antiquesandartireland.com

Information about Art, Antiques and Auctions in Ireland and around the world
  • ABOUT
  • About Des
  • Contact
  • Archive for the ‘AUCTIONS’ Category

    RECORD BREAKING NIGHT FOR ART AT CHRISTIE’S IN NEW YORK

    Wednesday, November 20th, 2024

    ED RUSCHA (B. 1937) – Standard Station, Ten-Cent Western Being Torn in Half sold for $68.2 million

    Led by record-breaking Magritte and Ruscha masterpieces, Christie’s 20th/21st Century art week in New York achieved $486 million on night one. Magritte’s L’empire des lumières became the most valuable work of Surrealist art ever sold at auction. Seven records were set across Mica: The Collection of Mica Ertegun Part I and the 20th Century evening sale. Together they totalled $485,922,600, selling 83 per cent by lot, 92 per cent by value, and 120% hammer and premium against low estimate. The top lot – René Magritte’s L’empire des lumières – made $121,160,000, a world-record price for a Surrealist work at auction. Seven records were set, including artist records for Magritte, Ed Ruscha, Christian Schad, Susan Rothenberg and Amedee Ozenfant. Magritte and Roy Lichtenstein also set records for works on paper. There were bidders from around the world and 1.25 million viewers watched the sales across Christie’s global platform.

    David Hockney’s Still Life on a Glass Table (1971) made $19,040,000. The painting was made after the end of his romance with Peter Schlesinger and is a tribute to the beauty, pain and fragility of love. Its nine objects — many associated with Schlesinger — are rendered with crystalline intimacy producing a dynamic work which was in major retrospectives including the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (1988) and the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris (2017).

    DAVID HOCKNEY – Still Life on a glass table (1971) sold for $19,040,000

    A WORLD RECORD FOR MAGRITTE AT CHRISTIE’S IN NEW YORK

    Wednesday, November 20th, 2024

    RENE MAGRITTE (1898-1967) – L’empire des lumières

    There was a new world record for Rene Magritte at Christie’s in New York on November 19 when L’empire des lumières sold for a hammer price of $105,000,000 ($121,160,000 with fees). This was a record too for a painting sold at auction in 2024 as it was the first picture this year to break the $100 million barrier. The painting was from the collection of designer and philanthropist Mica Ertegun whose world-class collection includes art, exquisite furnishings, jewellery and more. 

    A significant portion of the seller’s sale proceeds is intended to benefit philanthropic initiatives. During her lifetime, Mrs. Ertegun generously supported the Graduate Scholarship Programme in the Humanities at Oxford University, Jazz at Lincoln Center, the World Monument Fund and more.

    (See post on antiquesandartireland.com for September 23, 2024)

    JOSEPH WALSH LOW TABLE FROM SYDELL MILLER COLLECTION

    Tuesday, November 19th, 2024

    Joseph Walsh – Unique “Lilium” Low Table

    This unique Lilium low table by Joseph Walsh sold for $78,000 at Sotheby’s in New York today. It was from the collection of Sydell Miller whose enthusiasm for the work of the Irish sculptor started when she first encountered one of his works at an art fair. The commission of two site-specific low tables ensued, including the present lot, with Walsh designing the pieces with the proportions of her sitting rooms in mind. As functionality was primordial to the patron, Walsh included to the design unique moulded glass insets punctuating the top, ensuring that objects could be placed on its surface. In fact, Miller provided the artist with a curated list of objects that she wished to place on the tables.

    The ebonized bentwood, characteristic of Joseph Walsh’s practice, beautifully complements the crystal inclusions, which turned out to be the most technically challenging part of the production process. A relatively new technique for the artist at the time, Walsh collaborated with Waterford crystal manufacturer and the Corning Museum of Glass in the production and moulding of each unique glass element, shaped like delicate teardrops. 

    The day auction of the Sydell Miller collection brought in $11,605,680

    MONET MAKES HIS MARK ON ART SALES OF 2024

    Monday, November 18th, 2024

    Claude Monet – Nymphéas (Water Lilies) (executed c1914-17)

    A monumental Water Lilies by Monet sold for $65.5 million at Sotheby’s in New York this evening. The most expensive artwork sold so far at auction in 2024 was from the collection of Sydell Miller. Known to many as the “queen of the beauty industry” Sydell Miller’s  extraordinary collection has taken centre stage at Sotheby’s marquee sales week in New York and feature the major artistic movements of the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries.

    In both its composition and size the present Nymphéas marks a radical shift in Monet’s approach to a subject which, both at the time and in posterity, has come to be regarded as one of the most celebrated motifs in his canonical oeuvre. Measuring a remarkable 68 by 51 inches the work is a towering example of the monumental canvases which would come to populate his late output. Larger canvases like that of the present work allowed the artist to explore the Nymphéas theme with a freedom of expression that was otherwise restricted by his earlier, smaller scale. The resulting close chromatic range and all-over composition, which heralded a shift from the painterly conventions of its time, prophetically anticipates the origins of the large-scale gestural canvases of the later New York School.

    The evening auction of 25 lots and including works by Lalanne, Yves Klein, Picasso, Kandinsky, Henry Moore and Franz Klein, realised a total of $215,953,500

    HOBART COLLECTION OF IRISH ART AT CHRISTIE’S THIS WEEK

    Sunday, November 17th, 2024

    The Thinker on the Butte de Warlencourt by Sir William Orpen. UPDATE: THIS SOLD FOR £756,000

    The private collection of Mary and Alan Hobart, founders of the Pyms Gallery, comes up at Christie’s in London on November 19.  From premises in Belgravia and Mayfair the Hobarts mounted pioneering exhibitions at the Pyms Gallery, founded in 1974, which championed Irish art in Britain for the first time since Sir Hugh Lane at the  beginning of the twentieth century.

    Key artists included in Christie’s sale are William Orpen, Jack Butler Yeats, Mary Swanzy, F. E. McWilliam, Jerome Connor, William Crozier, Rita Duffy, Micheal Farrell, Cecil King, Charles Tyrrell, William Scott, Sean Scully, Grace Henry, Gerard Dillon, Augustus John, Bridget Riley, Patrick Heron, John Tunnard and Eileen Agar.  The Hobarts collection was showcased at an exhibition at IMMA in Dublin last year.

    The Poet by Orpen made £504,000 and his Changing Billets, Picardy made £441,000. An Afternoon in Dorset by Augustus John made £214,200, a world record for an oil on panel by the artist. There was a world record for Grace Henry when The Rosary sold for £47,880 and one for Rita Duffy when Crossroads Dancing made £14,490.

    UPDATE: THE COLLECTION REALISED £5,979,204

    O’Connell Bridge by Jack Butler Yeats. UPDATE: THIS SOLD FOR £882,000

    VIETNAMESE IMPERIAL CEREMONIAL SWORD AT ADAMS

    Saturday, November 16th, 2024

    A 19th century Vietnamese Imperial ceremonial sword UPDATE: THIS MADE 370,000 AT HAMMER

    An exceptional Imperial ceremonial sword leads the auction of Fine Asian Art at James Adam in Dublin on November 18.  Inlaid with rubies and mounted in gold the Vietnamese sword dates to 1840 and is from the reign of Emperor Minh Mang of the Nguyen Dynasty. The estimate is €100,000-€150,000.  There are 473 lots on the catalogue including prints, Oriental porcelain, jades, furniture, collectibles.  The catalogue is online.

    BIRDS IN FLIGHTS BY JOHN BEHAN AT WOODWARDS

    Saturday, November 16th, 2024

    John Behan’s bronze sculpture Birds in Flight will highlight the online sale at Woodward Auctioneers in Cork on November 23. One of our most renowned contemporary sculptors, Behan is the subject of a new feature-length film titled Odyssey directed by Donald Taylor-Black documenting his involvement with migrant camps in Greece. 

    A commitment to social justice has always been part of his work and John Behan, now in his mid-80s, has given art workshops to migrants and refugees in Athens. The bronze at Woodward’s is estimated at €8,000-€12,000.

    UPDATE: THIS MADE 17,000 AT HAMMER

    KILKENNY CASTLE CABINETS AT SHEPPARDS GRANGE MANOR SALE

    Friday, November 15th, 2024

    19th-century ormolu-mounted marquetry Boulle cabinet. UPDATE: THIS WAS UNSOLD

    This historically important Irish cabinet is one of a pair that will highlight Sheppards three day sale of contents from Grange Manor, Kilkenny and other clients on November 26, 27 and 28. Research indicates that the ebony, pewter, brass and tortoiseshell marquetry cabinets were sold as separate lots at the Kilkenny Castle dispersal sale in 1935 as lots 311 and 312. One of the cabinets was sold for 37 pounds and ten shillings then. Almost 90 years later the estimate for the pair of €100,000-€150,000. There is a photograph by Robert French showing them in the Long Gallery at the castle in 1865.

    Each sports a rectangular shaped top above two glazed leaf scroll inlaid doors flanking a bacchic mask and ram’s head. There is a decorated central panelled door between fluted brass inset columns. These magnificent cabinets stand on gadroon moulded bases fronted by lion masks terminating on turned toupie feet. The auction will be on view at Grange Manor from November 23-25 and the sale will be in Durrow and online.

    WEEDS BUT NOT AS WE KNOW THEM BY CALDER AT SOTHEBY’S

    Wednesday, November 13th, 2024

    Alexander Calder – Weeds. UPDATE: THIS SOLD FOR $3.6 MILLION

    Mauvaisesherbes or Weeds by Alexander Calder comes up at Sotheby’s Modern evening auction in New York on November 18 with an estimate of $3 million – $5 million. Composed of 15 elements arranged along a central axis in a tapered cascade it is an example of his career-long, transformative exploration of sculptural abstracted forms. The artwork is invigorated through its tensions—between the geometric and the organic, the structural and the fluid and between spatial and volumetric weight. It is precisely this dynamism for which Calder’s mobiles garnered their widespread acclaim and which has made his sculptures some of the most recognisable of the twentieth century. Executed in 1963 Weeds comes to market from the collection of Erica Jong, American poet and novelist whose trailblazing work within her own field complements the innovation Calder charted in sculpture. The auction features artworks that capture the spirit of artists working around the globe in the late 19th and early 20th centuries who dared to challenge established norms of artistic practice to create a new and wholly modern vision of art. 

    MOSQUE LAMP MAKES WORLD RECORD PRICE FOR GLASS OBJECT AT BONHAMS

    Wednesday, November 13th, 2024

    A Mamluk enamelled glass mosque lamp made for Chief of Corps Saif ad-din Sarghitmish (d.1358) Egypt or Syria, 1351-1358 AD.

    There was a new world record for a glass object at auction at Bonham’s in London when an example of Islamic glass sold for £5,130,400. The Mamluk enamelled glass mosque lamp made for Chief of Corps Saif ad-din Sarghitmish (d.1358) Egypt or Syria, 1351-1358 AD is the highest priced glass object ever sold at auction. It had an estimate of £600,000-1,000,000.

    The lamp was consigned by a descendant of Egypt’s first Prime Minister, Nubar Pasha, having been in the family for more than a century. It had been regarded by the family as a decorative piece – it had been used as a vase for dried flowers. Mosque lamps are considered some of the most technically accomplished examples of medieval glassware anywhere in the world. The technique of simultaneously gilding and enamelling glass was almost unique to the Mamluk court, where they were produced in the 13th and 14th centuries for decoration and provision of light in Mosques.