to an independent school in New York State. Proceeds from their sale will benefit Hackley's long-term development goals.

Among the most  anticipated lots of  the sale was Wassily  Kandinsky's  Expressionist  tour-de-force  "Studie  für Improvisation 8", from the artist's pioneering  series  of  1909, which  achieved $23,042,500  (£14,516,775/    17,973,150)  and set a new  world  auction  record  for  the  artist.

The mystical scene of a conquering hero wielding a golden sword toppled the previous auction record for the artist of $20.9 million, set in 1990.  "Study for improvisation 8" was sold from the collection of  the Volkart Foundation, a charitable trust founded by  Volkart Brothers,a prominent Swiss commodities trading firm established in 1851. Proceeds from the sale of the painting will benefit the Foundation's charitable programs.

Leading the sculptural works in the auction was Constantin Brancusi's masterpiece "Une Muse", a pivotal work in plaster from 1912 that sold for $12,402,500 (£7,813,575/ € 9,673,950). With its upright  pose, elegantly curving neck and expressive features, "Une Muse" captures a  critical moment in the artist's creative evolution and has been widely heralded as a pivotal composition in  Brancusi's  mature career. Brancusi's  delicate, stylized rendering of a woman's  head drew widespread accolades from collectors and the press when it debuted at the inaugural Armory Show  of  1913 in New York,and has  now  been requested for inclusion in the centenary celebration of the show next year.

A trio of bronze sculptures by Giacometti also performed well, led by "La Jambe" (The Leg), a seven foot tall depiction of a human leg. Modeled in the thin, elongated form for which the artist is best   known, "La   Jambe"  is  the  artist's  final  statement in  a series  devoted  to  depictions of  isolated   body parts. The work  sold for  $11,282,500 (£7,107,975/ €8,800,350) to the Richard Gray Gallery. Two additional bronzes, "Tête sur tige" conceived in 1947, and "Tête sans crane", conceived in 1957-58, achieved $6,802,500 and $5,570,500, respectively.

An exceptional group of Picasso works was led by "Buste de femme" of 1937, an unusually warm and intimate portrait of the artist's raven-haired muse, the photographer Dora Maar, sold for $13,074,500 (£8,236,935/€ 10,198,110). in sophisticated evening dress, with a splash of rouge on her cheeks, this smiling vision of Picasso's famously mercurial mistress counts among the most open and accessible of his depictions of her. Picasso kept the painting in his personal collection for nearly 30 years after its completion, leaving it to his second wife Jacqueline Roque upon his death.

Surrealist works were led by Joan Miró's "Peinture" (Femme, Journal, Chien) from 1925,which   achieved $13,746,500 (£8,660,295/ € 10,722,270). Painted with whimsical humor in a bright palette of yellow, red, black and white, the work draws the viewer into the artist's distinctive visual world of signs and symbols, capturing  with  just  the  sparest of elements the artist's charming vision of a pretty young woman walking her dog on the streets of Paris. In a clever play  on words, Miró inserts into the girl's hand a folded newspaper revealing the word "j ou" – which may be read as an abbreviation for the newspaper Le Journal, or more slyly as an allusion to the girl's playful nature.
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