New York | Art auction sales exceeded $2 billion

(New York) Picasso, Monet, Cézanne, Basquiat, Rothko and… Ferrari: auction sales of works of art in New York exceeded two billion dollars in one week, according to a report from the major houses in the sector which are are delighted with a market in great shape despite the international crises.


The behemoths Sotheby’s and Christie’s, and Tom Thumb Phillips, concluded their fall sales season on Friday, which began on November 7. According to a total amount calculated by AFP, this represented between them 2.1 billion dollars thanks to the masterpieces of modern and contemporary art sold during ultra-chic New York evenings crowded with collectors and extremely wealthy, anonymous buyers, in sales rooms and on the telephone.

Phillips’ president for the Americas, Jean-Paul Engelen, reported in a press release to AFP on Friday the “second highest total result in the history of Phillips” with $155 million in sales, “up by 11% compared to November 2022.”

The businessman sees it as a “sign of confidence in a healthy global market”.

Phillips thus sold a monumental contemporary work by the German Gerhard Richter, Abstraktes Bild (636) of 1987, for $34.8 million and The 14th of July (1912-13) by the cubist Fernand Léger for 17.6 million.

Lion’s share

It was Sotheby’s, owned by Franco-Israeli billionaire Patrick Drahi, which took the lion’s share with $1.1 billion in sales.

Highlights of his evenings: Woman with watch (1932) by Pablo Picasso sold for $139 million, the second price ever reached for the Spanish master who died 50 years ago, a monumental Self-Portrait as a Heel (Part II) from the American Jean-Michel Basquiat for 42 million, Poplars on the banks of the Epte, overcast weather by Paul Cézanne (1891) for 30.7 million and the highly prized American painter Mark Rothko for a Untitled (1968) bought by an anonymous person in the room for 23.8 million dollars.

Sotheby’s especially made a splash with the “Holy Grail of the pantheon of sports cars”, a 1962 Ferrari 250 GTO, which sold for $51.7 million, the second most expensive car ever sold at auction.

Competitor Christie’s, part of the Artémis holding company of French billionaire François Pinault, boasted a total of $864 million, a sign according to its president for the Americas, Bonnie Brennan, of a “strong market response”.

Highlights of its sales: Water Lily Pond (1917-1919) by Claude Monet for $74 million and three paintings by Paul Cézanne – including Fruits and jar of ginger at almost 39 million dollars – for the benefit of the Langmatt museum in Baden, Switzerland, provoking a small controversy in this country over a sale considered speculative.

In the context of the wars in Ukraine and Gaza and global inflation, the art market, driven by China and Asia, shows “no sign” of slowing down with “demand stronger than ever” Kelsey Reed Leonard, head of contemporary art at Sotheby’s, assured AFP at the launch of the season.

An expert in the sector preferring to remain anonymous even considers it “normal” that in the midst of geopolitical crises and in inflationary periods, “financial speculators” invest in art and luxury.

By 2022, auction houses had broken all the ceilings with global auction and private sales totaling more than $16 billion.


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