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1,200+ Bidders Propel Mario Buatta Collection to $7.6 Million Total Over 22 Hours of Auction at Sotheby's NY

SUPER MARIO BUATTA
Sotheby’s Two-Day Sale Dedicated to
The Personal Collection of Iconic Interior Designer Mario Buatta
Achieves $7.6 Million in New York

2.5+ TIMES THE AUCTION'S HIGH ESTIMATE
With 99% of All 922 Lots Sold
&
86% of All Lots Exceeding Expectations

1,200+ Bidders Compete over a Marathon 22 Hours of Auction
Conducted by 8 Auctioneers

HALF OF ALL LOTS SOLD TO ONLINE BIDDERS

4,000+ Visitors Flock to Sotheby’s York Avenue Galleries
To Attend the Public Pre-Sale Exhibition 

 

NEW YORK, 27 January 2020 – Sotheby’s two-day auction Mario Buatta: Prince of Interiors came to a close late Friday night in New York, achieving an outstanding total of $7.6 million – more than 2.5 times the sale's high estimate, and with an exceptional 99% of all 922 lots sold.

The blockbuster sale was dedicated to the extensive personal collection of legendary interior designer Mario Buatta, featuring furniture, fine art and decorative objects from his Upper East Side apartment and Gothic-revival house in Thompson, Connecticut.

Dennis Harrington, Head of Sotheby’s English & European Furniture Department in New York, said: “We are absolutely thrilled at the phenomenal reaction to the Buatta Collection, which inspired bidders from around the globe to compete day and night to acquire a piece of the late designer’s aesthetic. These results prove that Mario Buatta’s love of antique furniture, rich colors and patterns, and beautiful objects is still relevant to 21st-century collectors and designers – a legacy of which he would be immensely proud.”

Emily Eerdmans, design expert and co-author of Mario Buatta: Fifty Years of American Interior Decoration, commented: “There could be no finer tribute to Mario’s legacy than the incredible success of this sale. Sotheby’s shared our vision of showcasing and celebrating the Prince of Chintz with a catalogue, an exhibition, and a 22-hour blockbuster sale that will be long remembered.”

Below is a look at some of the objects that drove these exceptional results: 

TOP LOT Yuri Pavlovich Annenkov
Deux Maisons
Executed in 1928
Estimate $40/60,000
Sold for $212,500

Acquired by Mario Buatta at Sotheby’s New York in 1973, this 20th-century Paris scene by Russian émigré artist Yury Annenkov led the two-day offering. The oil painting was once in the collection of prominent Philadelphia lawyer and collector, Maurice J. Speiser, who frequented Paris in the roaring twenties and formed lasting relationships with modernist writers, musicians and artists such as Annenkov, Ernest Hemingway, Sergei Prokofiev and Marc Chagall.

MOST COMPETITION
An Italian Silver and Bamboo Flatware Service, Buccellati, Milan
Late 20th Century
Estimate $5/7,000
Sold for $93,750

A flatware service by Buccellati sparked the most competition among collectors, with a staggering 28 bidders vying for the 174-piece set.
TOP DRAWER
A Chinese Export Black and Gold Lacquer Bureau Cabinet
Circa 1730
Estimate $50/80,000
Sold for $162,500

Distinguished by its unprecedented quantity and quality of lacquered works, the Buatta Collection featured a Chinese Export Black and Gold Lacquer Bureau Cabinet, which achieved the top price for the selection of furniture on offer. Acquired by Buatta at Sotheby’s in October 1983, this striking piece is one of the finest examples of its kind to appear on the market in decades, and forms part of a small group of similar works produced in Canton in the 1730s. An extremely closely related example is in London’s Victoria & Albert Museum.
BEST PERFORMANCE AGAINST ESTIMATE
A Pair of Anglo-Indian Low Tables
Estimate $500/800
Sold for $27,500

Exemplifying the fierce competition among bidders throughout the two-day sale, a Pair of Anglo-Indian Low Tables achieved the best performance against estimate, selling for 34+ times its $800 high estimate.
TOP DOG
Frances C. Fairman
The Boxer Rebellion
1902
Estimate $10/15,000
Sold for $50,000

Illustrating the designer’s love for what he called his canine ‘ancestors’, Frances C. Fairman’s The Boxer Rebellion led Buatta’s extensive selection of dog paintings. Prominently hung in the living room of his Upper East Side apartment, the oil painting depicts his favorite breed, the Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, and celebrates the treaty between England and France ending the Boxed Rebellion in China.
MOST ONLINE VIEWS
An Extensive Dodie Thayer Pottery Lettuce Ware Part-Service
Estimate $10/15,000
Sold for $60,000

Ahead of the auction, an Extensive Dodie Thayer Pottery Lettuce Ware Part-Service was the most visited item from the collection on sothebys.com, with nearly 5,000 views. Buatta acquired the service at a Sotheby’s auction in October 2003 from the Estate of Richard V. Hare.
MOST CHARMING CHINTZ
A Slipper Chair and Armchair With Matching Floral Chintz Fabric, Modern
Estimate $1,200/1,800
Sold for $11,250

No celebration of Buatta’s life would be complete without examples of the designer’s trademark floral print fabric.






  • 27.01.2020
    Presse »
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus »

    To Lead Sotheby’s Modern & Post-War British Art Auction 22 – 23 November 2016, London



Neue Kunst Nachrichten
Die Universalmuseum Joanneum
Die vergangenen 20 Jahre der heutigen Universalmuseum...
Sanierung der ehemaligen
Für die Instandsetzung des Wohn- und Geschäftshauses...
ASIATISCHE KUNST ELABORIERTER
Lempertz hat in diesem Jahr einen Umsatz von € 50,1 Mio...
Meistgelesen in Nachrichten
Rückschau 2016  

Auf ein erfolgreiches Jahr 2016 blickten am heutigen

MUSA-Preis für  

Ab dem Jahr 2014 wird jährlich der MUSA-Preis für junge

Pulverfabrikation  

Bis 1994 wurde auf dem Areal Im Neckartal in Rottweil

  • Mario Buatta’s Manhattan apartment photographed for Architectural Digest in 1997. The living room is glazed in three shades of lime green and creamy white, with a faux-sisal painted floor. Over the sofa hangs Mario’s collection of dog paintings. Mario often joked, “These paintings are my ancestors. Seriously, I love dogs. I don’t have a dog because I have such a busy schedule, but I love viewing them on the wall.” Photo: Scott Frances for Architectural Digest/Otto Archive Bildquelle: Sotheby’s A
    Mario Buatta’s Manhattan apartment photographed for Architectural Digest in 1997. The living room is glazed in three shades of lime green and creamy white, with a faux-sisal painted floor. Over the sofa hangs Mario’s collection of dog paintings. Mario often joked, “These paintings are my ancestors. Seriously, I love dogs. I don’t have a dog because I have such a busy schedule, but I love viewing them on the wall.” Photo: Scott Frances for Architectural Digest/Otto Archive Bildquelle: Sotheby’s A
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus
  • Yuri Pavlovich Annenkov Deux Maisons Executed in 1928 Estimate $40/60,000 Sold for $212,500
    Yuri Pavlovich Annenkov Deux Maisons Executed in 1928 Estimate $40/60,000 Sold for $212,500
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus
  • An Italian Silver and Bamboo Flatware Service, Buccellati, Milan Late 20th Century Estimate $5/7,000 Sold for $93,750
    An Italian Silver and Bamboo Flatware Service, Buccellati, Milan Late 20th Century Estimate $5/7,000 Sold for $93,750
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus
  • A Chinese Export Black and Gold Lacquer Bureau Cabinet Circa 1730 Estimate $50/80,000 Sold for $162,500
    A Chinese Export Black and Gold Lacquer Bureau Cabinet Circa 1730 Estimate $50/80,000 Sold for $162,500
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus
  • A Pair of Anglo-Indian Low Tables Estimate $500/800 Sold for $27,500
    A Pair of Anglo-Indian Low Tables Estimate $500/800 Sold for $27,500
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus
  • Frances C. Fairman The Boxer Rebellion 1902 Estimate $10/15,000 Sold for $50,000
    Frances C. Fairman The Boxer Rebellion 1902 Estimate $10/15,000 Sold for $50,000
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus
  • An Extensive Dodie Thayer Pottery Lettuce Ware Part-Service Estimate $10/15,000 Sold for $60,000
    An Extensive Dodie Thayer Pottery Lettuce Ware Part-Service Estimate $10/15,000 Sold for $60,000
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus