LONDON.- On 11 February 2016,
Christies Post-War and Contemporary Evening Auction achieved a total of £58,099,000/ $84,301,649/ 74,599,116, with 51% of works selling above estimate and 38% within estimate. The top price of the evening was Peter Doigs The Architects Home in the Ravine, painted in 1991, which realised £11,282,500/ $16,370,908/ 14,486,730 (estimate: £10-15million). Registered bidders from 42 countries across four continents demonstrated the continued demand in the global contemporary market. As part of the 20th-Century season at Christies the Post-War and Contemporary Evening brings the running total for the season up to £175,887,500/ $253,848,339/ 214,591,037.
With sell-through rates of 89% by lot and 84% by value, works that were hotly contested included David Hockneys Beach Umbrella (1971), which attracted competition from six bidders five on the telephone and one in the room and more than doubled its pre-sale high estimate, selling for £3,106,500/ $4,507,532/ 3,988,746 (estimate: £1-1.5 million). High energy was present from the beginning of the evening, opening with three works by Alexander Calder from the much-sought-after Arthur and Anita Kahn Collection, far exceeding their pre-sale estimate (£1,280,000 - 1,720,000) and realising a total of £3,439,500/ $4,990,715/ 4,416,318, led by Crag with Yellow Boomerang and Red Eggplant (1974), which sold for £1,874,500/ $2,719,900/ 2,406,858. This appetite continued throughout the evening with further standout results for Zeitpunkt: Das Massaker von Muenchen (Point of time: The Massacre of Munich) by Joseph Beuys, which sold for £854,500/ $1,239,880/ 1,097,178 (estimate: £250,000 - 350,000), and Untitled (1973) by Robert Mangold, which realised £746,500/ $1,083,172/ 958,506 (estimate: £300,000 - 500,000), each setting a new world record price for the artist at auction.
Collections were a particular success of the evening each exceeding their combined pre-sale estimate with robust demand for works from the Collection of Marc and Frédérique Corbiau, including the work by Mangold (total: £5,836,000/ $8,468,036/ 7,493,424 against a pre-sale estimate of £3,580,000 - 5,150,000), alongside the Collection of Miles and Shirley Fiterman (total: £7,119,500/ $10,330,395/ 9,141,438 against a pre-sale estimate of £3,860,000 - £5,480,000). Another focal point were the works sold to benefit the South London Gallery, Tracey Emins Always More (2015) realised a figure of £80,500/ $116,806/ 103,362 (estimate: £40,000 - 60,000) and Antony Gormleys Reserve II achieved £458,500/ $665,284/ 588,714 (estimate: £250,000 - 350,000) (total: £539,000/ $782,089/ 692,076 against a pre-sale estimate of £290,000-410,000).
Edmond Francey, Head of Post-War and Contemporary Art, London: Tonights results offer real assurance to the art market, with a particularly energetic response to British painting and key international names, such as Mangold and Beuys. Collections were also highly prized, demonstrating how good provenance, taste and connoisseurship continue to be a major draw. The strong sell-through rates, with 89% of works sold above or within estimate, demonstrate that Christies is able to read the market and offer our consignors and buyers the very best expertise.
Peter Doigs The Architects Home in the Ravine (1991), having twice previously achieved the world-record auction price for Doig, once again proved the market for contemporary painting, with a figure of £11,282,500/ $16,370,908/ 14,486,730. The evening also saw Doigs Island Painting exceed its high estimate realising £3,442,500/ $4,995,068/ 4,420,170 (estimate: £2 - 3 million).
David Hockneys Beach Umbrella (1971) sold for £3,106,500/ $4,507,532/ 3,988,746 (estimate: £1-1.5 million). A glowing evocation of light and colour, the work was created during a highly productive period following the devastating end of the artists relationship with Peter Schlesinger. Beach Umbrella was one of three Hockney works offered in the Evening Auction from the Miles and Shirley Fiterman Collection and was also included in the artists landmark touring retrospective of 1988, which travelled from the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York to the Tate Gallery in London.
Lucian Freuds Head of Esther (1982-3) and Head of Ib (1983-4), painted in an intimate 14 x 12 inch format, realised £4,786,500/ $6,945,212/ 6,145,866 and £2,546,500/ $3,694,972/ 3,269,706 respectively (each with an estimate of: £2.5 3.5 million). These works were both executed in arguably Freud's greatest period at the beginning of the 1980s.
Francis Bacons Two Figures (1975) sold for £5,458,500/ $7,920,284/ 7,008,714 (estimate: £5-7 million). A self-portrait conjoined with the figure of George Dyer, it was painted in Paris in the mid-1970s shortly after Dyers tragic suicide. The work was acquired directly from Bacon by Michael Peppiatt, a close friend and confidant of the artist, and a leading biographer and curator of his work.
South London Gallery
In a remarkable act of generosity and in recognition of the SLGs growing significance, an anonymous donor has made a gift to the SLG of a four-storey former Fire Station, diagonally opposite the gallerys main site. Due to open to the public in 2018, the gallery needs to raise £4 million to renovate the Fire Station. The immediate success of the SLGs application to the UKs Heritage Lottery Fund is indicative of the importance and credibility of the project, with £1.5 million pledged towards the overall target if match funds are secured by June 2016. As part of the drive to reach that target, all proceeds from the sale of the works by Tracey Emin and Antony Gormley will go directly to the project, which Christies is proud to be supporting.