SOTHEBY’S NEW YORK SALE SERIES OFIMPRESSIONIST & MODERN ARTREACHES $394.6 Million*Third-Highest Result for the Series in Sotheby’s History*Today’s Impressionist & Modern Art Day SaleAchieves $44.7 Million,Led by a New Auction Record for Émile Bernard
NOW OPEN FOR BIDDING ONLINEThe Sleep of Reason: A Private Collection of Surrealist Art
Scott Niichel, Head of Day Sales and Deputy Co-Head of Impressionist & Modern Art at Sotheby’s, New York. said “The Impressionist and Modern Art Day sale results reaffirmed the health and depth of this market following yesterday’s stellar Evening auction. Almost a third of the lots offered came from the same long-established private collections that formed the core of last night’s auction, and they included many of sale’s standout pieces - not least Émile Bernard’s idyllic countryside scene which established a new world auction record for the French artist, and Modigliani’s charcoal which achieved one of the highest prices for a drawing by the artist. Private collectors in particular responded to quality, rarity and provenance across the wide spectrum of categories this sale has to offer, and we very much look forward to presenting our next sales in London in June.”
Émile BernardBretonnes ramassant des pommesPainted in 1889Estimate $400/600,000Sold for $1.9 million
Today’s sale was led by Émile Bernard’s Bretonnes ramassant des pommes, which soared above its pre-sale high estimate of $600,000 to sell for $1.9 million – a new world record for the artist at auction. Offered from the Collection of Joe R. & Teresa L. Long, Bretonnes ramassant des pommes is undoubtedly one of the most important works by the artist ever to appear at auction. Its ravishing colors, flattened perspective and pastoral subject matter embody the Nabis vocabulary that Bernard helped to create, underscoring a striking contrast from the modern bustle of a rapidly industrializing Paris.
Amedeo Modigliani’sTête profil gaucheEstimate $400/600,000Sold for $1.1 million
The Joe R. & Teresa L. Long Collection also featured Amedeo Modigliani’s Tête profil gauche which fetched $1.1 million (estimate $400/600,000). Distilling the profile of a woman to its most fundamental geometric forms, this work on paper is representative of Modigliani’s exhaustive pursuit of pure artistic fulfilment and synthesizes the ancient traditions of Egyptian, Greek and Roman art.
Marc ChagallPaysage de Paris en bleuPainted in 1967Estimate $1.2/1.8 millionSold for $1.3 million&Coq et femme à l'éventailPainted circa 1978Estimate $700,000/1 millionSold for $ 956,000
Following Tuesday night’s sale of Marc Chagall’s enchanting Le Paysan, which achieved $7.6 million, healthy competition for the artist’s work continued in today’s auction. Completed in 1967, more than two decades after his beloved Bella’s death and at a time when Chagall enjoyed international fame as a painter, Paysage de Paris en bleu is replete with symbols that pay homage to the love in the artist’s iconic dreamscape style. Coq et femme à l'éventail showcases Chagall's mastery in assembling an array of folkloric images in a dense and colorful composition. This work contains several of the most crucial elements in the artist's pictorial iconography, including the violinist, the dancing peasant and the goat. It was painted during a period when Chagall was experimenting with stained glass, the influence of which can be seen in the kaleidoscopic colors.Lynn ChadwickSitting FiguresConceived in 1979-80Estimate $600/800,000Sold for $1 million
Lynn Chadwick’s monumental and majestic Sitting Figures led today’s offering of sculpture in the sale. Conceived in 1979-80 and cast in an edition of 6, the present version was acquired directly from the artist’s studio in 1989 and has previously never appeared at auction.
Pierre-Auguste RenoirJeune fille en rosePainted circa 1890Estimate $700/900,000Sold for $ 956,000
One of the standout classic Impressionist offerings of the sale, Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s Jeune fille en rose is a charming example of the artist’s portraits of women, which were lauded amongst his contemporaries just as they are today. Dominated by a range of bright tones of greens and blues, this palette underscores Renoir's understanding of the natural variations of light and his dexterity as an Impressionist portraitist.
The Sleep of Reason: A Private Collection of Surrealist Art OnlineOpen for Bidding through 20 May
Unparalleled in its breadth, this enigmatic private collection of paintings, collages, works on paper and books, was carefully curated by a true connoisseur of Surrealist theory and history. French, Belgian, European, American and Latin American Surrealists are represented in the collection, speaking not only to the dedicated vision of the collector, but also to the worldwide prevalence of Surrealism within the context of the 20th century zeitgeist. Highlights include works by Dorothea Tanning, Leonora Carrington and Kay, Man Ray, Yves Tanguy, and Georges Hugnet.