NEW YORK, NY.- We are very pleased with our sale total of $128,104,500, said Tobias Meyer,
Sothebys Worldwide Head of Contemporary Art. The results came within our pre-sale estimate of $120.8/171.4 million, and we had a strong sell-through rate of 84.5% by lot, with 58 lots offered and 47 lots sold. These results follow the impressive total of $54.8 million achieved last night for works from the Collection of Allan Stone, bringing our overall two-day total to $182,910,000, securely within our overall estimate of $153.6/218.2 million.
It was a good night for Andy Warhol, said Alex Rotter, Director of Sothebys New York Contemporary Art department. We sold six out of the seven Warhol works on offer tonight, together bringing over $31 million. The sale was led by Sixteen Jackies, which sold for $20,242,500. There was extremely competitive bidding for Shadow (Red), which was vied for by four bidders and sold for $4.8 million, more than five times the high estimate. We saw solid prices for Statue of Liberty $3,442,500 and Round Jackie from the Collection of Dodie Rosekrans $3,722,500.
Jeff Koons Pink Panther, one of the most important works by the artist ever to have appeared at auction, sold for $16,882,500. The price is many multiples of the $1.8 million the work fetched when it last appeared at auction in 1999. The porcelain sculpture is the artists proof from an edition of three, with the other examples in the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago, and a prominent private American collection.
The sale saw a number of strong prices for art from the last 30 years, including Eroica I by Jean-Michel Basquiat. Painted in 1988 the final year of the artists life the work sold for $5,906,500 (est. $3.5/4.5 million). Shades by Mark Tansey, which depicts an allegory from Platos Republic, fetched $3,442,500 (est. $3/4 million). Leading a group of photographs in the sale was Rhein I, one of Andreas Gurskys most famous images, which sold for $2,098,500, comfortably in excess of the high estimate (est. $1/1.5 million). Two sculptures by Anish Kapoor were sought after tonight, with Turning the World Upside Down #4 fetching $2,434,500, in excess of the high estimate (est. $1.5/2 million), and Untitled from 2009, which also exceeded the high estimate to sell for $962,500 (est. $550/750,000).
Leading the mid-20th century section was one of the largest and most important works from Lucio Fontanas iconic body of work ever to appear at auction: Concetto Spaziale from 1965 sold for $6,242,500 (est. $6/8 million). David Smiths Voltri-Bolton II, a steel sculpture from 1962 was purchased by the Colby College Museum of Art for $2,994,500, nearly reaching the high estimate of $3 million. The work had been tucked away in a private collection since 1979. In addition to Round Jackie, works from the Collection of Dodie Rosekrans included three significant paintings by Jean Dubuffet from 1945-54; they were led by the Portrait de Édith Boissonnas that sold for $1,142,500, well over the high estimate (est. $600/800,000).
Works by Alexander Calder were also in demand this evening: The Tree, a large standing mobile exceeded the high estimate to sell $3,386,500 (est. $2/3 million) while Constellation with Bottles from 1943 fetched $3,106,500 (est. $3/4 million).
* Pre-sale estimates do not include buyers premium