Sotheby's Paris African and Oceanic Arts department's last sale of the year totals $6.3 million
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, May 1, 2025


Sotheby's Paris African and Oceanic Arts department's last sale of the year totals $6.3 million
Portraits of King Pokam and of Queen Yugang, Sovereigns of Batoufam. High. 101 and 102 cm ; 39¾ in and 40 in. Collection René and Odette Delenne. Sold for: 1.443.000€ / $1,535,496. Photo: Sotheby’s / Art Digital Studio.



PARIS.- The African and Oceanic Arts department's last sale of the year totalled €5,932,500 ($6,312,773), with 81% of lots sold and 90% by value, with nearly 50% of lots sold above their high estimates. The highest prices went to works from collections built up several decades ago and masterpieces from restricted corpuses.

At €2.9 million ($3 million), the René and Odette Delenne collection largely exceeded its high estimate, with 100% of lots sold. This remarkable collection begun in the 1950’s was celebrated at several outstanding exhibitions, and more recently with the acquisition of thirty-four sculptures from Congo by the Cleveland Museum of Art in 2010.

The sale was led by a pair of statues portraying King Pokam and his wife Yugang: a masterpiece by the Master of Batoufam (Bamileke, Cameroon), which was sold for €1,443,000 / $1,535,500 (lot 14). Documented since 1920’s, this work joined the Delenne collection in 1970, and was unveiled in 1988 at the famous Utotombo exhibition (Brussels, Palais des Beaux-Arts).

From the same collection, the Kopar male figure from the Lower Sepik region was sold for €483,000 / $513,960 (lot 9, estimate: €150,000-200,000). Collected around 1960, this austerely beautiful sculpture is part of a very restricted corpus.

Bidding was also competitive for a ceremonial drum collected by Jacques Viot from the Lake Sentani region in 1929, which at €363,000 / $386,268, twice the high estimate (lot 8, estimate: €120,000-180,000). Here a figure forms part of the handle, and the beauty of the carving illustrates the superlative art of Western Papua.

The sale included nine lots of African Art from the Murray Frum collection, which achieved a total of €900,250 / $955,000. This took the overall total for this collection to €8.4 million /$8.9 million including the Oceanic art works from the collection, sold on 16 September 2014 by Sotheby’s in Paris.

The highest price for this group went to a superb dignitary's sceptre from Luba, in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, which featured in the frontispiece of William Fagg's 1981 book on the Frum collection. The successful bidder went all the way up to €267,000 /$284,000 to obtain this insignia of power: one of the largest still in private hands, and a masterpiece of the corpus (lot 23, estimate: €150,000-200,000).

The sale included several masterpieces from the Congo, which collectors were not slow to carry off.

A Fang figure from the former Louis Carré collection fetched €423,000 / $450,000 (lot 20, €400,000-500,000). This ancestral effigy illustrating the virtuosity of Fang master sculptors, featured in the iconic exhibitions of 1930 and 1933 staged by Charles Ratton, Pierre Loeb, Tristan Tzara and at the Louis Carré gallery.

Another masterpiece belonging to a restricted corpus of art from Congo, a Kota Ndasa reliquary figure, exceeded at €291,000 / $309,650 its high estimate of €250,000 (lot 68). The discovery of this reliquary figure - a newly revealed masterpiece - sheds new light on a corpus as narrow as it is illustrious: the style known as "Kota Ndasa". It is also an expression, in the sheer power of its forms pared down to their simplest lines, of the apotheosis of Kota art.

Bidding was competitive for a Kongo-Vili Nkonde figure from the former Arman collection, whose protective power clearly appealed. Estimated at €130,000-160,000, this went all the way up to €279,000 / $296,900 (lot 77).

Last but not least, a masterpiece of Madagascan statuary, a 164 cm-high commemorative portrait of a man with a touch of the adolescent, which could have come straight out of the Renaissance period, brought this session to a close with a price of €363,000 / $386,270 : world auction record for a masterpiece from Madagascar (lot 84, estimate: €120,000-180,000).










Today's News

December 5, 2015

"Hoards: The Hidden History of Ancient Britain" opens at the British Museum in London

Sotheby's Paris African and Oceanic Arts department's last sale of the year totals $6.3 million

Cité de l'Architecture et du Patrimoine exhibits works by Renzo Piano Building Workshop

New Orleans Museum of Art features American art collection with visions of US

Shapiro Auctions announces highlights from its December sale of International Fine and Decorative Art

World's top nature photos to be projected onto St Peter's in solidarity with climate change

First exhibition of photographs by Fort Worth photographer Jeremy Enlow opens at PDNB

Sarah Moon's most comprehensive exhibition to date on view at Deichtorhallen in Hamburg

Rare Meissen goes home as German museum snaps up treasure at Bonhams European Ceramics Sale

Three 'Van Gogh Girls' outfits by Viktor & Rolf on display at Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen

Exhibition of new paintings by French artist Agathe de Bailliencourt opens at Blain/Southern

Hermès rarities = Holiday Luxury at Heritage Auctions' accessories signature auction

Roy Lichtenstein and historic property from the Christian deGuigné Collection to highlight Clars sale

Eleven opens annual Christmas Salon exhibition

The London Original Print Fair 2016 announces dates and launch of a new purchase grant for museums

Second artist shortlist for the BMW Art Journey announced

2016 Wolfgang Hahn Prize goes to artist Huang Yong Ping

Brazilians hot and bothered over risque sand sculptures

Exhibition of recent paintings by Philip Pearlstein opens at Betty Cuningham Gallery

Capo Auction tops own sales record with Antonio Bandeira Brazilian painting

Exhibition of works by Josef Hofer opens at Christian Berst art brut

Exhibition of work by jeweller Romilly Saumarez Smith and artist Verdi Yahooda opens in Norwich

The Human Body: Measure and Norms: Group exhibition opens at Blindspot Gallery

Mayfair's new contemporary art gallery opens




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful