Sotheby's
sees record London contemporary art sale despite Bacon
failure
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[July 02, 2015]
By Michael Holden
LONDON (Reuters) - Andy
Warhol's "One Dollar", the first in his dollar bill
series, fetched 20.9 million pounds ($32.4 million) at
Sotheby's on Wednesday, the top-seller in what the
auction house said was its highest ever total sales for
an auction of contemporary art in London.
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However, the auction's star attraction, Francis Bacon's
"Study for a Pope I", which had been estimated at 25 to 35
million pounds, went unsold after bids failed to reach the
reserve price.
"It wasn't the night for that one picture," said Oliver Barker,
Sotheby's senior international specialist in contemporary art.
As a result, overall sales at the auction came in at just over
130 million pounds, below the pre-sale low estimate of 142
million pounds.
Despite the Bacon disappointment, Cheyenne Westphal, Sotheby's
co-head of contemporary art, said the auction house had seen
sales of more than half a billion pounds in recent weeks in
London, establishing the British capital as an art hub to rival
New York.
Last week, Sotheby's saw sales of 178.6 million pounds at one
auction in London, with 10 of the 51 lots selling for more than
10 million pounds, while on Tuesday an auction of post war and
contemporary art at Christie's totaled 95.6 million pounds.
The soaring sums come after two weeks of sales in New York in
May brought in well over $2 billion at both houses.
Wednesday's Sotheby's auction was dominated by eight works by
Warhol, inspired by the U.S. dollar and with the American pop
artist 's 1962 hand-painted "One Dollar Bill (Silver
Certificate)" exceeding its top of estimate of 18 million pounds
to reach 20.9 million.
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The works sold for a combined total of 34.3 million pounds, while
another 11 in the series go under the hammer on Thursday.
Among the other big sellers was Gerhard Richter's 1987 work "A B,
Brick Tower", which sold for 14.2 million pounds, and David
Hockney's "Arranged Felled Trees", which went for 3.4 million
pounds, more than a million above its high estimate.
Although Bacon's standout painting failed to inspire bidders, two
other works by the Irish-born British artist - a 1975 self-portrait
and "Three studies for a Self-Portrait" - sold for 15.3 million
pounds and 14.7 million pounds respectively.
"Four Eggs on a Plate", a 2002 work by Lucian Freud which he gifted
to the late Duchess of Devonshire, saw the fiercest bidding of the
night. It sold for 989,000 pounds, almost 10 times its pre-sale
estimate.
(Editing by Alan Crosby)
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