Emily Kame Kngwarreye, Summer Celebration 1991, Estmate $300/500.000 Emily Kame Kngwarreye, Summer Celebration 1991, Estmate $300/500.000 - Mit freundlicher Genehmigung von: sothebys.com

Was: Presse

Wann: 24.05.2019

NEW YORK, 23 May 2019 – Sotheby’s is pleased to announce that our auctions of Aboriginal Art will now be presented in our New York headquarters. The first such sale will be held this November, alongside our marquee auctions of Contemporary Art and will feature works created by artists from the world’s oldest continuous culture, including early museum-quality artefacts…
NEW YORK, 23 May 2019 – Sotheby’s is pleased to announce that our auctions of Aboriginal Art will now be presented in our New York headquarters. The first such sale will be held this November, alongside our marquee auctions of Contemporary Art and will feature works created by artists from the world’s oldest continuous culture, including early museum-quality artefacts dating from the 18th century to cutting-edge post-colonial and political Contemporary Art.

The November sale will mark the first Aboriginal Art auction to be held outside of Australia or Europe by an international auction house. Sotheby’s has conducted standalone Aboriginal Art auctions since 1997, with sales held in Australia from 1997 to 2009, and in London from 2015 to 2018. The sales will be led by Tim Klingender, who has overseen all such sales at Sotheby’s since their inception in 1996.

“Australian Indigenous Art has always been of global interest, with buyers in recent London sales bidding from Europe, the Middle East, Asia, North & South America, and Australia. It has been my ambition for many years to conduct these sales in New York and 2019 marks 30 years since the landmark traveling exhibition ‘Dreamings – The Art of Aboriginal Australia’ at the Asia Society galleries introduced the city to this dynamic art movement. Since then, interest in the field has grown continuously, and it is now collected in depth by many of the world’s leading museums and private collectors,” said Timothy Klingender, Sotheby’s Senior Consultant Australian Art.

Early additions to the inaugural November auction include two masterworks by Emily Kame Kngwarreye, the most internationally acclaimed female Aboriginal artist, emerging from the renowned European Collection of Thomas Vroom. Summer Celebration 1991 and Untitled 1990 (right) are both rare, large-scale, early paintings, and the latter piece was included in the artist’s touring retrospective co-curated by The National Art Center, Tokyo and The National Museum of Australia, Canberra.

Sotheby’s has remained the continuous market leader in the field of Aboriginal Art for more than 20 years, and holds the record for the highest price achieved for Aboriginal Art at auction, as well as the highest overall sale total. Recent sales have included works from some of the world’s most renowned collections, including the Thomas Vroom Collection, the collection of the late Gabrielle Pizzi, and the collection of Fiona Brockhoff. Recent record prices include:

Highest auction price for a living Australian Aboriginal artistMichael Nelson Tjakamarra, Five Stories, £401,000

Highest auction price for an Australian Indigenous sculptureBenedict Munkara, Untitled, Male and Female Figures of Purukapali and Bima, £251,000

Highest auction price for an Australian Indigenous artefactA Broad Shield, Lower Murray River, Early 19th Century, £87,000

Highest auction price for an Australian Indigenous bark paintingJack Karedada, Namarali – The First One, £100,000

Tags: Benedict Munkara, Jack Karedada, Malerei, Michael Nelson Tjakamarra

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