Sotheby's sales floor, 19 May Courtesy, Sotheby's
Sotheby’s back-to-back evening auctions on 19 May hauled in a comfortable $241.6m ($283.4m with fees), a mid-range take when compared to overall pre-sale expectations. The Now sale, a turbo-charged white glove affair, realized $60.16m ($72.9m with fees) with 23 lots cumulatively estimated at $35.9m to $51.9m. The following 27 lots that comprised a significantly richer Contemporary sale took in $181.4m ($210.5m with fees) against an estimate of $170.1m-$256.2m.
Both sales had significant irrevocable bids and house guarantees, somewhat securing the high numbers. The Now sale kicked off with seven guarantees and irrevocable bids, estimated between $15.95m and $22.8m, while the Contemporary sale ran with eleven combined guarantees valued at $119-180 million. (Typically guarantees are pegged at the low end of estimates.) More impressively, eleven artist records were set during the combined sales, nine in The Now portion of the evening and two during the Contemporary sale.
Anna Weyant, Falling Woman (2020) Courtesy, Sotheby's
The marathon began with The Now sale and Anna Weyant’s striking Falling Woman (2020), which hammered at $1.3m ($1.63m with fees) against an estimate of $150,000-$200,000. Christina Quarles followed with a Surrealist infused composition, Night Fell Upon Us Up On Us (2019), which sold for a record $3.7m ($4.5m with fees, est. $600,000-$800,000), then the Venice Biennale star Simone Leigh’s handsome and historically attuned sculpture Birmingham, from 2012 and executed in India ink and epoxy on terracotta and porcelain, set another record when it hammered for $1.75m ($2.16m with fees, est. $150,000-$200,000).
The quick step march of women artists continued with Avery Singer’s 100in by 120in computer graphic resembling, grey scale work Happening, from 2014, which drew a posse of four bidders and achieved yet another record, hammering at $4.3m ($5.25m with fees, est. $2.5m-$3.5m), and María Berrío’s densely textured Japanese paper collage on canvas The Lovers 4 from 2016, which sold for $800,000 ($1m with fees, est. $300,000-$500,000).
Kerry James Marshall, Beauty Examined (1993) Courtesy, Sotheby's
In the recently minted blue-chip league, Julie Mehretu’s ink, graphite and acrylic on canvas, meticulously rendered with all-over mark making, Emergent Algorithm (Manara Circle, Palestine) from 2012, realized $4m ($4.89m with fees, est. $3m-$4m) while Lynette Yiadom-Boakye’s standing figure in a red and white striped jersey, 11PM Sunday (2011), hit $1.4m (backed by an irrevocable bit, $1.74m with fees, est. $1.2m-$1.8m). A standout entry of the evening, Kerry James Marshall’s art history infused acrylic and collage on unstretched canvas from 1993, Beauty Examined, ignited a slow burn bidding battle and ultimately sold to an anonymous telephone bidder for $11.5m ($13.5m with fees, est. $8m-$12m).
After a short intermission the second act of Sotheby’s almost perfect evening began with David Hammons’ storied Untitled (Body Print) from 1975, executed in grease and dry pigment on paper, which made a tidy $1.1m ($1.38m with fees, est. $600-800,000). Helen Frankenthaler’s richly hued abstraction from 1974, Circe, went for $3.9m ($4.76m with fees, est. $2.5m-$3.5m) and David Hockney’s polygon shaped, technicolor hued landscape in acrylic on canvas Grand Canyon II, from 2017 and scaled at 48in by 96in, realized $9.8m ($11m with fees, est. $10m-$15m).
Ed Ruscha, Cold Beer Beautiful Girls (1993) Courtesy, Sotheby's
From the West Coast Pop Art front, Ed Ruscha’s blue sky text painting stenciled with crisp white letters, Cold Beer Beautiful Girls (1993) reached $16.1m ($18.8m with fees, est. $15m-$20m). The picture last sold at Christie’s New York in November 2002 for $537,500, a clear indicator of how far and how much this market has grown.
In a darker mood, Remorse, Philip Guston’s hood draped figure, partially illuminated by a cord hung bare light bulb, from 1969, realized $6.5m ($7.8m with fees, est. $5m-$7m). A second, later work by Guston, the 1978 canvas Celebration which is emblematic of the artist’s post Ab-Ex, cartoon-influenced style and shows his outraised hands with a smoldering cigarette over a pastiche of painting cans and bottles, sold to a telephone bidder for $4.25m ($5.2m with fees, est. $5m-$7m).
A quartet of works in different media by Georg Baselitz from the collection of Hardie Beloff was led by Women of Dresden-Visit from Prague, a roughhewn carved head in ash wood painted bright yellow that shattered expectations by charging to a record $9.5m ($11.2m with fees, est. $3m-$4m). A second Baselitz from the group, Falle (Trap), from 1963, a striking expressionist view of a seated figure, one of the artist’s invented cadre of heroes and anti-heroes, leaning against two limbless trees with blood staining his fatigues, realized $7m ($8.36m with fees, est. $8m-$12m). The seller acquired the painting in 1986 from the famed and now long shuttered Galerie Beyeler in Basel.
In a related figurative vein and equally electrifying in content and image, Francis Bacon’s seated Study of Red Pope 1962, 2nd Version 1971, set behind its gold frame and glass barrier, brought a relatively meek but top lot at $40m ($46.2m with fees, est. $40m-$60m). Bacon’s elaborately cloaked pope is encased in a kind of transparent cell with the suited image of his dead lover George Dyer looking in as if viewing a kind of freak show. The seller’s family acquired the painting from Marlborough Zurich in 1973 for approximately $250,000, the going price for a single panel Bacon in those days. This time it came to market backed by a Sotheby’s house guarantee. It was previously offered at Christie’s London in October 2017 with a £60m-£80m estimate and failed to sell. This was its reduced second coming.
Cy Twombly, Untitled (1969) Courtesy, Sotheby's
The back and forth play between European and American masters carried on with Cy Twombly’s sublime blackboard painting, Untitled (1969), grandly scaled at 78¾in by 93½in, made $35.5m ($38m with fees, est. $40m-$60m). The work came backed by a so-called irrevocable bid and looked like it needed it despite ranking high in Twombly’s oeuvre, with its looping, intertwined lines of graceful marks resembling someone entranced, with chalk in hand, effortlessly writing on a classroom blackboard. The illusion of the chalk lines comes from the artist’s alchemical mix of oil based house paint and wax crayon on canvas. Still, the painting slipped by with scant bidding and went to the irrevocable bidder.
Unlike the Now portion of the sale, with its electrified bidding, bevy of women and artists of color, the second act, with a few notable exceptions, was dominated by older or long-gone white males.