LONDON.- The highlight of 20th Century Week at
Christies in London, the Impressionist and Modern Art Evening Sale was 94 per cent sold by lot and 87 per cent sold by value, realising a total of £149,500,000 (including premium), with three works selling for more than £20 million.
The top lot of the night was Max Beckmanns Hölle der Vögel (Birds Hell). Completed over the course of 1937 and 1938 and depicting mankinds descent into darkness and terror, the painting is the artists visceral response to the rise of the Nazi regime in his native Germany.
There was keen bidding before the painting was hammered down for £36,005,000 / $45,834,365 (with premium), setting a new world auction record for the artist, as well as the highest price realised for an Expressionist work. The previous world auction record for Beckmann was $22,555,750, set in 2001.
The sale of such a historically significant painting as Beckmanns Birds Hell demonstrates Christies ability to lead with masterpieces that resonate on the international market, commented Adrien Mayer, International Director of Impressionist and Modern Art at Christies in New York. This emblematic picture has become unanimously recognised as the Guernica of Expressionism and the international appetite was evidenced in the spirited bidding witnessed in the saleroom and on the phone.
The sale was packed with highlights, including Femme écrivant (Marie-Thérèse) by Pablo Picasso. Painted on 26 March 1934, this is an intimate portrait of the woman the artists biographer, John Richardson, describes as having inspired the most ecstatically erotic works of the artists career.
Picasso kept this work for a very long time, confirmed Diana Widmaier Picasso, granddaughter of both the artist and sitter. It was a very, very important work: one of the last paintings from the golden period representing Marie-Thérèse. It duly sold for £34,885,000 / $44,408,605.
Le moissonneur (daprès Millet) by Vincent van Gogh was painted in 1889, less than a year before the artist took his own life. The painting is one of 10 works inspired by Millets series of drawings of quietly dignified peasants. Seven of these are now in the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam; Le moissonneur which can be translated as The reaper was one of just three in private hands. The painting sold for £24,245,000 / $30,863,885 against an estimate of £12,500,000-16,500,000.
World artist records were also set for Georges Vantongerloo (1886-1965), with Composition dans le carré avec couleurs jaune-vert-bleu-indigo-orangé, which sold for £1,085,000 / $1,381,205, almost doubling the previous record set at Christies in 2012. Hannah Höchs widely exhibited Frau und Saturn, 1922, also sold for £1,085,000 / $1,381,205, eclipsing the previous mark set at Christies in New York in 2007.
20th Century Week opened 24 hours earlier with the Modern British & Irish Art Evening Sale, which realised a total of £20,199,500. The top lot of the night was Henry Moores Family Group, which saw spirited bidding in the room and on the phone before selling for £3,861,000 / $4,918,914 to an Asian collector.
Barbara Hepworths Curved Form (Bryher II) realised £3,301,000 / $4,205,474 and is currently featured in the exhibition Sculpture in the Square, an outdoor sculpture garden set within St Jamess Square, until 29 June 2017
The sale opened with a world auction record for Henry Lambs Portrait of Edie McNeill (£281,000 / $357,994). Additional records were achieved for Victor Pasmores Linear Motif in Black and White (£329,000 / $419,146) and Nic Fiddian-Greens Still Water (£209,000 / $266,266). A record in the medium was set for L. S. Lowrys 1939 drawing A Station Platform (£269,000 / $342,706).