NEW YORK, NY.- One week following the U.S. Presidential elections, an engaged, confident and increasingly global community of collectors converged at
Christies flagship saleroom in Rockefeller Center, driving the firms total sales of Impressionist, Modern, Post-War and Contemporary Art to a combined $618,397,125 (£500,901,671 / 581,293,298) thus far. A companion online-only sale devoted to Picasso Ceramics, which is already 100% sold by lot, continues into Friday afternoon.
With nearly 750 individual works sold across the week, the combined sell-through rates for Christies live auctions were 80% by lot and 86% by value, with great consistency across price levels. At the high-value Evening Sales, the majority of works offered sold within or above estimate, underscoring the firms commitment to delivering superior results for both individual sellers and estate collections.
Christies continued investment in global growth initiatives was evident this season, as clients from more than 47 different countries registered to participate in the 20th Century Art Week series. American buyers were a dominant force across the sales, with strong competition from Asian and European collectors, particularly for Impressionist and Modern Art.
Jussi Pylkkänen, Global President and Principal Auctioneer, commented: We have worked hard to broaden our buyer base in recent years and there is no question that this commitment is helping to create more competition in Christies salerooms around the globe. As a result, we posted new world auction records for three titans of modernism: Claude Monet, Wassily Kandinsky and Willem de Kooning. Our day sales also generated great global competition and very strong sell-through rates. In spite of uncertainties caused by both Brexit and the U.S. elections, the art market reacted very positively, prices were firm, and Christies continued to deliver to our clients. This has been a very satisfactory week and we look forward to strong sales in Hong Kong at the end of November. In 2017, Christies will continue to broaden and enhance our global outreach with exhibitions in new premises in key cities as we encourage more collectors to engage in this exciting market.
POST-WAR AND CONTEMPORARY ART, Evening, Day and Online Only Sales
Total: $339,222,375
The evening auction achieved a total of $276,972,500 (£221,933,093 / 256,776,589) with 89% sold by lot and 94% sold by value, providing a positive and confident start to the sale week. The day sales realized a combined $61,462,250 (£49,248,598 / 56,980,628).
The record breaking sale of de Koonings Untitled XXV for $66.3 million was the unequivocal highlight of the Post-War and Contemporary Art Sales. This work recalibrated the market when it sold at Christies in 2006, and its appreciation over a period of ten years is a testament to the unwavering longevity of superb pictures, and the art market as a whole.
Bidding was determinedly confident throughout the evening and day sales, which saw participation from a breadth of international clients. The volume of bidding on the phone, online and in the room translated into exceptional prices for artists including Jean Dubuffet, Julie Mehretu, Gerhard Richter and Alexander Calder. Additional records were set for works by John Currin, Jonathan Horowitz, Giuseppe Gallo, Bruce Conner and Harold Ancart.
A companion online-only sale of Andy Warhol works, Pop Meets Chic, totaled $787,625. Offered from the collection of the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, the sale featured more than 100 works including the artists early commercial illustrations and Polaroids of celebrities and fashion figures. A 1966 screenprint of Warhols iconic Cow, was the top lot, achieving $106,250, against a presale estimate of $50,000-70,000.
IMPRESSIONIST AND MODERN ART, Evening, Day and Works on Paper Sales;
Running Total: $279,174,750
The New York sales series of Impressionist and Modern Art achieved $279,174,750 (£223,645,495 / 259,823,241) and now leads the auction market for Impressionist and Modern Art. Christies Evening Sale realized $246.3 million led by strong competition for the sales top lots masterpiece-quality works by Claude Monet, Wassily Kandinsky and Pablo Picasso. At $81.4 million, Monets Meule (Grainstack) fetched the highest auction price of the week and achieved a new world auction record for the artist, and the $23.3 million realized for Kandinskys Rigid et courbé marked a new world auction record for the artist as well. In yet another example of the growing trend towards cross-category collecting, Japanese collector Yusaku Maezawa emerged as the buyer of Picassos Buste de femme (Dora Maar) for $22.6 million.
Also notable was Christies Works on Paper and Day Sale category for Impressionist and Modern Art, which achieved $32.8 million for both sales. Collectors and dealers took advantage of the opportunity to acquire exceptional works by some of the great artists of the era, with strong prices for works by Joan Miro, Henri Edmond Cross, and Le Corbusier.
Christies seventh sale of Picasso Ceramics, a companion online-only sale to Christies 20th Century Week, continues through Friday, November 18th. The sale presents a strong selection of the artists highly-coveted ceramic works, with estimates starting at US$800. Demand for this exciting category in the art market continues to grow, with all previous sales 100% sold by lot. *Results available upon conclusion of the sale.
20TH CENTURY WEEK STATS AT A GLANCE
· Series total: $618.4 million, with one sale continuing
· Highest online bid: $750,000 for Foujitas Nu, painted in 1931
· Range of prices: $800 up to $81.4 million
· 10 new world auction records set for artists
· Over 10,000 visitors to Christies Rockefeller Center exhibition