LONDON.- Following a week that saw more than 8,000 guests attend the pre-sale exhibition at
Sothebys New Bond Street galleries in London, todays Modern & Contemporary Art Evening Auction was led by the record-shattering result for René Magrittes sublime Lempire des lumières, selling for £59.4 / $79.8 million.
The result drove the nights combined sale total to £221.4 / $297.2 million, the highest total ever achieved in a single day at Sothebys London (est. £170.4-223.3 million / $227.9-299.7 million).
Later this month, Sothebys will present the first sale dedicated to Surrealist art ever staged in Paris, with 25 lots carrying a combined pre-sale estimate of $30 - 43 million.
FACTS & FIGURES FROM TONIGHTS SALES
Deep bidding across both sales, spanning all categories
Five works sold in excess of £10 million, the highest number at Sothebys in five years
Deep bidding from Asia: in The Now sale, 50% of the works attracted Asian bidding, in the Modern & Contemporary Evening Auction 30% of works attracted Asian bidding
International participation from 46 countries, the highest in almost a decade
Over half of participants were online, the highest proportion for a London Marquee sale
Modern & Contemporary Evening Auction
Modern & Contemporary Evening Auction: £191.2 / $257.9 million (pre-sale estimate: £154.8-201m / $207.8-269.8m (54 lots)
Sale led by René Magrittes Lempire des lumières, a masterpiece of 20th century art, which achieved £59.4 / $79.8 million, nearly tripling the artists previous auction record and setting a new record for a painting sold at auction in Europe*
*The price achieved, £59.4 million, represents the highest price, in GBP, ever achieved for any work sold at auction in Europe. The dollar equivalent, $79.8 million, represents the second highest price, in USD, ever achieved for a painting sold at auction in London
Record for any Belgian artist at auction
Prior to sale, the painting was exhibited to fanfare worldwide with stops in Los Angeles, New York, Hong Kong, Taipei, and Singapore before returning to London
Claude Monets Nymphéas, an exceptional example of the artists famed and beloved Waterlilies, sold for £23.2 / $31.2 million
David Hockneys Garrowby Hill, a magnificent return by the artist to the ever-changing East Yorkshire landscape, sold for £14 / $18.9 million (7.5-10.5 million)
The Now Evening Sale
Sale total: £30 / $40.3 million in debut London edition for the series, exceeding its high estimate by 35% (pre-sale estimate: £15.6-22.3 million / $21-29.9 million)
95% of lots sold
70% of lots exceed their high estimate
36% of buyers in the sale were under the age of 40
Six benchmarks set including new artist records for Shara Hughes, Flora Yukhnovich, Hilary Pecis and Robert Nava, while Rachel Jones and Robbie Barrat make their auction debuts
Average of more than 5 bidders per lot
Fresh to market works bring demand, with all works having never before been offered at auction
Strong participation from Asia (see above)
Paddles raised for women artists, with strong results set for Jade Fadojutimi, Hilary Pecis, Cecily Brown and Elizabeth Peyton, in addition to:
Rachel Jones whose A Slow Teething achieved £617,400 / $828,613 - nearly nine times the high estimate - in auction debut
Auction record set for Shara Hughes, whose Naked Lady sold for £2 / $2.7 million following a 15-minute bidding battle between more than 10 bidders, nearly doubled the artists previous record
Meteoric rise of British artist Flora Yukhnovich continued, whose Warm, Wet N Wild sold for £2.7 / $3.6 million, setting a new auction record for the artist, more than 13 times the pre-sale high estimate
Further standout results:
David Hockneys Woldgate Woods, Winter, 2010, the artists first multi-camera video work, set a new benchmark for video art by the artist, selling for £922,500 / $1.2 million
Two works by Banksy from the collection of music legend Robbie Williams achieved a combined total of £7.2 / $9.7 million, led by Vandalised Oil (Choppers) at £4.4 / $5.9 million