New Peaks Reached in the American Art Market at Christie's New York
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New Peaks Reached in the American Art Market at Christie's New York
Thomas Moran (1827-1926), Green River of Wyoming signed with initials in monogram and dated 'TMoran. 1878' (lower right) oil on canvas 25 x 48 in. (63.5 x 121.9 cm.) Photo: Courtesy Christie's.



NEW YORK.- Christie’s Spring 2008 Important American Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture sale totaled $72.6 million, set new records and established major new benchmarks across the category. The highest total for an American Art sale at Christie’s, the auction also saw new records set for 19th Century American art, American Modernism – and included the highest combined total for American Western art. 111 lots were sold during the proceedings for an average sold lot value of $654,043.

Eric Widing, Head of American Paintings at Christie’s, says: “Today the Wild West came to Christie’s as we shattered previous records and achieved an astonishing $17.7 million for Moran’s masterwork of the Green River, Wyoming. Numerous successive American Western records were set immediately after, when property from the great Stegall collection of Taos masters was offered, along with a tremendous new record for Albert Bierstadt, one of the most storied landscapists of the West. Other categories saw excellent prices, in particular Marsden Hartley’s newly-discovered Modernist masterwork Lighthouse, which set a record not just for Hartley, but also for American Modernism.”

The auction was led by Thomas Moran’s monumental American West landscape Green River of Wyoming, which realized a remarkable $17.74 million, more than doubling the previous record for a 19th century American painting. One of the earliest of his acclaimed oils depicting the Green River, it sold in the room to American art dealers Avery Galleries, from Bryn Mawr, PA. The pre-sale estimate for the painting was $3.5 to $5 million, and the previous record for a 19th century American painting was John Singer Sargent's Robert Louis Stevenson and his wife that fetched $8.8 million in 2004.

A new auction record was also set in the rising American Modernism category, when Marsden Hartley’s recently-rediscovered Lighthouse – an American Modernist masterwork and the finest painting of its kind to be offered in a generation – sold for $6.31 million. It was bought by an anonymous phone bidder, and broke the previous record for American Modernism that had stood at $6.17 million, when Georgia O'Keeffe's Calla lilies with red anemone sold at Christie's in 2001.

Beyond the success of the Moran landscape, American Western art had an unprecedented day, with $41.47 million sold during the auction – the largest auction of American Western art ever sold. The exceptional works from the renowned Stegall Collection – the most important collection of Taos paintings to appear at auction in a decade – totaled $11.22 million; and when combined with other Western works in the sale, eight new records were set, including those for Albert Bierstadt, Walter Ufer and Joseph Henry Sharp.










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