Sotheby’s New York – Contemporary Art

Posted by Admin - March 14th, 2012

The bi-annual Contemporary sale is one of Sotheby’s must-see sales of the spring season. The March 9th event celebrates the work of established post-war masters such as Warhol, Rauschenberg and Calder alongside works by today’s most intriguing creators such as Yuskavage, Tomaselli and Condo. This highly curated sale features iconic and jewel like paintings, drawings, sculpture and photography dating from the 1930s through today. A few highlights this season include the iconic image Untitled Film Still #21 by Cindy Sherman. Additionally, the sale includes beautiful works by Gerhard Richter, one of the most desirable and celebrated artists of today. Finally, there are iconic and classical paintings and works on paper by Abstract Expressionists including Hans Hofmann, Adolph Gottlieb, Robert Motherwell and Willem de Kooning among others.

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Sotheby’s New York – Photographs

Posted by Admin - March 7th, 2012

Sotheby’s was the first international auction house to offer regular sales of Photographs, beginning in 1971 in London, 1975 in New York, and 2002 in Paris. We sell photographs from the entire history of the medium, from salt prints and daguerreotypes of the 1840s to contemporary works of the present decade.  Included in our auctions are works by a roster of blue-chip photographers from around the globe, from William Henry Fox Talbot in London, to Eugene Atget in Paris, to Richard Prince in New York.

Our international team, the most experienced and highly regarded specialists in the auction world, has established itself as a leader in scholarship and evaluation.  Their passion and expertise have resulted in dozens of world records for individual photographers, brought new categories of work to the public’s eye, and defined many of the market criteria against which photographs and collections are judged.

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I.M. Chait to host March 21 auction of Important Chinese Ceramics & Asian Works of Art during Asia Week New York

Posted by Admin - February 7th, 2012

Rare 15th-century Ming Xuande porcelain sprinkler, est. 0,000-0,000. I.M. Chait image.

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. – When the doors are opened to I.M. Chait’s elegant Manhattan gallery space during Asia Week New York (March 16-24), the management and staff of the family-owned southern California firm expect to welcome many old friends to their preview and March 21 auction of Important Chinese Ceramics & Asian Works of Art.

 

The company’s venerable founder and auctioneer Isadore “I.M.” Chait, who is celebrating his 45th year as a specialist dealer of Asian art, takes pride in the fact that collectors who bought from him decades ago are still amongst his active clientele.

 

“What is particularly interesting about the Asian market is the cycle of buying, holding and selling,” Chait said. “We’ve noticed that pieces purchased five to fifteen years ago in Hong Kong or New York auctions are now resurfacing. It has been an ongoing practice for some Chinese art collectors to buy an object, put it in their collection, then 10 or 20 years later, put it up for sale at the same venue and buy something else they like.”

 

But what is changing, Chait said, is that nowadays there are so many private museums establishing or adding to their Asian collections, that many rare pieces are being removed from the cycle. “They’re going into institutional collections and staying there. This is one factor that is driving auction prices upward,” Chait said.

 

Mark on the Ming Xuande porcelain sprinkler. I.M. Chait image.

There are many rare and exotic artworks in the 300+ lot March 21 auction that Chait predicts will attract intense interest. Topping the list is a marked 15th century Ming Xuande Period porcelain sprinkler of Islamic shape. Chait explained that, at the height of its manufacture, Chinese porcelain often went to Middle Eastern potentates, hence the distinctive bulbous style with graduated cylindrical spout.

 

“Anything from the 15th century is exceedingly rare. This sprinkler comes from a major collection that was started 35 to 40 years ago. The only reason this piece is being sold is because the consignor is fortunate enough to have another one in their collection,” Chait said.

 

An estimate of 0,000-0,000 for the sprinkler is conservative when measured against recent comparables. “At a show one or two years ago we saw an example that sold for half a million dollars,” Chait said. “It showed up a few months later in a Chinese auction with a million-dollar estimate.”

 

Yuan Dynasty blue and white porcelain bowl, est. 0,000-0,000. I.M. Chait image.

Another highlight with a six-figure estimate is the Yuan Dynasty blue and white porcelain bowl with expectations of reaching 0,000-0,000. The bowl comes to auction with outstanding provenance, having once been part of the renowned T.T. Tsui Museum of Art Collection in Hong Kong.

 

An estate collection local to the auctioneer’s Beverly Hills gallery was the source for an important spinach jade brushpot that Chait describes as “one of the most exquisitely carved brushpots we’ve ever seen.” Under its base is a label – possibly from the 1960s/’70s – from the London auction house Spink & Son.

 

Important spinach jade brushpot, est. ,000-,000. I.M. Chait image.

Chait noted that the object is deeply and intricately carved from a single piece of jade, a method that requires great artistic skill. The carver’s technique masterfully rendered a three-dimensional, “layered” effect to the piece. The presale estimate has been set at ,000-,000.

 

The rich cobalt hue of lapis lazuli is the immediate focal point of a Qianlong table screen from an old Shanghai collection. According to Chait, it may have Imperial provenance.

 

Qianlong lapis lazuli table screen, est. ,000-,000. I.M. Chait image.

“Most table screens of this type are made of wood. Lapis is more rare,” he said. The lot is estimated at ,000-,000.

 

Additional objects of exceptional quality are still arriving for consignment to Chait’s Asia Week auction, including a collection of 70 extremely fine 20th-century netsukes, most being of ivory and all by important carvers. The collection was purchased at auctions and from top dealers in the 1990s, bearing out Isadore Chait’s theory about a 20-year buying-and-reselling cycle.

 

Chait’s Asia Week auction is the firm’s most important sale of the year. Each object selected for inclusion in this year’s premier event was personally selected and vetted by Isadore Chait and comes with the company’s guarantee of authenticity. Mr. Chait is an internationally acknowledged expert in both Oriental sculpture and gemology. He is a recommended appraiser to many museums and educational institutions, including the J. Paul Getty Museum, the Norton Simon Museum and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

 

All auction items will be available to preview daily from March 16-20, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. (10 a.m. till noon on auction day) at I.M. Chait’s gallery on the 6th floor of the historic Fuller Building, 595 Madison Ave. at 57th St., New York, NY 10022. A West Coast preview will take place from Feb. 27-March 4, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. or by appointment, at I.M. Chait’s flagship gallery located at 9330 Civic Center Dr., Beverly Hills, CA 90210.

 

The March 21 Asia Week New York auction will commence at 2 p.m. Eastern Time at the Fuller Building gallery, with all forms of bidding available, including live via the Internet through LiveAuctioneers.com.

 

Four of I.M. Chait’s staff are fluent in Mandarin and will be on hand to greet Asian visitors to the New York gallery space and to assist Chinese-speaking bidders over the phone during the auction.

 

For additional information on any lot in the sale or to obtain a fully illustrated color catalog ( + shipping), call 1-800-775-5020 or 310-285-0182; or e-mail joey@chait.com. Visit the company online at www.chait.com.

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Sotheby’s New York – American Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture

Posted by Admin - January 29th, 2012

Sotheby’s is now accepting consignments through February 5th for the American Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture sale, to be held on April 5th, 2012.

 

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Sotheby’s New York – Old Master Drawings

Posted by Admin - January 20th, 2012

Sotheby’s Old Master Drawings sales offer works created in Continental Europe between the 15th and the early 19th centuries using media such as pen and ink, chalk, metalpoint, brush and wash, watercolour and gouache executed primarily on paper supports, but also sometimes on vellum. Styles and subjects vary enormously, ranging from working figure and composition studies by Renaissance Masters such as Michelangelo, to designs for prints, stained glass, textiles or silverware, and independent landscape watercolours or natural history illustrations.

Our global team located in London and New York has overseen notable sales of work by artists such as Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Rembrandt van Rijn and Canaletto and Fragonard, amongst others. Learn more about this department in Records & Results.

Sotheby’s Old Master Drawings department conducts two main sales per year in early July in London, and in late January in New York. Both sales include a section of Early British drawings, watercolours and miniatures.

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Sotheby’s New York – Important Jewels

Posted by Admin - January 1st, 2012

A wonderful group of Art Nouveau jewels, including works by Fouquet and Lalique, highlights the Important Jewels sale in New York this February.  The sale also offers vintage and contemporary signed pieces from leading jewelers such as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels, David Webb and Buccellati.  Collectors looking for fine diamonds will find a wide selection of white stones under 10 carats and a beautiful heart-shaped fancy orangy pink diamond that leads the sale this season.

Los Angeles: 5-6 January 2012
San Francisco: 9-10 January 2012
Philadelphia: 10 January 2012
Chicago: 18-19 January 2012
Ft. Worth: 24 January 2012
Dallas: 25 January 2012
Los Angeles: 25-26 January 2012
Houston: 26 January 2012

 

 

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Sotheby’s New York – Important Tiffany

Posted by Admin - December 28th, 2011

Auction results online now at Sothebys.com

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Sotheby’s New York – Contemporary Art

Posted by Admin - December 23rd, 2011

The March 9th Contemporary auction features an appealing selection of works from post-1945 to the present. The sale includes works from celebrated artists Alexander Calder, Robert Rauschenberg and Andy Warhol, along with exceptional examples by artists including Louise Bourgeois, Cindy Sherman and Sherrie Levine. This sale captures the international interest in the movements of Abstract Expressionism, Minimalism, Conceptualism and Pop Art.

 

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Collecting Treasures of the Past VII Opens at Blumka Gallery in New York, January 2012

Posted by Admin - November 24th, 2011

Collecting Treasures of the Past VII Opens at Blumka Gallery in New York, January 2012

New York , New York — 21 November 2011
Pluto and Proserpina, by Matthias Steinl, an Imperial Court sculptor in Vienna (1643/44-1727) and one of the greatest ivory carvers of all time.

click to enlarge

Pluto and Proserpina, by Matthias Steinl, an Imperial Court sculptor in Vienna (1643/44-1727) and one of the greatest ivory carvers of all time.
(Blumka Gallery)
Sitting Angel: An extremely life-like modeled figure of an angel whose mate is in the Bavarian National Museum, this wood-and-gilt sculpture is by the German Baroque sculptor and woodcarver Johann Joseph Christian, who worked in the mid-18th-century in southern Germany.

click to enlarge

Sitting Angel: An extremely life-like modeled figure of an angel whose mate is in the Bavarian National Museum, this wood-and-gilt sculpture is by the German Baroque sculptor and woodcarver Johann Joseph Christian, who worked in the mid-18th-century in southern Germany.
(Blumka Gallery)
A Highly Important Jeweled and Silver-Gilt Narwhal and Ivory Cup Attributed to Georg Pfründt, Augsburg, 1670-1674: Once in the collection of Baron Nathaniel von Rothschild and exhibited in "The World of Wonder" exhibition at the Walters Art Gallery, this exceptional and exotic cup of carved sea monsters, unicorns, and Native Americans representing the American and European continents, is probably the finest example of similar cups that were avidly collected by German sovereigns.

click to enlarge

A Highly Important Jeweled and Silver-Gilt Narwhal and Ivory Cup Attributed to Georg Pfründt, Augsburg, 1670-1674: Once in the collection of Baron Nathaniel von Rothschild and exhibited in “The World of Wonder” exhibition at the Walters Art Gallery, this exceptional and exotic cup of carved sea monsters, unicorns, and Native Americans representing the American and European continents, is probably the finest example of similar cups that were avidly collected by German sovereigns.
(Blumka Gallery)

OVER 80 EXCEPTIONAL MEDIEVAL, RENAISSANCE, AND BAROQUE OBJECTS ON VIEW, INCLUDING “PLUTO AND PROSERPINA,” A TOUR DE FORCE OF IVORY CARVING.

 

Anthony Blumka of Blumka Gallery in New York and Florian Eitle-Böhler of the Starnberg, Germany-based Kunsthandlung Julius Böhler announce that Collecting Treasures of the Past VII,an exhibition of exceptional Medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque objects, opens on Thursday, January 26 through Friday, February 10, 2012 at Blumka Gallery, 209 East 72nd Street in New York. This exhibit coincides with Old Masters Week.

 

With over 80 rare and historically significant objects on view, Blumka and Eitle-Böhler are particularly pleased to present Pluto and Proserpina, by Matthias Steinl, an Imperial Court sculptor in Vienna (1643/44-1727) and one of the greatest ivory carvers of all time. “We consider Pluto and Proserpina to be the most important Baroque ivory to enter the market in the past 50 years,” said Anthony Blumka. According to Blumka, there are only six or seven pieces by this artist in existence, and this example is possibly one of the 10 most important Baroque ivories in the world today.

 

This unique carved ivory depicts the ancient Roman gods Pluto and Proserpina. According to the myth, Pluto, god of the underworld, is enraptured by Proserpina (the daughter of Ceres, the goddess of agriculture and crops, and Jupiter, the god of sky and thunder), and their passionate love story forms the basis for the creation myth of winter. ”Art historians around the world have accepted that, indeed, this is a master work by Steinl,” added Florian Eitle-Böhler. “Because of this, it is the first time in memory that an object held in dealers’ hands was requested by a museum – the Liebieghaus in Frankfurt – where it was on view last year in their exhibition, ‘Elfenbein Barocke Pracht Am Wiener Hof.’”

 

Pluto and Proserpina also has an impressive provenance: It was once one of the prized pieces in the collections of the Princes von und zu Liechtenstein, Baron Anselm Salomon de Rothschild (1803-1874), Baron Albert Salomon Anselm de Rothschild (1844-1911), and Baron Dr. Alphonse Maier de Rothschild (1878-1942).

 In addition to Pluto and Proserpina, some of the other highlights of Collecting Treasures of the Past VII include:

Diptych: The Passion of Christ: A medieval ivory masterpiece from the Workshop of the Master of the Passion Diptychs in Paris, 1360-1370. In this masterwork, four elaborately carved scenes in trefoil arcades represent Jesus’ Entry into Jerusalem, The Last Supper, The Washing of the Feet, The Betrayal, The Hanging of Judas, The Road to Calvary, and The Crucifixion. Each wing of the diptych has a hole for a string so it could be fastened to a belt.

A Highly Important Jeweled and Silver-Gilt Narwhal and Ivory Cup Attributed to Georg Pfründt, Augsburg, 1670-1674: Once in the collection of Baron Nathaniel von Rothschild and exhibited in “The World of Wonder” exhibition at the Walters Art Gallery, this exceptional and exotic cup of carved sea monsters, unicorns, and Native Americans representing the American and European continents, is probably the finest example of similar cups that were avidly collected by German sovereigns.

A Small Siculo-Arabic Casket of the 12th Century: With its original linen interior, this caskets’ sides are made of sheets of ivory carved with ornate flowers, peacocks, and what are perhaps family crests.

Sitting Angel: An extremely life-like modeled figure of an angel whose mate is in the Bavarian National Museum, this wood-and-gilt sculpture is by the German Baroque sculptor and woodcarver Johann Joseph Christian, who worked in the mid-18th-century in southern Germany.

Saint Magdalene, a Precious Ivory Relief by Frans Van Bossuit from the 3rd quarter of the 17th century in the Netherlands: In this work, a beatific Mary Magdalene, wrapped in luxuriant waves of her own hair and standing before streams of radiant light, clutches a skull.

 

Blumka Gallery and Kunsthandlung Julius Böhler, both founded in the 19th century, are two of the leading firms in the field of European works of art. Over the years, each gallery has played a role in enhancing both private and museum collections across the globe. The Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Treasury at the Cloisters in New York, the Bavarian National Museum, and the Louvre are merely a sampling of museums that have acquired important pieces from Blumka and Böhler.

 

Blumka Gallery is located at 209 East 72nd Street (between Second and Third Avenues). Gallery hours are Monday through Friday, 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. For more information, call 212-734-3222 or visit www.blumkagallery.com or www.boehler-art.com

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Sotheby’s New York – Hunters & Gatherers: The Art of Assemblage – A Selling Exhibition

Posted by Admin - November 23rd, 2011

For enquiries please contact:
Lisa Dennison, Lisa.Dennison@sothebys.com, +1 212 894 1424

Lara Barak, Lara.Barak@sothebys.com, +1 212 894 1577

For most of history, human beings were hunters and gatherers. Until the invention of agriculture, about 10,000 years ago, to subsist meant to comb the wilds, foraging for edible plants and animals. The impulse to scavenge is thus embedded in our genes, and through the centuries it has found powerful expression in the world of art.

Artists are a particular type of hunter-gatherers. Since ancient times, they have assembled works from assorted materials, both natural and man-made, in arrangements in which the artistic whole transcends the sum of its parts.

The focus of this exhibition is the accumulative tendency in art that has been broadly labeled as “assemblage.” Much of the work in this realm before the 20th century has been the product of artists from pre-Columbian America, Africa and Oceania. From the 17th century, Native Americans actively traded with Europeans  for precious commodities such as metal and glass beadwork, which they ingeniously incorporated into ceremonial items, clothing and weaponry. These decorations conveyed status and added luster and allure to a wide range of objects including masks, rattles and headdresses.

During the same period, a rich sculptural tradition emerged on the other side of the globe, in the Chiloango River Region in central Africa.  Power figures, carved of wood in human or animal form, were used to harness spiritual forces for protection, healing or revenge.  A ritual expert drove metal objects into the figure to awaken the spirit.  The potent physical presence of these figures, bristling with nails, blades and spikes, still resonates with the power of these awe-inspiring rituals.

In the early 20th century, African artworks began to arrive in Europe, catalyzing a seismic shift in the course of western art history. They had a profound influence on many artists, including Picasso and Braque, who were soon to create an artistic revolution of their own, when they inserted fragments of the real world onto the surface of their canvases, heralding the advent of collage. Building on these innovations, Dada and Surrealist artists such as Marcel Duchamp, Man Ray and Kurt Schwitters exploited the collision of the rational and non-rational through the use of readymade objects and the chance arrangements of forms. Neo-Dada and Pop artists also incorporated found and manufactured objects into their art; in his Combines, Robert Rauschenberg expressed the desire to bridge the gap between art and life.

The practice of assemblage has continued into the 21st century, with artists enthusiastically using non-traditional materials in both intimate and environmentally-scaled artworks. Many of these follow the cooler conceptual strategies of Duchamp, while others mine Africa’s heritage, not only in the sense of formal properties, but by tapping into their cultural, social and historical resonance as well.  Nick Cave, for example, explores issues of ceremony and ritual in his beautifully crafted Soundsuits, referencing both tribal and Indian art in their various guises. El Anatsui stitches together mesmerizing metal tapestries out of recycled liquor bottle caps. Others, including Anselm Kiefer and Huma Bhaba, incorporate clay and other natural materials into their paintings and sculpture.

Juxtaposing western and non-western art histories, this exhibition is itself an assemblage of different time periods, cultures and artistic forms, resulting in striking visual encounters. In some cases, there is a direct reference to the notion of hunting and gathering, while in others, materials are recuperated into hybrid compositions that are playful, enigmatic and dynamic. Ultimately, it is the fluidity of ideas and the dialogues between objects that create the universe of Hunters and Gatherers.

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