(Paris) The auction of the art collection of French actor Gérard Depardieu, which ended Wednesday evening in Paris, brought in 4 million euros ($5.7 million), the house announced of Ader sales.
“In front of a packed house”, “more than 95% of the lots were sold”, specifies the auction house in a press release.
The actor, who was not present at the time of the sale, “preferred not to part with the masterful bronze by Germaine Richier,” details the Ader house.
“To lighten up a little,” according to the auctioneer, the 74-year-old actor decided to disperse more than 250 works by great masters of the 20th century.e century, like Calder or Rodin, artists he played in the cinema alongside Isabelle Adjani at the end of the 80s.
The whole thing had been estimated at more than 3 million euros ($4.3 million).
Tuesday, on the first day of the sale, a bronze with black patina by Auguste Rodin, Paolo and Francescaprinted in an edition of 12, was sold for 83,200 euros (with fees) ($118,000), above the high estimate.
A sculpture by Zadkine from 1922, Kneeling womanfound a buyer after heated bidding at 104,960 euros ($149,000) including fees (high estimate at 80,000 euros, or $114,000).
A gouache and ink by Alexander Calder, Sun shine (1974), reached 92,160 euros ($131,000) with fees, shattering the estimate.
During the three days of exhibition to the public, several thousand people followed one another in the three rooms of the Hôtel Drouot, necessary to present all of the lots which decorated the actor’s Parisian mansion.
“This collection is a great surprise due to the importance of the works collected by Gérard Depardieu over more than forty years. He collected very carefully, often allowing us to discover a completely new side of the character,” David Nordmann, auctioneer at Ader, told AFP.
Gérard Depardieu has been indicted since 2021 for suspicion of rape and sexual assault on an actress, Charlotte Arnould.
The actor was removed in May for this reason from the promotion of the latest film in which he appears, Umamiand several performances of his singing show around Barbara, a famous French singer who died in 1997, were disrupted by feminists.