Vilhelm Hammershøi’s Interior. The Music Room, Strandgade 30, hanging on the wall of the very room it depicts Image © Iben Kaufmann Vilhelm Hammershøi’s Interior. The Music Room, Strandgade 30, hanging on the wall of the very room it depicts Image © Iben Kaufmann - Mit freundlicher Genehmigung von: sothebys.com

Was: Auktion

Wann: 16.05.2023

Until Now Having Graced the Wall for More than 75 Years of the Very Room it Depicts in the Artist’s Former Copenhagen Apartment

Estimated to Achieve $3-5 Million

The Painting Carries the Highest Estimate Ever Placed on a Work by Hammershøi

NEW YORK, 6 APRIL 2023 – Described by a contemporary critic in 1907 as “the most still and silent” of all the Danish…

Until Now Having Graced the Wall for More than 75 Years of the Very Room it Depicts in the Artist’s Former Copenhagen Apartment

Estimated to Achieve $3-5 Million

The Painting Carries the Highest Estimate Ever Placed on a Work by Hammershøi

NEW YORK, 6 APRIL 2023 – Described by a contemporary critic in 1907 as “the most still and silent” of all the Danish painters, Vilhelm Hammershøi has cast an enigmatic spell over audiences for more than a century with his modern and timeless aesthetic. The resonance of his painterly vision has become increasingly acute in the twenty-first century as viewers take refuge in his enigmatic works, where time seems to stand still.

This spring in New York, a painting by Hammershøi which has hung for over three quarters of a century on the very wall it depicts in Strandgade 30, Copenhagen – the apartment that was occupied by the artist and his wife Ida from 1898 until 1908, where he painted what are considered to be his most important interior paintings, and which was bought by the grandparents of the current owners in the mid twentieth century – is set to star as one of the highlights of Sotheby’s Modern Evening Auction on 16 May. As one of the flagships of Danish art today, Hammershøi is also now regarded as a transcendental modern master among the pantheon of artists who defined a relentlessly epic period in art history.

Last offered at auction in 1944, Interior. The Music Room, Strandgade 30 comes to the market with an estimate of $3 – 5 million, the highest estimate ever placed on a work by the artist. The painting has been shown outside Scandinavia on one occasion only, as part of a monograph exhibition on Hammershøi which travelled from Copenhagen to Paris and New York in 1997-98. From April 12th to 16th, it will go on view at Sotheby’s in London, ahead of a pre-sale viewing in New York in May.

“It is immensely exciting to be able to bring to the market this exceptional interior, which stands out both on account of its quality and quintessential subject matter but also of its provenance. In the same family ownership for over three quarters of a century, during that time it has graced the very wall it depicts in Strandgade 30, Hammershøi’s Copenhagen home until 1908.”Claude Piening, Senior International Specialist, European Paintings

“It fills us with pride to be sending this Danish masterpiece forth into the world, and for Hammershøi’s inimitable and timeless way of seeing to be appreciated and enjoyed by a global audience. As we have seen in recent years, his aesthetic and popularity have truly transcended his local market, and he now occupies a key position in the canon of classic modern artists.”Nina Wedell-Wedellsborg, Sotheby’s Denmark

“It fills us with pride to be sending this Danish masterpiece forth into the world, and for Hammershøi’s inimitable and timeless way of seeing to be appreciated and enjoyed by a global audience. As we have seen in recent years, his aesthetic and popularity have truly transcended his local market, and he now occupies a key position in the canon of classic modern artists.”Nina Wedell-Wedellsborg, Sotheby’s Denmark

Hammershøi’s interest in music is well known, and he and Ida regularly hosted evenings of chamber music in their home. The two string instruments, the cello and the violin, may well have belonged to Hammershøi’s friend, patron and biographer Alfred Bramsen’s children, Henry and Karen, respectively. True to Hammershøi’s counter-narrative aesthetic, however, here the trio of instruments – piano, cello, and violin – idle in silence, their players absent, their muteness amplifying the sense of soundlessness of the interior they occupy. They evoke instead the visual musicality of the composition, a harmonious arrangement in line, space, and light, cadenced by the even but slowly changing daylight illuminating the ensemble through the window to the left.

In a rare interview, from 1907, Hammershøi explained his preference in developing compositional structure: “What makes me choose a motif are… the lines, what I like to call the architectonic attitude in the picture. And then the light, naturally.” His interiors find parallels both in the art of the Dutch Golden Age and in the work of his contemporaries – the grey palette and sense of solitude bear striking similarities to the works of James McNeill Whistler who, also exploring the interrelation between painting and music, titled his paintings ‘symphonies’. A resonance can also be

Hammershøi’s work has long been revered as a source of Danish national pride, but the artist has recently been the subject of numerous retrospective exhibitions in Europe, Asia and America, prompting overdue recognition of one of Denmark’s most innovative and celebrated artists. In tandem with this development, museum acquisitions of the artist’s work outside Scandinavia have included The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and the Städel Museum in Frankfurt. Over the last six years, auction prices for his paintings have exceeded $5 million on multiple occasions. Distinguished by a subdued and refined palette and an architectural and geometric complexity typical of the artist’s most emblematic subjects, Interior. The Music Room, Strandgade 30 is set to captivate collectors and the public ahead of its auction next month.

Contact Info New York:Derek Parsons | Derek.Parsons@sothebys.comAnna Tisi | Anna.Tisi@sothebys.com

London:Matthew Floris | Matthew.Floris@sothebys.com

Tags: Malerei, Moderne Kunst, Vilhelm Hammershøi

the exhibition – opening on 5 February and on view until 5 May at Sotheby’s Tel Aviv office, located at 6 Rothschild Boulevard 

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