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3 février 2018

Sotheby's Masters Week achieves $82.5 million in NY - Nearly doubling 2017 results

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Balthasar van der Ast, Still Life With Basket Of Shells, A Plate With Fruits And Insects. Estimate $800/1.2 million. Sold for $ 1,815,000. Courtesy Sotheby’s.

NEW YORK, NY.- Sotheby’s annual Masters Week auctions concluded today in New York, with 650+ paintings, drawings and sculptures selling for an overall total of $82.5 million – approaching the series’s high estimate of $85.9 million. This total is nearly double the results of the same sale series in 2017 ($41.9 million). 

Sotheby’s exhibition of 15 outstanding Spanish Old Master paintings from The Auckland Project in Bishop Auckland, North East England will remain on public view in New York through 11 February – a pendant to The Frick Collection’s exhibition Zurbarán's Jacob and His Twelve Sons: Paintings from Auckland Castle. Belonging to Auckland Castle’s permanent collection, the works at Sotheby’s will form its newly created Spanish Gallery – opening in 2019 – and are on public view for the first time in America. Seeking to revitalize the former industrial town of Bishop Auckland through the creation of a world-class cultural and heritage destination, the new Spanish Gallery will be the first museum in the UK dedicated to Spanish art and culture. 

Below is a look at some of the highlights that drove the results of the Masters Week series: 

Master Paintings & Sculpture Day Sale 
Auction Total: $8.2 million
 
Masters Week auctions concluded on Friday morning with the Master Paintings & Sculpture Day Sale. The auction was led by Jacopo Zucchi’s 16th-century Portrait Of A Young Lady In An Embroidered Dress And Pearls, which sold for $567,000 – more than four times its pre-sale high estimate (estimate $80/120,000). Though the identity of the woman remains unknown, it is clear from her lavish costume and elegant pose that she is a member of the Florentine Medici court. The painting once belonged to the celebrated New York connoisseur Thomas Jefferson Bryan (1802-1870), and later formed part of the collection of the New York Historical Society upon his death in 1870. 

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Lot 151. Jacopo Zucchi (Florence circa 1540 - 1596 Rome), Portrait Of A Young Lady In An Embroidered Dress And Pearls, oil on canvas, 52 1/4  by 41 5/8  in.; 132.7 by 105.9 cm. Estimate 80,000 — 120,000 USD. Lot sold 567,000 USD. Photo: Sotheby's

Master Paintings Evening Sale 
Auction Total: $48.4 million
 
Thursday’s evening sale was led by an impressive pair of Venetian views by Canaletto, which sold for $4.2 million (left, estimate $3/4 million). Most likely completed in England in the 1740s, the pair offers waterfront views of two of the most recognizable façades in La Serenissima: the Church of the Redentore and the Prisons of San Marco. While there are other known views of the Church of the Redentore by Canaletto, the present view of the Prisons of San Marco is a unique composition for the artist of which no other version is known. 

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Lot 54. Giovanni Antonio Canal, called Canaletto (Venice 1697 - 1768), Venice, the Churches of the Redentore and San Giacomo; Venice, the Prisons and the Bridge of Sighs, Looking Northwest from the Balcony; a pair, both oil on canvas; each: 18 3/8 by 30 1/4 in.; 46.7 by 76.8 cm. Estimate 3,000,000 — 4,000,000 USD. Lot sold 4,179,500 USD. Photo: Sotheby's.

Christopher Apostle, Head of Sotheby’s Old Master Paintings Department in New York, commented: “We are absolutely thrilled with the sale’s results, which saw varied and spirited bidding from international institutions, private collectors and the trade. All major schools are represented at the highest end of the auction, demonstrating strength across the diversity of our market – Italian, Spanish, German French, Flemish and Dutch pictures all commanded standout prices. We saw competition for both traditional scenes, such as the Canaletto views and Lancret interior, as well as for arresting images like the two works by Cranach the Elder. "

The Line of Beauty: Drawings from the Collection of Howard and Saretta Barnet 
Auction Total: $11.6 Million
 
Assembled over some 40 years by the New York couple Howard and Saretta Barnet, this superb collection told the story of five centuries of the art of drawing in Western Europe. The auction’s total of $11.6 million far outstripped its high estimate of $7.2 million, demonstrating the exceptional quality, beauty and market appeal for the Barnets’ collection. The dedicated sale was led by Samuel Palmer’s A Church With A Boat And Sheep from circa 1831, which achieved $2.4 million – nearly seven times its high estimate of $350,000, and a new world auction record for the artist. Created during his fabled ‘Shoreham period’, the present work is an extremely fine example of Palmer’s monochrome drawings, with other such works housed in the collections of the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, the Tate Britain and the British Museum in London. 

 

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Lot 13. Samuel Palmer, R.W.S (Newington 1805 - 1881 Redhill), A Church With A Boat And Sheep. Pen and brown ink and wash heightened with scratching out, 183 by 137 mm; 7¼ by 5 3/8  in. Estimate 250,000 — 350,000 USD. Lot sold 2,415,000 USD. Photo: Sotheby's.

Gregory Rubinstein, Head of Sotheby’s Old Master Drawings Department, commented: “We are thrilled with the results achieved by the Barnet Collection, which presented collectors with the opportunity to acquire drawings of the highest quality and beauty. These results demonstrate the market’s understandable enthusiasm for museum-quality, fresh-to-market material, as was the case with the record-breaking Samuel Palmer drawing that led the auction. It’s incredibly rare for such a collection to appear at auction, and it’s been a joy to have worked on it from start to finish. Rarely, if ever, have I seen a more perfectly chosen collection, in any category.” 

The Otto Naumann Sale 
Auction Total: $6.2 Million
 
Wednesday’s auctions concluded with a dedicated evening sale of property from the gallery and private collection of Otto Naumann, the preeminent dealer of Old Master and 19th Century paintings who is regarded as one of the most respected figures in the international art scene. Offering a supreme assortment of Dutch, Flemish, Italian, Spanish and British paintings spanning the 16th through the 19th centuries, the auction totaled $6.2 million – surpassing its high estimate of $5.2 million. The sale established new auction records for eight artists, including benchmark prices for James Drummond, Denys Calvaert and Giovanni Bilivert. Bilivert’s small-scale painting on copper Venus, Cupid and Pan led the sale, achieving $879,000 (estimate $300/500,000). With its highly-polished surface, the artist displays his superb sense of refinement in colors and skill in conveying different textures.

 

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Lot 18. Giovanni Bilivert (Florence 1585 - 1644), Venus, Cupid and Pan,inscribed on the reverse in an old hand, possibly by the artist himself: originale di Giovanni Biliverti/ Fiorentino, oil on copper, 18 by 13 in.; 45.7 by 33 cm. Estimate 300,000–500,000 USD. Lot sold 879,000 USDPhoto: Sotheby's.

George Wachter, Chairman of Sotheby’s America and Co-Chairman of Sotheby’s Old Master Paintings Worldwide, commented: “We were honored to work with Otto Naumann once again in presenting his distinguished selection of paintings. The tremendous success of the sale is a testament to Otto’s taste, sophistication and collaborative spirit, with top prices driven by private collectors from around the world who competed to own a piece of his vision.” 

Old Master Drawings including the Collection of Professor Egbert Haverkamp-Begemann 
Auction Total: $5.2 Million
 
The various-owner sale of Old Master Drawings was anchored by the collection of the late Egbert Haverkamp-Begemann, the long-standing and much revered professor of the History of Art at New York University’s Institute of Fine Arts. Haverkamp-Begemann was a highly important figure in the teaching and study of 17th-century Dutch and Flemish art, and drawings were always an integral part of his approach to teaching. The collection totaled $1.5 million – nearly double its high estimate – and was led by Karel van Mander the Elder’s record-breaking The Repentance of Zacchaeus the Tax Collector, a beautifully-preserved example of late 16th-century Dutch Mannerist draughtsmanship that sold for $387,000 (estimate $60/80,000). The sale achieved six new artist records plus a further 13 medium records (for works on paper). 

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Property from The Collection of Professor Egbert Haverkamp-Begemann. Lot 258. Karel van Mander the Elder (Meulebeuke near Courtrai 1548–1606 Amsterdam), The Repentance Of Zacchaeus The Tax Collector. Pen and brown ink and wash, over traces of black chalk, within brown ink framing lines, indented for transfer, 186 by 142 mm; 7¼ by 5 5/8  in. Estimate 60,000–80,000 USD. Lot sold 387,000 USD. Photo: Sotheby's.

Fine Old Master and 19th Century European Art 
Auction Total: $2.9 million
 
The annual sale of Fine Old Master and 19th Century European Art saw strong prices achieved for quintessential 19th-century pictures – from Rudolf Ernst’s Orientalist panel The Musician that tripled its high estimate of $25,000 to achieve a price of $93,750, to British Victorian pictures including Richard Dadd’s allegorical Sketch To Illustrate The Passions - Avarice and Herbert Gustave Schmalz’s Faithful Unto Death (Christianes Ad Leones!), both of which fetched $68,750 (estimates $8/12,000 each). 

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Lot 1856. Rudolf Ernst (1854-1932 Austrian), The Musician, signed R. Ernst (lower left), oil on panel, 31 3/4 by 25 in. Estimate 15,000 — 25,000 USD. Lot sold 93,750 USD. Photo: Sotheby's.

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