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  • Archive for February, 2015

    ART WORKS FEATURING LIONEL MESSI

    Friday, February 6th, 2015
    Takashi Murakami - Lionel Messi and a Universe of Flowers (2014) at Sotheby's on February 12.  (£200,000-300,000). ©2015 Takashi Murakami/Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved.

    Takashi Murakami – Lionel Messi and a Universe of Flowers (2014) at Sotheby’s on February 12. (£200,000-300,000). ©2015 Takashi Murakami/Kaikai Kiki Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved.  UPDATE: THIS SOLD FOR £317,000

    Specially commissioned works of art featuring Lionel Messi will come up at a charity art auction at Sotheby’s in London on February 12. FC Barcelona Foundation, Reach OutTo Asia (ROTA) and UNICEF have launched the ‘1 in 11’ campaign to extend educational opportunities to marginalized children in Bangladesh, Indonesia and Nepal, with the goal of expanding to more countries.

    Globally, one in 11 primary school-age children – or 58 million out of 650 million children – are out of school.  The auction will feature donated works by artists including Takashi Murakami, Damien Hirst, Jeff Koons, Richard Serra and Shirin Neshat.

    Takashi Murakami said: “I’m delighted to be able to support the ‘1 in 11’ campaign through donating my artwork to the auction and designing the global campaign logo. I know the money raised by the campaign is going to help some of the most marginalised and vulnerable children across the world. 1 in 11’ will inspire the world that integrating sport and play into education can be the catalyst to unlock a child’s potential”.

     

    UPDATE: THE auction, which featured 18 artworks donated by renowned artists, raised £2.6 million. The top lot was Jeff Koons Donkey (Yellow) from 1999 which sold for £557,000.

    ANTIQUESANDARTIRELAND.COM CONTINUES TO GROW

    Thursday, February 5th, 2015

    A huge thank you to all our readers. This website continues to go from strength to strength with regular readers from Ireland, the UK, the US, France, the rest of Europe and right around the world.  According to Google’s Webmaster Tools the number of hits recorded by antiquesandartireland.com in the month to February 5 exceeded 1.3 million.

    Online buying at auction is a global phenomenon which continues to grow.  There were bidders from all continents at the record breaking Impressionist and Modern Art sales at Sotheby’s and Christie’s in London this week.  It is not only art.  Everything sells on the internet. eCommerce jewellery grew significantly at Christie’s worldwide in 2014 with over twice as many sales as 2013. Overall Christie’s sold $754.7 million dollars worth of jewellery in 2014, the highest annual result for jewellery at any auction house, with over 430 jewels sold online.

    The graphic which illustrates our figures from January 6, 2015 to February 5 2015 is on the left.  You can click on the image to enlarge it.feb figures

    MIRO, CEZANNE, MODIGLIANI TOP £147 MILLION SALES AT CHRISTIE’S

    Wednesday, February 4th, 2015
    Paul Cézanne, Vue sur L’Estaque et Le Château d’If

    Paul Cézanne, Vue sur L’Estaque et Le Château d’If sold for £13,522,500

    Miro, Cezanne, Modigliani, Giacometti and Magritte were the top sellers at Christie’s sales in London tonight. More than £147 million worth of art changed hands. The Impressionist and Modern evening sale brought in £80,375,000 and the Art of the Surreal auction which followed realised £66,656,000.  This was the first ever Surrealist sale to break the $100 million barrier.

    At the Impressionist and Modern sale Paul Cezanne’s Vue sur l”Estaque et le Chateau d’If sold for £13,522,500, Les Deux Filles by Amadeo Modigliani made £7,586,500 and Alberto Giacometti’s Femme de Venise V sold for £6,802,500.

    At the Art of the Surreal sale Joan Miro’s  Painting (Women, Moon, Birds) was the top lot of the evening, making £15,538,500. Miro’s L’Oiseau au Plumage  deploye vole  vers l’arbre argente sold for £9,154,500. Rene Magritte’s Quand  l’heure sonnera made £4,338,500 and his Les Compagnons de la Peur made £4,114,500.

    Jay Vincze , head of the Impressionist and Modern Art department at Christie’s, London, said:  “We are very pleased with the strong results of this evening’s sales of Impressionist, Modern and Surrealist art which exceeded the top pre-sale estimate and welcomed registered bidders from 34 countries across 5 continents. The broad range of styles and periods of the works offered – many of which came to the market for the first time in generations – contributed to the extraordinary depth of bidding we witnessed.  Pan Asian buyers continue to compete for the best works across 20th century avant-garde art, notably extending this season to Surrealist masters such as Magritte, Ernst and Dominguez. This is a strong start to the overall week of five sales for the category at Christie’s in London, which presents new and established collectors with opportunities across price levels.”

    UPDATE:  The Impressionist/Modern day sale at Christie’s on February 5 brought in another £13,344,825. Christie’s February auction of Impressionist/Modern/Surreal art brought in £170.8 million with global participation. A total of 36 works sold for over £1 million.

    A SURTOUT FROM KILKENNY CASTLE AT SOTHEBY’S ROYAL SALE

    Wednesday, February 4th, 2015
    The surtout de table

    The surtout de table  UPDATE: IT SOLD FOR £18,750 at hammer

    The surtout de table of the Marquesses of Ormonde originating from Kilkenny Castle is among the lots at Sotheby’s Of Royal and Noble Descent sale in London on February 24. Attributed to the London jewellery firm of Rundell Bridge and Rundell it dates to 1805 and is made in the French Empire Taste then fashionable.  Sotheby’s say it was most probably made for Walter Butler (1770-1820), 1st Marquess of Ormonde, 18th Earl of Ormonde, and his wife Anna Maria Catherine Clarke. Ormonde was an important patron of Royal Goldsmiths Rundell Bridge and Rundell and commissioned a fine silver dinner service in 1808.  Part of this was allocated in 1982 to the Royal Pavilion at Brighton by the English government.

    Divided into five mirrored sections and measuring 8’4” in length the surtout is estimated at £8,000-12,000.  The pierced gallery on paw feet below a cast double coronet is interspaced by plaques with the coat of arms for the Marquesses of Ormonde. The sellers are descendants of the Marquesses of Ormonde.  It will be sold among 250 exceptional royal and aristocratic heirlooms originating from the four corners of the world.

    FIVE MONETS MAKE £56 MILLION IN ONE HOUR AT SOTHEBY’S

    Tuesday, February 3rd, 2015
    Claude Monet - Le Grand Canal sold for £23.67 million.

    Claude Monet – Le Grand Canal sold for £23.67 million.

    Claude Monet’s 1908 view of Venice entitled Le Grand Canal sold for £23.67 million at an historic record breaking series of sales at Sotheby’s in London tonight. It was one of five Monet’s which together sold for a total of £55.74 million during one hour at this evening’s sale of Impressionist and Modern Art. Another Monet, Les Peupliers à Giverny from 1887 made £10.79 million.  The Venice work has been displayed for the past eight years at the National Gallery in London.  Les Peupliers à Giverny came from the collection of the Museum of Modern Art, New York and was sold to benefit the Acquisitions Fund.

    Henri Matisse’s  Odalisque au fauteuil noir sold for £15.83 million.  There was a new auction record for a work on paper by Georges Seurat. Étude pour une baignade, Asnières sold for £7.7 million.  It relates to one of Seurat’s greatest paintings, Une baignade, Asnières from 1883-1884, which hangs in the National Gallery, London.

    Henry Wyndham selling the top lot at the auction.

    Henry Wyndham selling the top lot at the auction.

    By the end of the evening the total of £186.4 million for the Impressionist, Modern and Surrealist art evening sales was the highest total for any auction ever held in London.  There were participants from 35 countries across six continents with collectors from Asia and Russia asserting themselves as a continuing force in the market.

    The day sales on February 4 added another £25.6 million with participation from 52 countries. This brought Sotheby’s February auctions of Impressionist, Modern and Surrealist art to a grand total of £212 million.

    (See posts on antiquesandartireland.com for January 3,  8 and 28, 2015).

    SOTHEBY’S SCULPTURE SPECIALIST VISITING IRELAND

    Tuesday, February 3rd, 2015
    THIS Spanish or South French Corpus Christi from a collection in Dublin sold for £278,500.

    THIS Spanish or South French Corpus Christi from a collection in Dublin sold for £278,500.

    In Ireland things tend to crop up.  “That is an experience that I had personally and Sotheby’s has had over the last few decades” said Sotheby’s specialist Christopher Mason who will be in Dublin on  February 4 and 5 to appraise European sculptures and works of art.  Sculptures sourced in Ireland achieved strong results at Sotheby’s last year.  A life sized masterpiece of a mother and child in terracotta by 19th century French artist Aime-Jules Dalou from Westport House sold for £362,500 and went to the National Gallery in Ottowa; a previously unrecorded marble bust of Homer by Francis Harwood from a private collection here made £242,500 and a late 12th/early 13th century Spanish-South French Corpus Christi from a Dublin private collection sold for £278,500 over a top estimate of £15,000.

    Mr. Mason notes a growing eclecticism in the taste of collectors. “Nowadays some of the most exciting collections are  formed by a diverse range of objects, with everything from European bronzes to Tribal art.   People are drawn to interesting and unusual things in the market, objects of quality and age.  Sculpture offers something for everyone”.

    ARTWORKS FROM PRIVATE COLLECTION OF NOEL COWARD

    Monday, February 2nd, 2015

    A selection of artworks formerly in the private collection of playwright, composer, director, actor and singer Sir Noël Coward come up at Christie’s Modern British and Irish Art sale on March 19 at South Kensington. Paintings by Coward include portraits and scenes of Jamaica, his Caribbean home. In addition there is paintings he acquired as gifts from friends such as the actress Elizabeth Taylor, the actor David Niven, and the composer, actor and entertainer Ivor Novello. It comprises works by revered British artists such as Christopher Wood, John Nash, Edward Seago and Derek Hill. Estimates range from £300 up to £100,000.

    Christopher Wood (1901-1930) Fishing Village, Cornwall (£70,000-100,000).  Courtesy Christie's Images Ltd., 2015.

    Christopher Wood (1901-1930)
    Fishing Village, Cornwall (£70,000-100,000). Courtesy Christie’s Images Ltd., 2015.

    Sir Noël Coward (1899-1973) View from Firefly Hill, Jamaica, painted in 1955 (£10,000-15,000).  Courtesy Christie's Images Ltd., 2015

    Sir Noël Coward (1899-1973) View from Firefly Hill, Jamaica, painted in 1955 (£10,000-15,000). Courtesy Christie’s Images Ltd., 2015

    A DATE CHANGE FOR THE OLYMPIA FAIR

    Monday, February 2nd, 2015

    This is art sales week fortnight in London but looking forward to June the Olympia International Art and Antiques Fair has announced a date change. Now in its 43rd year the UK’s largest fair which was established in 1972 will run at the later dates of June 18-28 to coincide with other important cultural events in London. Organisers say the date change consolidates London’s influential position as the hub of the global art world during late June. Olympia’s special mix of 170 leading dealers from around the world offers something for all levels, with prices from £100 to £1 million.

    Images from the Olympia Fair.

    Images from the Olympia Fair courtesy Olympia International Art and Antiques Fair.

    Images from the Olympia Fair.

    Images from the Olympia Fair courtesy Olympia International Art and Antiques Fair.