Sotheby's Asia Week Auctions Achieve $45.7 Million in New York
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Auktion31.03.2019
Manjari Sihare-Sutin, Head of Sotheby’s Modern & Contemporary South Asian Sales in New York, noted: “We are extremely pleased with the results of Monday’s auction, which saw a strong sell-through rate and top prices for exceptional works on offer. We were thrilled to see Huma Bhabha’s Untitled from 2011 set a new world auction record for the artist at $200,000, as well as a continued appreciation for works by MF Husain, whose five works all found buyers. From the Bengal School of artists, to the spectacular F.N. Souza, Zainul Abedin and more, we were proud to present a sale completely sourced from private collections and the results were very rewarding.”
IMPORTANT CHINESE ART
Auction Total $19.8 Million
This season’s various-owner auction of Important Chinese Art was led by a gilt-bronze figure of the Chinese Buddhist deity Cintamanicakra Avalokiteshvara dating to the late Tang Dynasty / Five Dynasties, which sold for $2.1 million, following a seven-minute bidding battle. The seller had brought the piece to an Antiques Roadshow appraisal event in St. Louis, recalling that she had purchased the work at a garage sale some 20 years prior for approximately $75–100. The work came to auction today with a pre-sale estimate of $60/80,000.
The auction was also led by An Exceedingly Rare and Important Complete Set of the Sutra of Perfect Enlightenment by the Qianlong Emperor that fetched $2.7 million – more than five times its $500,000 high estimate. Every detail in the production of this Sutra reflects the supremacy of imperial quality, executed to the highest standards overall. The present Sutra also has a long collecting history in the West, that can be traced to Bernard Alfred Quaritch, a German bookseller who opened a bookshop in London in 1847 specializing in old and rare books, which still exists today.
A group of Chinese jade sold by The Art Institute of Chicago was 100% sold, totaling $3.2 million. The group was led by A Rare White Jade ‘Imperial Procession’ Brushpot dating to the Qing Dynasty, Qianlong / Jiaqing Period. Fashioned from superlative quality stone and deeply carved in the round to form a virtual diorama, the work achieved $2.1 million – well exceeding its $1.2 million high estimate.
Angela McAteer, Sotheby’s Head of the Chinese Works of Art Department in New York, commented: “We are extremely pleased with results achieved across our four auctions devoted to Chinese Works of Art last week. We saw great demand for works acquired by visionary American collectors, including important pieces from the fabled collection of Stephen Junkunc III, Kangxi period porcelain from the collection of Jeffrey P. Stamen, and Chinese jade and ceramics from the Robert Youngman collection. A group of jades offered on behalf of The Art Institute of Chicago was 100% sold, led by a beautiful and rare white jade imperial procession brushpot that achieved $2.1 million. Overall, we saw strong competition for Imperial works of art, with Chinese porcelain reigning supreme throughout the sales.”
JUNKUNC: ARTS OF ANCIENT CHINA
Auction Total $4.1 Million
Our March auctions of Important Chinese Works of Art opened with a series of dedicated sales, beginning with an exceptional offering of Chinese gilt-bronzes, weapons, jade animals, Buddhist sculpture and pottery from the collection of Stephen Junkunc, which brought $4.1 million with an exceptional 82% of all sold lots achieving prices above their high estimates. The sale followed Sotheby’s offering of Chinese Buddhist sculpture from Mr. Junkunc’s collection in September 2018.
Tuesday’s sale was led by An Extremely Rare Beige Jade Carving of a Mythical Beast Han Dynasty - Six Dynasties, which achieved $740,000 – well above its $500,000 high estimate. Figural sculptures such as the present work executed from the Han dynasty to Six Dynasties period were both a sumptuous display item for appreciation by the elite, as well as a reminder of the powerful supernatural forces latent in the world. A Tang Dynasty Large and Rare White Marble Carving of a Bodhisattva, previously held in the Cleveland Museum of Art, also reached $740,000 (pictured right, estimate $600/800,000). Freestanding sculptures from this period are rare, and even rarer are those of this exceptional quality and carved from marble. Since the introduction of Buddhism in the first century AD, images of Buddha and bodhisattva were believed to be imbued with the spiritual presence of the deity they depicted and served as bridges between the deity and devotees.
KANGXI: THE JIE RUI TANG COLLECTION, PART II
Auction Total $2.2 Million
Following the success of KANGXI: The Jie Rui Tang Collection in March 2018, this season’s selection of Kangxi-era ceramics from the Collection of Jeffrey P. Stamen featured a range of representative examples of major ceramic categories of the period. The offering was led by an Extraordinary, Fine and Large Inscribed Famille-Verte Brushpot that soared to $572,000 – more than four times its $120,000 high estimate. Brushpots of this large size in the famille-verte palette and bearing inscriptions are exceptionally rare. An essential item for a scholar, the present brushpot is decorated with an aspirational depiction capturing a moment of poetic inspiration. Scholarly-themed luxury wares gained popularity among the wealthy elite of the late Ming and early Qing dynasties, and were likely understood and appreciated by the fortunate few who could afford them as both spiritual inspiration and as a resounding statement of wealth and social status.
THE ROBERT YOUNGMAN COLLECTION OF JADE
Auction Total: $1 Million
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