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  • Archive for May, 2011

    EGON SCHIELE CITYSCAPE HIGHLIGHTS SOTHEBY’S LONDON SALE IN JUNE

    Thursday, May 5th, 2011

    Egon Schiele's Häuser mit bunter Wäsche, “Vorstadt” II is one of the most important oils by the Austrian artist ever to come to the market. (click on image to enlarge) UPDATE: SOLD FOR £24,681,250,

    This 1914 cityscape, one of the most important oils by Egon Schiele ever to come to the market, will be a highlight of Sotheby’s Impressionist and Modern Art sale in London on June 22.  Häuser mit bunter Wäsche, “Vorstadt” II – translated as Houses with colourful Laundry “Suburb” II – ranks among just a small number of significant cityscapes by Schiele remaining in private hands.  It was acquired in the year it was painted by Schiele’s friend and patron Heinrich Böhler. It has been in the collection of the Leopold Museum in Vienna since 1952.
    The Museum’s managing director Peter Weinhäupl said:  “The Leopold Museum today is committed to affirming its position as the pre-eminent repository of Austrian Modern Art and the decision it has taken with this sale is a testament to this commitment. While this painting will be missed, the museum is fortunate to hold eight further Schiele cityscapes of superb quality in its collection.”
    Schiele, who died in the great flu of 1918 aged 28, loosely based this painting on Krumau, the town in Southern Bohemia where his mother was born.  He and his lover Walburga (Wally) Neuzil moved there in 1911, in order to escape what they perceived as the claustrophobic atmosphere of Vienna (ironically, they were soon driven out of the town by the residents, who strongly disapproved of their liberal lifestyle, and returned to the environs of Vienna a year later).
    Häuser mit bunter Wäsche, “Vorstadt” II  comes to the auction market for the first time with an estimate of £22-30 million.
    UPDATE:  IT MADE £24,681,250, a world record for the artist.

    CHRISTIE’S IMPRESSIONIST AND MODERN ART EVENING SALE MAKES $155,995,000

    Thursday, May 5th, 2011

    Monet's Les Peupliers made $22,482,500 at Christie's in New York against an estimate of $20/30 million.

    Paysage de banlieue by Maurice de Vlaminck made $22,482,500 at Christie's against an estimate of £18/25 million.

    Pablo Picasso (1881-1973) Les femmes d'Alger, version L made $21,362,500 including buyer's premium at Christie's. It was estimated at $20/30 million.

    Christie’s Impressionist and Modern Art evening sale of 57 lots in New York on May 4 brought in $155,995,000.  It was 82% sold by lot and 81% by value.

    Monet’s Les Peupliers, the joint top lot in this auction, sold at Christie’s in 2000 for $7 million.  It was one of  the three lots pictured here which sold above $20 million.  A new world auction record was set for Maurice de Vlaminck (1876-1958) for his 1905 Fauvist landscape Paysage de Banlieue.

    There were four lots sold at over $10 million, and 19 over $1 million. Buyers were 47% European, 36% American, 4% Asian and 13% other. (See antiquesandartireland.com posts for April 19 and March 26).

    IMPRESSIONIST AND MODERN ART MAKES $170,478,000 AT SOTHEBY’S

    Wednesday, May 4th, 2011

    Picasso - Femmes Lisant

    Gauguin Jeune tahitienne

    Impressionist & Modern Art evening sale at Sotheby’s New York on May 3 made $170,478,000.  This was within but very much at the lower end of the overall estimate of $158.9-229.7 million. The 59 lot auction was 74.6% sold by lot, and saw a total of 37 works sell for over $1 million.
    The top lot was Pablo Picasso’s Femmes lisant (Deux personnages). It made $21,362,500 in a sale where auction records were established for the Surrealist artist Paul Delvaux and for a sculpture by Paul Gauguin. Jeune tahitienne sold for 11,282,500.  It was carved during Gauguin’s first trip to Tahiti between 1890 and 1893, and is the only fully-worked bust portrait the artist is known to have created. It marks the eighth highest price for any work by Gauguin at auction.

    PAUL DELVAUX 1897 - 1994 LES CARIATIDES

    Les Cariatides by Paul Delvaux from 1946 made $9,042,500 in a sale which saw strong prices for Surrealist works.

    The Expressionist Alexej von Jawlensky’s Frau mit grünem Fächer (Woman with a green fan) made $11,282,500, just under its high estimate of $12 million. This is the second highest price for a work by Jawlensky.  There were strong prices too for Magritte and Dali.  The art illustrated represents the top five highest prices for the sale.
    The Impressionist & Modern Art Day Sale on May 5 at Sotheby’s in New York brought in $38,982,225.

    ALEXEJ VON JAWLENSKY 1864-1941 FRAU MIT GRÜNEM FÄCHER (WOMAN WITH A GREEN FAN)

    Picasso - COUPLE À LA GUITARE made $9.6 million.

    INTERNATIONALISATION OF THE IRISH ANTIQUE AUCTION MARKET

    Sunday, May 1st, 2011

    The internationalisation of the Irish antique and art market is becoming increasingly apparent. Sales at Sheppards, a long established Irish provincial auction house, reflect this changing market.  The three day sale at Sheppards in Durrow, Co. Laois on May 10, 11 and 12 offers much that is of interest to local, national and international buyers.

    In the past the advantage of the Durrow location was that it was on the main Dublin-Cork road and as a result was easily reached from many points in the country.  Nowadays because of the internet such sales are accessible to collectors everywhere.  From Durrow Sheppards enjoys a reach that is increasingly global.  Location is no longer the factor it used to be.  Sheppards, in common with a number of other Irish auction houses, now ship to everywhere.

    The on-line catalogue is available on their website.  Here are a few of the lots coming up in May.

    See antiquesandartireland.com post for April 28.

    This George III mahogany Chippendale silver table is estimated at 8,000-12,000. (click on image to enlarge). UPDATE: IT MADE A HAMMER PRICE OF 9,500

    A large George III Irish brass bound plate bucket is estimated at 2,500-3,500. (click to enlarge) UPDATE: THIS MADE 2,600 AT HAMMER

    After Sir Joshua Reynolds, Portrait of Denis Daly, Oil on canvas, Provenance: Russborough House, Co. Wicklow is estimated at 2,000-3,000. (Click on image to enlarge) UPDATE: THIS MADE 4,300 at hammer

    Samuel Spode, Jockey on horseback, Oil on canvas estimate 3,200-4,200. (click on image to enlarge) UPDATE: THIS MADE 3,700 at hammer

    EARLIEST RULES OF CLUB FOOTBALL TO BE SOLD BY SHEFFIELD AT SOTHEBY’S

    Sunday, May 1st, 2011
    The earliest rules of club football will be sold by Sotheby’s in London on July 14.  The document is part of the archive of the world’s oldest football club, Sheffield FC which was established in 1857.   They are estimated at  £800,000-£1,200,000.  The  lot  includes  both  the  original handwritten  draft  rules  (1858)  and  the  only  known  surviving  copy  of  the  printed  Rules,  Regulations,  &  Laws  of  the  Sheffield  Foot?Ball  Club  (1859).
    The  1858  rules  promoted  a  passing   game  played  with  the  feet, and included  the  free  kick,  throw-in, goal  kick,  restrictions  on  handling the ball, and  the  banning  of  “hacking  or  tripping”.   The archive, which sheds light on the world’s first  vibrant  football  culture in Sheffield  in  the  1860’s, comprises club minute books.  These are from the 1850’s and ’60’s.  There is a volume of match reports from the early 1860’s.
    Chairman  of  Sheffield  Football  Club,  Richard  Tims,  commented:  “The  sale  of this  remarkable  piece  of  sporting  history  will  allow  Sheffield  Football  Club  to  develop  its  facilities  and  secure  its  future  as  the  home  of  grass?roots  football.
    In New York last December Sotheby’s sold James Naismith’s Founding Rules of Basketball from December 1891. The two page typed document, which was tacked up in a Springfield, Massachusetts YMCA gym, made $4.4 million dollars including buyer’s premium.
    UPDATE:  THE earliest rules of club football – sold as part of the historic archive of the world’s oldest football club, Sheffield – fetched £881,250  setting a record at auction for any item of football memorabilia. It was bought by an anonymous telephone bidder.

    SOME LOTS FROM MEALY’S SALE ON MAY 4

    Sunday, May 1st, 2011
    More than 800 lots will come under the hammer at Castlecomer, Co. Kilkenny on May 4. The fine and decorative art sale at Mealy’s will include 18th, 19th and 20th century furniture; contemporary Irish paintings;  silver and plate;  bronzes;  clocks and barometers; carpets and rugs; jewellery; light fittings; overmantels; porcelain and a single owner collection of whiskeys, brandy and other liquors.
    Here is a sample. The catalogue is on-line.
    See antiquesandartireland.com post for April 27.
    UPDATE: Around 35 per cent of lots remained unsold, which is higher than usual.  On an overall tough day the sale brought in a figure close to 150,000.  Garden furniture, silver and the alcohol collection sold well,  trading conditions were difficult for furniture and paintings.

    This c1900 mahogany bureau by Edwards and Roberts with satinwood and kingwood banding and profuse inlay is estimated at 4,000-6,000. (click on image to enlarge) UPDATE: THIS WAS UNSOLD

    A c1900 Gothic style pitch pine writing table with tooled leather top is estimated at just 200-300. UPDATE: THIS MADE 200

    A west of Ireland watercolour by William Percy French (1854 - 1920) is estimated at 2,500-3,500. UPDATE: THIS WAS UNSOLD

    An old oak drop-leaf gateleg table with frieze drawer is estimated at 300-400. UPDATE: THIS WAS UNSOLD