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A New Book Gathers Every Single Documented Frida Kahlo Painting, Including Lost Works—See Images Here


Despite her lasting fame, Frida Kahlo made surprisingly few works in her life. Now, all 152 of the artist’s documented paintings have been collected in a massive new coffee table book from Taschen, Frida Kahlo: The Complete Paintings by Luis-Martín Lozano.

The gorgeously illustrated $200 tome includes reproductions and analysis of all of Kahlo’s known paintings, including several works that have been lost, numerous photographs of the great Mexican artist, and a detailed account of her life and career.

For author Luis-Martín Lozano, the book represents 30 years of research on the artist, tracking down artworks in private collections that are rarely loaned or reproduced. (He published his first book on the artist in 2001.)

“Every single painting is covered—that’s never been done before,” Lozano, an art historian and curator, told Midnight Publishing Group News, noting that some of these paintings haven’t been exhibited in over 80 years.

Frida Kahlo, Self-portrait (Time Flies) (ca. 1929). Photo by LML Archive, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, Self-portrait (Time Flies) (ca. 1929). Photo by LML Archive, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

“The people who write about Kahlo tend to repeat the same ideas and the same paintings over and over,” he added. “There’s lack of real research on Kahlo.”

Two private collections have become major lenders to institutional exhibitions about Kahlo, meaning that the visibility of works owned by Doris Olmedo and Jacques and Natasha Gelman has done much to shape public knowledge of and scholarship about the artist.

In addition to showcasing Kahlo’s lesser-known works, Lozano hopes that the book will also broaden readers’ understanding of the artist, allowing them to appreciate the complexity of her paintings beyond the ways in which they illustrate her iconic fashion, her Mexican identity, her health struggles, and her romantic relationships.

Frida Kahlo beside a Pre-Hispanic sculpture in the garden of the Casa Azul (1951). Photo ©bpk/IMEC, Fonds MCC/Gisèle Freun, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo beside a Pre-Hispanic sculpture in the garden of the Casa Azul (1951). Photo ©bpk/IMEC, Fonds MCC/Gisèle Freun, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

“Kahlo’s paintings talk much more about social and historical issues than has been pointed out,” Lozano said.

“I really hope readers realize how much more complex her painting is, and how well-versed she was in art history. She was looking at many, many sources, from German New Objectivity to Surrealism, and also Pre-Columbian art and Egyptian antiquities,” he added. “All this together makes her paintings much more than just her biography.”

See more paintings from the book below.

Frida Kahlo, <em>Hospital Henry Ford</em> (1932). Photo by akg-images, Museo Dolores Olmedo, Mexico City, Xochimilco, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, Hospital Henry Ford (1932). Photo by akg-images, Museo Dolores Olmedo, Mexico City, Xochimilco, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, <em>Ixcuhintli Dog with Me,</eM> (c. 1938). Photo by akg-images, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, Ixcuhintli Dog with Me, (c. 1938). Photo by akg-images, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, <em>The Heart</eM> (1937). Photo by Fine Art Images/Bridgeman Images, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, The Heart (1937). Photo by Fine Art Images/Bridgeman Images, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, <em>What Water Gave Me</eM> (1938). Photo by Christie’s Images/Bridgeman Images, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, What Water Gave Me (1938). Photo by Christie’s Images/Bridgeman Images, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, <em>The Dream (The Bed)</eM> (1940). Photo by Jorge Contreras Chacel. ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, The Dream (The Bed) (1940). Photo by Jorge Contreras Chacel. ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, <em>Self-portrait With Small Monkey</eM> (1945). Photo by akg-images, Museo Dolores Olmedo, Mexico City, Xochimilco, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, Self-portrait With Small Monkey (1945). Photo by akg-images, Museo Dolores Olmedo, Mexico City, Xochimilco, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, <em>Without Hope</eM> (1945). Photo by akg-images, Museo Dolores Olmedo, Mexico City, Xochimilco, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, Without Hope (1945). Photo by akg-images, Museo Dolores Olmedo, Mexico City, Xochimilco, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, <em>The Little Deer</em> (1946). Photo by Fine Art Images, Bridgeman Images, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, The Little Deer (1946). Photo by Fine Art Images, Bridgeman Images, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, <em>Self-portrait (for Samuel Fastlicht)</em>, 1948. Photo by akg-images, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, Self-portrait (for Samuel Fastlicht), 1948. Photo by akg-images, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, <em>Self-portrait (with Dr. Farill)</eM>, 1951. Photo by Rafael Doniz, courtesy Hauser & Wirth Collection Services, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

Frida Kahlo, Self-portrait (with Dr. Farill), 1951. Photo by Rafael Doniz, courtesy Hauser & Wirth Collection Services, ©Banco de Mexico Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2021; reproduction authorized by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y Literatura, 2021.

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In an Explosive Claim, a Top Art Dealer Says a Hermitage Museum Fabergé Show Is Full of ‘Tawdry Fakes’ From a Single Russian Oligarch’s Collection


A leading London-based art dealer has accused the Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg of mounting a Fabergé exhibition featuring more than 20 “tawdy fakes” from the collection of Alexander Ivanov, a Russian oligarch with ties to Vladimir Putin and the Kremlin.

The explosive claim was made in an open letter to Hermitage boss Mikhail Piotrovsky by Andre Ruzhnikov, who has been buying and selling Fabergé for 40 years. In it, he accuses Piotrovsky of “insulting the good name of Fabergé, betraying your visitors’ trust, operating under false pretences, and destroying the authority of the museum you have been appointed to lead.”

“The Hermitage is the pride of Russia and belongs to the world’s cultural heritage,” Ruzhnikov wrote. “Your ‘Fabergé’ exhibition is dragging it through the gutter.”

This soldier figurine, which is being shown at the Hermitage as genuine Fabergé, has been dismissed by the director of the Fersman Mineralogical Museum in Moscow as a “low-quality modern replica” of Fabergé’s Soldier of the Reserve (1915) in his museum.

This soldier figurine, which is being shown at the Hermitage as genuine Fabergé, has been dismissed by the director of the Fersman Mineralogical Museum in Moscow as a “low-quality modern replica” of Fabergé’s Soldier of the Reserve (1915) in his museum.

The allegations concern objects from the Fabergé Museum in Baden-Baden, Germany, a private institution owned by Ivanov, that Ruzhnikov says are fake. The objects are in the Hermitage exhibition “Fabergé: Jeweller to the Imperial Court” (November 25–March 14, 2021).

Ivanov tells Midnight Publishing Group News that all the objects in the show were “selected personally by [curator] Marina Lopato, together with Hermitage museum restorers and other staff.” Lopato, a Fabergé specialist to whom the show is dedicated, died last July.

Piotrovsky, director of the Hermitage since 1992, has refused to respond to the charges. On January 13, he sent a blanket statement to the media referring enquiries to his catalogue preface, which states that “the authenticity of each fresh item that appears on the market can always be challenged and disputed… the consensus of the expert community is not easy to obtain.”

When Midnight Publishing Group News contacted Piotrovsky on January 26 inviting further comment, a museum press officer referred us to an article on a local website, Fontanka.ru, extolling Piotovsky’s “characteristic wisdom” in “anticipating the conflict.”

The recently colorized photo that is allegedly the basis for the portrait of Grand Duchess Anastasia on the Wedding Anniversary Egg.

A recently colorized 1906 photo of Grand Duchess Anastasia that is allegedly the basis for the portrait on the Wedding Anniversary Egg.

The Anachronisms Pile Up…

At the center of the controversy is a Wedding Anniversary Egg ascribed to Fabergé and purportedly gifted by Czar Nicholas II to Empress Alexandra on Easter 1904 to mark their 10th wedding anniversary.

Since at least last spring, when DeeAnn Hoff, an independent Fabergé researcher from Oregon, published a critical assessment of the object in Fabergé Research Newsletter, its authenticity has been a point of contention.

In her article, Hoff claimed that four of the Egg’s miniature portraits depicting the Russian royal family were based on recently colorized archival photographs taken after 1904.

For example, the medallion of Grand Duchess Anastasia, according to Hoff, depicts her in a white dress with colored ribbons and bows. But according to several contemporaneous portraits by court miniaturist Vasily Zuev (1870–1941), Anastasia wore a dress of pure white, ribbons and bows included. Her image on the Wedding Anniversary Egg medallion appears to come from a colorized version of a black-and-white photo taken in 1906. That image is freely available online.

Another anachronism, Hoff writes, concerns the Egg’s Nicholas II portrait. The Czar is shown wearing just four of the five medals that bespangled his uniform from 1896 onwards. Hoff believes the image is based on an outdated photograph from 1894, before the addition of his fifth medal. The miniature portrait on the Egg also wrongly shows one of the Czar’s medals—the Order of the Dannebrog—with a blue ribbon rather than the red-and-white colours of the Danish Flag.

The portrait of Grand Duchess Maria on the Wedding Anniversary Egg of 1904. It appears to be based on a 1910 photo of Maria that inspired court miniaturist Valery Zuev’s Maria medallion for Fabergé’s Fifteenth Anniversary Egg in 1911 (below).

The portrait of Grand Duchess Maria on the Wedding Anniversary Egg of 1904. It appears to be based on a 1910 photo of Maria that inspired court miniaturist Valery Zuev’s Maria medallion for Fabergé’s Fifteenth Anniversary Egg of 1911 (below).

Shady Provenance?

Ivanov—who shot to prominence in 2007 after bidding a record £9 million on the Rothschild Fabergé Egg, which was presented to the Hermitage in 2014 by Vladimir Putin—supplied Midnight Publishing Group News with 13 documents purportedly substantiating the provenance of the Wedding Anniversary Egg and three other items in the Hermitage exhibition dismissed by Ruzhnikov as modern fakes: a Hen Egg dated in the catalogue to 1898; an Alexander Nevsky Egg dated to 1904; and a soldier figurine dated to 1917.

One of the documents is a typed list of valuables for export drawn up by Soviet authorities in October 1932 that includes an item Ivanov says is the Wedding Anniversary Egg, described as a “white enamel egg with a bouquet of flowers.” Yet this item is listed with accession number 17555, long cited by Fabergé scholars as referring to the 1901 Basket of Flowers Egg acquired by Queen Mary, wife of British King George V, in 1933. That Egg is now in the Royal Collection.

Court miniaturist Valery Zuev’s Maria medallion for Fabergé’s Fifteenth Anniversary Egg of 1911. Courtesy the Fabergé Museum, Saint Petersburg.

Court miniaturist Valery Zuev’s Maria medallion for Fabergé’s Fifteenth Anniversary Egg of 1911. Courtesy the Fabergé Museum, St Petersburg.

The description corresponding to number 17555 in the inventory for the Kremlin Armory museum in Moscow—a leading depository of Fabergé material—is “so detailed there is not the slightest chance it can be identified as the so-called Wedding Anniversary Egg of 1904,” says Kremlin Armory archivist Tatiana Tutova.

Ivanov also claims his Wedding Anniversary Egg was auctioned by Maurice Rheims in Paris on March 19, 1951. Yet the copy of the catalogue entry Ivanov has furnished as evidence is in English, not French. And no such sale was recorded in that week’s Gazette de l’Hôtel Drouot, the weekly journal providing an obligatory official record of every auction held in the French capital. (The Hôtel Drouot is the central Paris auction venue where, until 2000, virtually all Paris auctions were legally required to be held.)

The <em>Gazette de l’Hôtel Drouot</em> record indicating the sale of March 19, 1951, was dedicated to oriental rugs.

The Gazette de l’Hôtel Drouot record indicating the Hôtel Drouot sale of March 19, 1951, was dedicated to oriental rugs.

When Ruzhnikov announced that he had ascertained from the Drouot archives that the sale staged by Maurice Rheims on March 19, 1951, was devoted to Oriental carpets, Ivanov claimed the Egg was auctioned at another Paris venue. He did not say where, nor has he provided a copy of the catalogue’s cover or contents.

The institutions lending items to the Hermitage show have also raised eyebrows.

The Hermitage’s own Fabergé holdings are relatively modest and, alongside the suburban St Petersburg palaces of Pavlovsk and Peterhof, the only other lenders to the exhibition the Fabergé Museum in Baden-Baden, the Russian National Museum in Moscow—another private museum owned by Ivanov—and the Museum of Christian Culture in St Petersburg, owned by Konstantin Goloshchapov, a close ally of Putin’s. The goal of these private museums, Ruzhnikov argues, is “to legitimize counterfeits and enhance their market-value by exhibiting them in the Hermitage.”

Ruzhnikov and Hoff are not the only ones to criticize the show. In a letter sent to Piotrovsky by Pavel Plechov, director of the Fersman Mineralogical Museum in Moscow, Plechov says the show’s purported Fabergé soldier figurine is a “low-quality modern replica” of Fabergé’s Soldier of the Reserve (1915) in his museum.

Conspicuously absent from the exhibition’s partners is the Fabergé Museum set up a mere mile away from the Hermitage in 2013 by Viktor Vekselberg to showcase the 190-piece Forbes Fabergé collection he acquired for a reported $100 million in 2004. (Ruzhnikov was instrumental in negotiating that sale.) No senior Fabergé Museum personnel had even visited the exhibition as we went to press, two months after its opening.

This 19th-century tiara, sold at Christie’s on November 26, 2014 for just £74,500, is now presented at the Hermitage as a work by Fabergé.

This 19th-century tiara, sold at Christie’s on November 26, 2014 for just £74,500, is now presented at the Hermitage as a work by Fabergé.

A Dark Market

The accusations against the show and Ivanov’s collection are being made against the backdrop of a robust dark market for forged Fabergé goods.

“There’s always been a lot of Fauxbergé on the market,” Ruzhnikov says. “But the fight against it is picking up speed.” A recent Christie’s catalogue, for example, included a silver desk clock assigned to Fabergé and granted a £30,000 to £50,000 estimate. Ruzhnikov, in an auction preview posted on his personal website, dismissed it as a “piece of garbage.” Christie’s withdrew the item before the sale, citing “authenticity concerns.”

Ruzhnikov says there have been multiple instances of items affixed with Fabergé hallmarks and repackaged as authentic. One of the four diamond tiaras in the Hermitage show, owned by Ivanov and again attributed to Fabergé, passed through the hands of London jewellery dealer Humphrey Butler, who tells Midnight Publishing Group News he bought it from an art advisor in December 2012. He then sold it to one of London’s leading wholesalers, Anthony Landsberg, in early 2013.

“Nothing at the time indicated that the jewellery was of Russian origin,” Butler says, adding that he was “amused” to see a tiara sold by Christie’s for £74,500 in November 2014 resurface as a “Fabergé” item in the Hermitage exhibition. The auction house’s sales catalogue blandly described it as “an antique sapphire and diamond tiara, circa 1900, with early 19th-century elements.” No Fabergé hallmark was apparent.

“It is inconceivable that Russian Empresses, with the unmatched Russian crown jewels at their disposal, would demean themselves with composite low-quality tiaras of this type,” said a prominent London Fabergé dealer, speaking off the record.

One of the most spectacular fakes Ruzhnikov has encountered is a gold and nephrite “Imperial Empire Egg” purportedly commissioned by Nicholas II in 1902 that was offered to him for $2 million in 2005. At the time, it contained a portrait of Alexander III.

When a Russian imperial inventory surfaced in Denmark in 2015 referring to an “egg with gold mounts on two nephrite columns” with portraits inside of Prince Piotr Oldenburgsky and Nicholas II’s sister, Olga, the portrait of Alexander III was replaced by a modern double-portrait of the couple, Ruzhnikov says.

He was re-offered the Egg in 2018. The new price? $55 million.

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A Single Mega-Collector Went on a Big-Time Buying Spree to Power Sotheby’s $114 Million Old Masters Auction


A rare-to-market 15th-century masterwork by the Florentine super-star painter Sandro Botticelli, Portrait of a Young Man Holding a Roundel from circa 1480, led Sotheby’s live-streamed Master paintings and sculpture sale on Thursday morning for a record $92.2 million.

Bidding opened at an eye-popping $70 million and chugged along with the help of chandelier bids at $2 million dollar increments until a real one came in at $78 million, quickly followed by the winning $80 million hammer price. It went to an anonymous telephone bidder represented by Lilija Sitnika, Sotheby’s London-based senior client liaison working the Russia desk.

The underbidder was from Asia, according to Sotheby’s, which had tagged an unpublished and unprecedented estimate for the department in excess of $80 million for the 23-by-15-inch tempera-on-poplar panel.

Sandro Botticelli, Portrait of a Young Man Holding a Roundel (circa 1444/5–1510). Courtesy of Sotheby's.

Sandro Botticelli, Portrait of a Young Man Holding a Roundel (circa 1444/5–1510). Courtesy of Sotheby’s.

The price shattered the previous mark for Botticelli, set at Christie’s in January 2013, with the so-called “Rockefeller Madonna” (also known as Madonna and Child with Young Saint John the Baptist) that made $10.4 million against an estimate of $5 to $7 million.

Portrait of a Young Man Holding a Roundel, a pristine, half-length portrait, shows an unidentified but seriously handsome young man with shoulder-length reddish-blonde hair, costumed in a tightly tailored mauve doublet, holding a disc-shaped gold portrait of a 14th-century bearded saint.

The figure is framed by a window but no landscape is visible, only a pale blue rectangle of light as his delicately rendered hands rest on a stone ledge.

It last sold at auction at Christie’s London in December 1982 with the title Portrait of Giovanni de Pierfrancesco de’ Medici to the New York real estate magnate Sheldon Solow for a then-record £810,0000 ($1.1 million in today’s currency).

It was Solow’s estate that sold the work today.

Some art-historian heavyweights from that time, including the late and esteemed Everett Fahy, the long-time chairman of European paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and later a consultant in the Old Master department at Christie’s, held reservations about the attribution to Botticelli, preferring to credit fellow Florentine Francesco Botticini as the artist in question.

That viewpoint vanished today with the record price. Sotheby’s Old Masters department head Christopher Apostle characterized doubts as to its attribution as “a red herring.”

The Master of Marradi, The Death of Lucretia at the Banquet of Lucius Junius Brutus. Courtesy of Sotheby’s.

Since the portrait sold in London, it has spent extended periods on loan at both the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the latter loan from May 2013 to February 2020.

Today’s Botticelli buyer (paddle number 45), whether Russian or not, went on a bit of a buying spree, and scooped up three other works through Sitnika, including the Master Of Marradi’s mid-15th century multi-figured scene, The Death of Lucretia at the Banquet of Lucius Junius Brutus, for a record $1 million (against an estimate of $400,000 to $600,000) and Jean Baptiste-Camille Corot’s 19th-century landscape, La Cascade de Terni, for $600,800 (estimated for $200,000 to $300,000).

Jean Baptiste Camille Corot, <i>La Cascade de Terni</i>. Courtesy of Sotheby's.

Jean Baptiste Camille Corot, La Cascade de Terni. Courtesy of Sotheby’s.

The sale tallied $114.5 million including fees—meaning that the collector who snapped up the Botticelli accounts for more than 80 percent of the money that changed hands. The sales total beat presale expectations of $100 million to $110.2 million. (Pre-sale estimates do not include buyers’ fees; final figures do).

Thirteen of the 43 offered lots failed to sell, for a buy-in rate of 30 percent.

Six artist records were set, and the Botticelli now ranks as the second-most-expensive Old Master painting to sell at auction, surpassed only by Leonardo’s Salvator Mundi (circa 1500), which sold at Christie’s New York in a Post-war and contemporary art evening sale in November 2017 for $450.3 million, the highest price ever achieved for any work at auction.

The live-streamed sale, with Oliver Barker conducting from the Sotheby’s studio in London, easily surpassed last January’s Master paintings evening sale, held in person at the firm’s York Avenue headquarters. That sale realized $61.1 million against an estimate of $47.7 to $61.8 million.

Remarkably (or so it would seem) the other star lot of today’s sale—Rembrandt’s stunning Abraham and the Angels from 1646, measuring just 6 3/8 by 8 3/8 inches, and estimated at $20 to $30 million with a Sotheby’s-backed financial guarantee—was withdrawn from the auction at the 11th hour.

“We’re short-term caretakers of this painting,” Apostle said when asked about its status. “It’s going to find a new home very quickly.”

Luca della Robbia, Relief of the Madonna and child (ca. 1450). Courtesy of Sotheby's.

Luca della Robbia, Relief of the Madonna and child (ca. 1450). Courtesy of Sotheby’s.

That drama aside, the sale motored on in rather effortless fashion with the standout Luca della Robbia’s Relief of the Madonna and child in tin-glazed terra cotta, and deaccessioned by the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, New York, making a record $2 million (it was estimated at $700,000 to $1 million). Four of the six lots the institution offered found buyers, for a total of $3.2 million.

Other highlights included the only female artist in the sale, the Dutch Golden Age painter Rachel Ruysch and her masterfully realistic Still life with flowers in a vase on a ledge with a dragonfly, caterpillar, and butterfly from 1698, which realized an estimate-busting $2.2 million (against an estimate of $1 million to $1.5 million).

Rachel Ruysch, Still life with flowers in a vase on a ledge with a dragonfly, caterpillar, and butterfly (1698).

Rachel Ruysch, Still life with flowers in a vase on a ledge with a dragonfly, caterpillar, and butterfly (1698).

Another Dutch master, Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder’s sumptuous, late-17th-century Still life with grapes in a basket, peaches on a silver dish, medlars, two butterflies, a fly and a snail, all on a red velvet cloth over a partially draped ledge, went for $2.3 million (against an estimate of $1 million to $1.5 million).

It last sold at the Paris auction house Gros & Delettrez in June 2012 for €1.4 million ($1.7 million) hammer.

A charming Flemish work, Frans Pourbus the Elder’s Portrait of a young woman, aged 17, holding a small spaniel wearing a collar of bells (1576), elicited multiple bids, bringing$478,000, a record for the artist.

It last sold at auction at Doyle New York in September 1978, when it made $20,000 hammer.

On the more somber side, Hugo van der Goes’s dramatically dark composition The descent from the cross, sold for $3.4 million (it was estimated at $3 to $5 million) and came to market backed by an in-house guarantee.

Though the star Rembrandt was disappointedly withdrawn, there was some compensation with Portrait of a young man behind a balustrade, possibly a self-portrait of the artist by Aert de Gelder—Rembrandt’s last pupil, according to Sotheby’s. It sold to an online bidder for a record $927,500 (it was estimated at $800,000 to $1.2 million).

“We met our expectations,” said George Wachter, co-chairman of Sotheby’s Old Master paintings worldwide. “And we also met our goals, so we’re really relieved at that.”

The live-streamed action resumes Friday morning at Sotheby’s with the single-owner and heavily marketed “Fearless: The Collection of Hester Diamond,” featuring more Old Masters and then some.

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Why This Arts Nonprofit Is Studying Every Single Monument in the US


If you ask yourself “What is a monument?” what comes to mind?

As prominent a role as these statues and memorials play in the cultural discourse these days, they mean something very different depending on where and who you are. 

That’s a problem, says Paul Farber, director of Monument Lab, a Philadelphia-based public art studio and nonprofit dedicated to the study of the country’s historic memorials, markers, and statuary. To identify a new future for national monumentation, we must first understand its past, but, as of now, that’s a history no one has really written yet.

At least until now. Farber’s organization is currently in the process of completing an exhaustive audit of the monument landscape across the United States. It’s an ambitious, complicated effort made possible largely through a $4 million grant from the Mellon Foundation’s five-year, $250 million “Monuments Project,” an initiative that aims “to transform the way our country’s histories are told in public spaces.” (Monument Lab was the project’s inaugural grant recipient when it was announced last fall.)

Participants in the Monument Lab Public Thinktank – New York City, High Line, 2019. Photo: Liz Ligon.

Participants in the Monument Lab Public Thinktank – New York City, High Line, 2019. Photo: Liz Ligon.

“What our team has been doing is trying to gather as many datasets from federal, state, and local-level organizations. That’s not a plug-and-play operation,” Farber says, explaining that the gathering of comprehensive historical data is not as simple as plugging two cords together and transferring information. “It’s the equivalent of opening up a massive drawer of wires that have never been untangled or even looked at.”

Data, in this case, connotes a number of different statistics, and it tends to vary depending on who collected it. In some cases, it may mean a survey of the race, age, and gender of the subjects of memorial statues; in others, it could mean a record of when and how a piece of public art was installed, how often it was cleaned, or who paid for its upkeep.  

So rooted in symbolism, identity, and regionality are these objects that thinking of them through numbers can feel counterintuitive. But numbers bare behavior, Farber notes, and that tells us a lot. 

He characterizes these datasets as “insight into the processes of power that are responsible for upkeeping, sponsoring, and tracking monuments. How you track and maintain the things that you say you value,” he says, “will be tested and reflected in the systems of upkeep.”

A participant in the Monument Lab Research Workshop – Toronto, Reflecting Authority, High Line Joint Art Network, 2019. Photo: Andrew Williamson.

A participant in the Monument Lab Research Workshop – Toronto, Reflecting Authority, High Line Joint Art Network, 2019. Photo: Andrew Williamson.

Indeed, “power” is the operative word here, and it’s reflected in the organization’s current working definition of a monument: a “statement of power and presence in public.” 

Now ask yourself again: “What is a monument?” Is your mental image different?

The findings from Monument Lab’s audit will be made freely available this spring, and will arrive in the form of a print publication, a website, and a machine-readable dataset. 

Following the release, the organization will put some $1 million of its grant money toward the establishment of 10 field offices around the country. Where those offices will be located and what they’ll look like is still being determined, Farber says, but they’ll be representative of their local region. He calls them a “hybrid between a public campaign and a participatory exhibition.”  

“Rather than looking for the quick fix to make the monument question go away, we’re looking for the pathways to justice, repair, and care that can be sustained over a generation,” he sums up. “The field offices are an attempt to do this.”

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