LONDON.- Christies Chief Executive Officer Guillaume Cerutti announced today that after 38 years of dedicated service to the company, Christies Global President Jussi Pylkkänen plans to step down from his formal role at the auction house to work as an independent art advisor.
On November 9, Jussi will take his final New York auction when he climbs into the rostrum for the 20th Century Evening sale, and will then make his final appearance as an auctioneer in London for the Old Masters Evening sale on December 7.
Guillaume Cerutti, Christies Chief Executive Officer, commented: Jussi is a well-loved member of the Christies family. We are very grateful for his tremendous contribution to Christies, as a respected art specialist, a remarkable business getter and one of our best auctioneers. We wish him the best on beginning this next phase of his career as an independent client advisor.
Jussi Pylkkänen, Global President, commented: Christies is an inspiring place to work and has brought me great happiness across four decades working with the very best specialists in the market, at the very heart of the art world. I have been privileged to have the opportunity to befriend collectors all over the globe and auctioneer works of art of superb quality in every category in London, New York, Paris and Hong Kong. The art market continues to evolve and the extraordinary influx of buyers at the top of the market now offers me a unique opportunity to share my experience with a new generation of collectors who are keen to buy major works of art both privately and at auction.
A renowned specialist in 20th Century Art, with more than 30 years of experience in the field, Jussi was Director of Christies Impressionist and Modern Art Department from 1995 to 2005. He was appointed Global President of Christies in 2014, after serving ten years as President of Christie's Europe, Middle East and Russia.
Jussi is perhaps best recognised publicly as one of Christies principal auctioneers. In 20 years at the rostrum, he has taken major sales in every category and for many leading charities including UNICEF, The Red Cross, Terrence Higgins Trust and The Art of Wishes. As auctioneer, he sold Leonardo da Vincis Salvator Mundi in 2017 after a fierce 19-minute battle, for a groundbreaking $450.3 million, and followed this historic sale with the auction of the most expensive 20th Century painting, Andy Warhols iconic Shot Sage Blue Marilyn, which achieved $195 million in 2022. He is also renowned for his work with Christies market-leading Collection Sales, serving as auctioneer for the celebrated collections of Elizabeth Taylor (2011), Peggy and David Rockefeller (2018) and Paul G. Allen (2022). The last of these remains the most expensive single-owner collection ever sold at auction at a breathtaking $1.6 billion.