Error: 3002 Source: GeoIP.asp line 56: File could not be opened. Exceptional Works by Klimt, Giacometti, Cézanne, Matisse and Magritte at Sotheby's
The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 Wednesday, May 22, 2013
 
Exceptional Works by Klimt, Giacometti, Cézanne, Matisse and Magritte at Sotheby's
Auction house workers stand by a 1913 painting by Gustav Klimt, left, entitled 'Church in Cassone-Landscape with Cypresses' next to a still-life painting by Paul Cezanne, center, and the only life-time cast of 'The Walking Man' by Alberto Giacometti, right, during a photo call in central London, Tuesday Jan. 12, 2010. All three art pieces, estimated to fetch more that 10 million British pounds each will be auctioned during the Impressionist & Modern Art Masterpieces sale on Feb. 3, 2010. AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis.
LONDON.- Sotheby’s Evening Sale of Impressionist & Modern Art on Wednesday, February 3, 2010 will be the first ever London sale of its kind to include three works individually estimated to realise more than £10 million. The works - each one a masterpiece - are by Klimt, Giacometti and Cézanne. They form the nucleus of an exceptionally rich and varied sale which also offers major works by artists such as Matisse, Feininger, Schiele, Magritte, Miró and Moore.

Melanie Clore, Co-Chairman of Sotheby’s Impressionist & Modern Art Department Worldwide, commented: “Following on from the success of our sales in New York in November, we are now delighted to present such important and rare works to the market, which not only reflect the confidence of our consignors, but also cater to the strong interest from collectors around the world for top quality works.”

The important still-life Pichet et fruits sur une table, painted in 1893-94 by Paul Cézanne, is estimated at £10-15 million. One of the finest works by the artist ever to come to auction, the painting dates from the period when Cézanne’s mastery of the still-life was at its height. The artist’s still lifes have long been recognised as being among his greatest achievements and they played a key role in the development of early 20th-century art. Commenting on Cézanne’s still-lifes, Roger Fry wrote: ‘It is hard to exaggerate their importance in the expression of Cézanne’s genius … because it is in them that he appears to have established his ideas of design and his theories of form.’ This painting was selected for the cover of the authoritative book Paul Cézanne, A Biography by John Rewald, the author of the Cézanne Catalogue Raisonné.

The quality of this still-life has been recognised by a series of illustrious collectors including Dr Albert C. Barnes, who acquired the work in 1920. His world famous Barnes Foundation in Pennsylvania is home to many of Cézanne’s most celebrated works. The painting relates closely to Cézanne’s still-life of the same date formerly in the collection of Mr and Mrs John Hay Whitney, which was sold at Sotheby’s New York in May 1999 for $60 million. The distinctive blue patterned curtain and still-life composition with fruit also appear in three major oils now in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, the National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C and the J. Paul Getty Museum in California.

Of equal rarity is Gustav Klimt’s Kirche in Cassone (Landschaft mit Zypressen) (Church in Cassone - Landscape with Cypresses), one of the most important landscapes by the artist ever to have appeared on the market. Estimated at £12-18 million, this beautiful, jewellike work was once part of one of the greatest early collections of Klimt’s work: that of the Austro-Hungarian iron magnate and collector Viktor Zuckerkandl (1851-1927) and his wife Paula. The painting went missing in Vienna during the Nazi period and only resurfaced several decades later. It is now being offered for sale pursuant to an agreement between the now 81-year old great nephew of the original owner and the European private collector in whose family the painting has been for several years.

Another outstanding work in the sale is L’Homme qui marche I, by Alberto Giacometti. One of the most important sculptures by the artist ever to have come to the auction market, this life-size work ranks among the most arresting and iconic of the artist’s bronzes. Its appearance at auction in February will mark the first time a Giacometti figure of a walking man in this monumental size has come to auction in over 20 years. More than that, this particular piece has the distinction of being a life-time cast. No life-time cast of the subject has ever been offered at auction before.

Formerly part of the corporate collection of Dresdner Bank AG (by whom it was acquired circa 1980), the work came into the possession of Commerzbank AG after the latter’s takeover of Dresdner Bank in 2009. Cast in 1961, L’Homme qui marche I is estimated at £12-18 million. Proceeds from the sale will be entirely put towards supporting Commerzbank’s foundations as well as selected museums.

Fauve and Expressionist works:
The market for Fauve and Expressionist works has grown apace in recent years. Helena Newman, Director of the Evening Sale and Vice Chairman of the Impressionist & Modern Art department, Sotheby’s Worldwide, remarks: “In recent years, we have seen an increasing number of buyers, particularly new buyers, looking for early modern masterpieces especially by Fauve and Expressionist artists such as Van Dongen, Kirchner and Matisse.”

Henri Matisse’s Femme couchée, estimated at £3.5-5.5 million, is a magnificent example of the artist’s favourite subject - that of a reclining woman in an interior - and this theme relates closely to his celebrated Odalisques series from the 1920s, which would become one of the most fascinating series of Matisse’s entire oeuvre. Probably painted in the artist’s studio on the Quai Saint-Michel in Paris around 1917, Femme couchée reflects the artist’s romantic and opulent approach that reached a culmination during his time in Nice.

Lorette, the semi-nude Italian model depicted, began posing for Matisse in 1915 and she is captured in the painting wrapped in a Spanish-style shawl and in a state of dreamy abandon on a vividly coloured and patterned sofa, which became a Matisse trademark. The model is said to have had a profound influence in liberating Matisse and his work.

The sale also includes works by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner and Lyonel Feininger. Estimated at £1-1.5 million, Kirchner’s Variétéparade (Variety Show), a monumental portrayal of acrobatic stage performers, is an example of German Expressionist painting at its most exuberant. Commenced in 1910 in Dresden and finished in Switzerland in 1926, this remarkable work – full of joie de vivre – plays out all the aesthetic concerns that were at the heart of Die Brücke – the important avant-garde artistic collective of which Kirchner was a founding member.

Locomotive, a vividly coloured work by Lyonel Feininger, carries an estimate of £1.5-2.5 million. Having spent 15 years working as a successful illustrator for periodicals in Berlin and Paris, Feininger only turned his attention to oils later in life and Locomotive, painted in Paris in 1908, is a rare early work from the formative years of his career as a painter. The artist was fascinated by Paris city life and signs of modernity and the subject of trains and locomotives, in particular, was one that he returned to on numerous occasions in his graphic works, oils and drawings. Locomotive belonged to Feininger’s eldest son Andreas from his time as a young boy and the painting remained in the artist’s family for almost a century.

Gustav Klimt was a great friend and mentor to his younger compatriot Egon Schiele, who is represented in February’s sale by Sitzende Frau mit violetten Strümpfen – one of the most arresting and accomplished works on paper from Schiele’s mature period. Although not depicted in the nude, the female subject radiates a palpable erotic appeal. She takes up the entirety of the picture surface, her physical presence so dominant that her head appears to extend beyond the edge of the sheet. The sitter is most likely to be Adele Harms, whose sister Edith Schiele married and for whom he evidently harboured a strong physical desire. Executed in 1917, just a year before his untimely death, the work dates from a period of relative success and prosperity for Schiele. As Jane Kallir observed: “His line, by 1917, had acquired an unprecedented degree of precision... Schiele’s hand had never been surer, more capable of grasping, in a single breathtaking sweep, the complete contour of a figure.... he had found, in the best of his late work, the perfect line.” Amply demonstrating this, Sitzende Frau mit violetten Strümpfen is estimated at £3-5 million.

Surrealist works:
February’s sale will also include a strong section of Surrealist works and the group is highlighted by Le Beau Navire, a mysterious composition by René Magritte in which a serene, almost sculpture-like female nude is set against a dramatic seascape. Estimated at £2.5-3.5 million, the painting belongs to a group of works that Magritte executed in the 1940s, all depicting classical female nudes in unidentified landscapes, the woman’s upper body permeated by the tone of the sky behind in what has been described as a pictorial reference to black magic: “It is an act of black magic to turn woman’s flesh into sky.” (David Sylvester and Sarah Whitfield, René Magritte, Catalogue Raisonné.)

Another work in the sale is Peinture (Le Pêcheur) by Joan Miró, a quintessential Surrealist composition painted in 1927 at the height of the artist’s involvement with the Surrealist group (est: £300,000-400,000). This will be offered alongside further notable works by Francis Picabia (La Transparence, est: £500,000-700,000), Max Ernst (Arbre et deux personnages, est: £400,000-600,000), and Jean Arp (Tête Bouteille, est: £200,000-300,000).

Sculpture:
Like Fauve and Expressionist art, Modern sculpture has also seen a remarkable growth of interest in recent years and it is well represented in the sale. Monumental sculpture, in particular, has been separately showcased at Sotheby’s annual selling exhibitions of modern and contemporary sculpture held at Chatsworth, where an increase in interest from international collectors has been evident.

Alongside the life-size Giacometti bronze mentioned above, the sale will also include a rare example of a unique painted plaster by the artist. Estimated at £1,800,000-2,500,000, Petit Buste sur Colonne was given by the artist to the current owner in 1952 and appears now for the first time ever on the market, having been in the same collection for over half a century.

Giacometti’s masterful paring down of the sculpted form can be viewed in the sale alongside a very different treatment of the human figure: that of the legendary British sculptor Henry Moore. Moore is represented in the sale by two works. A monumental outdoor bronze Reclining Figure is estimated at £2,500,000 £3,500,000 and this impressive piece explores the subject that was one of Moore’s chief preoccupations during his long career. It was bought directly from the artist’s studio by the present owner and has remained in the same collection for over 25 years. It will be complemented by a more intimate piece: Working Model for a Draped Seated Woman: Figure on Steps, which belongs to a series of seated figures that Moore created while developing ideas for the sculpture he was commissioned to make for the UNESCO headquarters in Paris and is estimated at £500,000-700,000.

Sotheby's | Impressionist & Modern Art | Klimt | Giacometti | Cézanne |


Last Week News

January 12, 2010

MOCA Board of Trustees Names New York Gallerist Jeffrey Deitch as Museum Director

Egypt: New Find Shows Slaves didn't Build Ancient Monuments

Sotheby's to Offer Painting that Sparked Debate and Controversy

Yale University Says Lawsuit by Peru Should be Dismissed

Louvre Museum Reports it had 8.5 Million Visitors in 2009

New Traveling Exhibition Shows Elvis before He was "The King of Rock 'n' Roll"

Museum in Fort Worth will Present Works by Gabriel Acevedo Velarde

Smithsonian Museums Report 30 Million Visits in 2009

Van Gogh's Starry Night Named World's Most Popular Oil Painting of the Decade

Style on Sunset Goes Cutting Edge for the New Year at Bonhams

Everson to Fill Galleries with Color Field Sculptures by Tim Scott

Haus der Kunst to Show "Ed Ruscha: 50 Years of Painting"

Hoang Van Bui, Homefronts III Born Again, at Kiang Gallery

New Commission by Mat Collishaw to be Presented at BFI Gallery

First U.S. Exhibition of Medieval Glass Objects for Daily Use Opens in May

Exhibition Showcases Animated Films from Harvard's Long History with the Practice

"Light of the Sufis: The Mystical Arts of Islam" Opens May 2010

Major Exhibition of Photographs by Timothy H. O'Sullivan Opens at the Smithsonian American Art Museum

Burial Discovered at Bonampak Building

January 11, 2010

NBC Universal Presents Bravo Reality Series "Work of Art: The Next Great Artist"

The Late Work of Bruce Conner to be Shown at Susan Inglett Gallery

American Modernism Shines at Kresge Art Museum in Michigan

Northern Illinois University Art Museum to Open Comic Book Exhibition

LiveAuctioneers Unveils Revolutionary Technology Enabling Real-Time Bidding

Native Artists Explore Skin as a Subject at the Smithsonian

Frey Norris Offers Most Comprehensive Look at Dorothea Tanning's Early Career

Fuller Craft Museum Presents New and Recent Quilts by Nancy Crow

Impressionist Paintings on View at Nassau County Museum of Art

Museum to Show Exhibition that Transforms Organic Materials

High Museum of Art Features Works on Paper by South African Artists

Display of Contemporary Artistic Approaches at Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg

Interior Finishing Touches Now Under Way at Virginia Museum of Fine Arts

Kinetic Interactive Sculpture by Lab(au) on View in Berlin

Exhibition by Artist Gordon Cheung Premieres at ASU Art Museum

Austrian Artist Karl-Heinz Klopf's "You're Having a Laugh"

Solo Exhibition by Charlie Murphy Announced at Text+Work

DePaul Exhibition Explores Process of Pairing Down Museum Collections

Morris Museum of Art Announces 4th Annual Print Fair - Original Art at Affordable Prices

Second Solo Show for Mark di Vincenzo at Sears-Peyton Gallery

Toby Paterson Explores the Relationship between Abstraction and Reality at the Fruitmarket Gallery

January 10, 2010

Ruhr Inaugurated as European Capital of Culture, Expects More than 5 Million Visitors

California Dealer Tatiana Khan Charged with Selling Phony Picasso

Marlborough Gallery Presents Group Exhibition "Look Again"

National Gallery of Victoria Announces Exhibition from the Stadel Collection

Paintings by Jacob Lawrence and Jack Levine at DC Moore Gallery

Paul Kasmin Presents Annette Lemieux's Latest Foray into the American Farm

International Art Fair for Contemporary Objects Returns to the Saatchi Gallery

Smithsonian Exhibition Depicts an Efflorescence of Ceramic Production

Walker Art Gallery Takes a Fresh Look at the Powerful Work of Aubrey Williams

By A Thread Puts a Contemporary Spin on a Centuries-old Medium

Solo Exhibition of New Works by Eberhard Havekost to Open at Schirn Kunsthalle

Portland Museum of Art Breaks Attendance Record

Pop Culture Phenomenon Gumby Animator Art Clokey Dies at 88 in California

Faggionato Fine Art to Present First UK Exhibition of Work by Italian Artist Luca Pancrazzi

Tate Appoints Anne Wagner as The Henry Moore Foundation Research Curator

20/21 International Art Fair to be Held at Royal College of Art in February

Rossi & Rossi to Participate at Art Dubai with Naiza H. Khan Exhibition

Margrit Mondavi's $2 Million Pledge Launches Fundraising Drive for UC Davis Art Museum

Cantor Arts Center Announces "Collection Highlights from Europe, Ancient Greece and Rome"

January 9, 2010

Sotheby's to Offer a Monumental Sculpture by Alberto Giacometti, L'Homme qui Marche I

Sperone Westwater Shows Recent Sculpture by the Italians Bertozzi & Casoni

Guggenheim Creates Cabinet and Appoints Ari Wiseman as Deputy Director

Gagosian to Present Aaron Young's First Solo Show in Los Angeles

Toledo Museum Acquires First Italian Baroque Painting in 26 Years

Recent Drawings and Color Studies by David Reed at Peter Blum Gallery

Winter Antiques Show Celebrates its 56th Year with Six New Exhibitors

New Acquisitions 2009 on View at the Portland Museum of Art

Cooper-Hewitt will Present "National Design Triennial: Why Design Now?"

Sherry Frumkin Gallery Opens Exhibition by California Artist Dean De Cocker

FLAG Art Foundation Features Works by Felix Gonzalez-Torres and Jim Hodges

National Portrait Gallery Charts the Iconography of Lady Jane Grey

Royal Tapestry Exhibition Travels to U.S. for the First Time

Ogden Museum of Southern Art to Open Six Exhibitions

The Dead Sea Scrolls Spoke Volumes During their Toronto Engagement

Wesleyan University's Ezra and Cecile Zilkha Gallery Presents Julika Rudelius: Projections

Artist Stephen Huneck, 'Dog Chapel' Founder, Dies

Knoxville Museum of Art Featured on Cover of AT&T Yellow Pages Directory

Paris Palais Royal Columns Get 6 Million Euro Facelift

January 8, 2010

Smithsonian Museum Exhibitions Celebrate Elvis Presley's 75th Anniversary

Boris Johnson Starts Enabling Works for New Tate Modern Building

Exhibition of New Photographic Works and Videos by Elisa Sighicelli at Gagosian

Getty Museum Director Michael Brand Elects to Step Down

Hirshhorn Museum Presents Selection of Works by Josef Albers

New Work by William Eggleston and Rare Photos by Diane Arbus at Cheim & Read

Treasures from the Collection of Benjamin F. Edwards III to be Sold at Christie's

Heirs of Paul von Mendelssohn-Bartholdy Reach Settlement Agreement

Exhibition at Michael Rosenfeld Gallery Honors the Work of Charles Seliger

Sonjie Feliciano Solomon Wins 2010 Urban Artist Initiative/NYC Fellowship

Longtime Film Forum Director Karen Cooper Invited to Select Films at MoMA

Nassau County Museum of Art Presents an Exhibition of Latin American Art

"Still Lifes and Feet", 1956-1961, by Andy Warhol at Paul Kasmin Gallery

Iconic Architecture Photographs by Ishimoto Yasuhiro to be Shown in Houston

Eco-Conscious Couple in Taiwan Builds School with Donated Wastepaper

Hauser & Wirth to Present Drawings and an Installation by Ida Applebroog

Johnen Galerie Adapts a Three-Act Chamber Play to an Exhibition of Visual Art

Historic DC Site for White House History Center

Suspect Likely Visited Auschwitz Site Before Theft

January 7, 2010

U.S. Artist Emily Prince Tracks Fallen Soldiers in Major Work at Saatchi Gallery

Bill Moggridge Named Director of the Smithsonian's Cooper-Hewitt

Works on Paper by Helen Frankenthaler on View at Ameringer/McEnery/Yohe

Art Museum Looking for a Building Finds a Chagall Masterpiece Instead

"Primary Atmospheres: Works from California 1960-1970" at David Zwirner

Respected Scholar Joins Cleveland Museum of Art as Associate Curator

The Whitney Selects Danny Meyer to Serve as Exclusive Caterer and Create New Cafe

High to Host Collectors' Evening Where New Works will be Chosen

MIA to Present Inaugural Show by Newly Appointed Contemporary Art Curator

Spatial Installation by Anna Baumgart and Agnieszka Kurant in Warsaw

Casio's Digital Art Frame Transforms Images into Works of Art

Philbrook Museum of Art Shows Exhibition by Taos Society of Artists

Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art Announces New Executive Director

4-Ton Sculpture Missing From Utah Shop is Found

Largest Bronze Sculpture of Classical Mythology in the World Set to be Unveiled in the City of Miami

"Women & Spirit: Catholic Sisters in America" Opens in Smithsonian's International Gallery

Chelsea Art Museum Presents Group Show of Contemporary Art by American Indian Artists

National Portrait Gallery Commissions New Painting of Prince William and Prince Harry

New Hampshire Artist Protests Halt to Bigfoot Project

Meissen Snuffbox Returned to Heirs of Munich-based Art Gallery

Chicago Man Admits he Sold Bogus Picassos on eBay

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Jackson Pollock work "Number 19, 1948" sells for record $58.4 million at Christie's

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Belize City officials say ancient thirty-meter high Mayan pyramid razed for road fill

4.- Hidden drawings from Nazi concentration camp on display at Jewish Museum in Berlin

5.- Records fall at Sotheby's contemporary art auction; Barnett Newman painting sells for $43.84M

6.- Death mask of Napoleon to be auctioned at Bonhams' Book, Map and Manuscript sale

7.- New Yorkers unnerved by neighbor's voyeuristic photos on view at Julie Saul Gallery

8.- Rare Vincent Van Gogh sketchbook copies up for unprecedented sale at museum store and online

9.- Leonardo DiCaprio environmental art auction at Christie's New York tops $38 million

10.- Hong Kong cries fowl as giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman deflates

Related Stories



Important Judaica and Israeli & international art bring a combined $7.9 million at Sotheby's New York

Sotheby's New York to offer The Andy Williams Collection of Navajo blankets in May 2012

Buhl Collection brings $12.3M - Highest ever total for a private collection of photos sold at auction

'Casablanca' piano sells in NY for more than $600K

No bidder found for letters by 'Peanuts' creator

Sotheby's names President and CEO William F. Ruprecht as Chairman of the Board of Directors

Sotheby's announces first ever selling exhibition of contemporary art from central Asia and the Caucasus

Mick Jagger love letters written to American singer Marsha Hunt sold at London auction

House of Illustration raises 68,750 in "What are they like?" Celebrity Auction at Sotheby's London

Swiss contemporary art generates enthusiasm among collectors at Sotheby's



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
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
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