Recent Art News
Christie's Breaks Auction Records of Post-War and Contemporary Art |
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| Friday, 17 November 2006 17:18 |
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“Tonight’s sale caps an incredible two weeks at Christie’s where we have seen record totals and unprecedented depth in the market in all fields,” said Edward Dolman, Chief Executive Officer of Christie’s. “These sales have confirmed Christie’s as the undisputed leader at the uppermost echelons of the market.” Right at the heart of a burst of painting activity in the mid-1970s, de Kooning’s Untitled XXV suggests a continual passing of time which gives this work a sense of dynamism rather than stillness. The painting’s dramatic and powerful presence led to fierce bidding battles which were settled at $27,120,000, setting not only a world auction record for the artist but also a world auction record for any post-war work. From the same period, Untitled XXIX, 1977 realized $8,080,000 while de Kooning’s superb drawing, Two Women II, circa 1952, achieved $9,648,000, setting a new world auction record for a work on paper by the artist. Never before had a group of Warhol works of this magnitude been presented in one auction and Warhol’s genius hovered over the sale throughout the evening. The choice selection of the artist’s works attracted bidders and buyers from around the globe. The top Warhol of the evening was Mao, one of the finest examples of Warhol’s greatest and most sensational series of the 1970s, which realized $17,376,000, a new world auction record by the artist. Mao was bought by Mr. Joseph Lau, a private collector from Hong Kong. Mao’s image was closely followed by that of unforgettable Hollywood legend Marilyn Monroe. Orange Marilyn, estimated at $10 – 15 million achieved $16,256,000. Sixteen Jackies, a reverent depiction of an exceptional First Lady and a sober artistic response to the assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963, brought $15,696,000. In total, the eight works by Andy Warhol offered in the sale realized $59,712,000. Click on logo below to add this article to your favorite Social Website ~ |


New York City - Christie’s New York’s sale of Post-War and Contemporary Art totaled $239,704,000, breaking the $200 million barrier barely 18 months after Christie’s New York for the first time crossed the $100 million cap for a sale in the post-war and contemporary field (May 2005 at $133.7 million). Among the artists for whom the sale set new world auction records were Andy Warhol, Willem de Kooning, Clyfford Still, Sam Francis, and Sol LeWitt. Buyers in the sale, by lot, were 64.8% American, 15.5% European, 9.9% Asian and 9.8% other. 
