Tag Archives: Henry Moore

At Sotheby’s, a $70M Giacometti Fails to Sell While Works By Munch and Cézanne Ignite Buyer Excitement

Sotheby’s Modern Evening Auction saw a headline lot by Giacometti falter dramatically, casting a shadow over an otherwise solid $186.4 million result. Brendon Cook/BFA.com

If the prevailing art market mantra in recent months has been that, while buyers may be more selective, true quality will always sell, then what unfolded last night at Sotheby’s Modern Evening Auction delivered a sobering counterpoint. The evening’s centerpiece—Giacometti’s bronze bust of his brother Diego, the only known hand-painted version and a highlight of the 1956 Venice Biennale—was a dramatic pass. Despite being billed as the star lot, Grande tête mince (Grande tête de Diego), consigned by the Soloviev Foundation to benefit its charities, stalled after a few rounds of chandelier bidding and fell short of its $70 million estimate, dissolving into the uneasy silence of a muted salesroom. The work went to the rostrum without a guarantee or an irrevocable bid—a bold, some might say reckless, move in a market where such mechanisms are increasingly treated less like optional safeguards and more like essential life preservers. The lingering question is whether the consignors were too eager to test the waters unprotected. The estimate itself may have been ambitious enough to dissuade even the most ardent trophy hunters, though this time, the trophy was undeniably the real thing. “It simply wasn’t its moment,” said Julian Dawes, Sotheby’s head of Impressionist and modern art in the Americas. “Our belief in the work remains undiminished.” Sotheby’s CEO Charles Stewart echoed the sentiment, calling the result “an organic, genuine auction moment,” and stressing, “It wasn’t financially engineered at all. It was the seller believing in the work and willing to sell at a price.”

In recent years, Giacometti has cemented his position as a reliable cornerstone of the auction market—a blue-chip name that consistently performs and seldom disappoints, even during periods of economic turbulence. But as auction houses increasingly err on the side of caution, it’s possible the market has been oversaturated this season. Last night at Sotheby’s, the house also offered Femme debout (Poseuse I) from the collection of Hollywood film producer Joseph H. Hazen—one of the evening’s standout consignments. Opening at $3.4 million, the sculpture ignited a prolonged bidding battle, ultimately hammering down after more than five tense minutes for $5.6 million ($6.8 million with premium), landing comfortably above its $4-6 million estimate.

SEE ALSO: Despite Quiet Bidding, Christie’s Evening Sales Brought in $489M

Despite the Giacometti miss, which admittedly cast a long shadow over the evening, Sotheby’s still brought in a respectable $186.4 million across sixty lots—albeit short of its presale estimate of $240.3 million to $318.7 million. The sale felt noticeably livelier than Christie’s the night before, with deeper competition across several lots despite a few sharp disappointments. Of the works that did sell, roughly 40 percent exceeded their high estimates, and twenty-six lots were guaranteed—twenty-four of them backed by third parties.

Alberto Giacometti’s Grande tête mince (1955) failed to meet its $70 million estimate. Courtesy of Sotheby’s

Ten lots failed to sell, leaving Sotheby’s with a final sell-through rate of 83 percent. Notably, 40 percent of the offerings were fresh to the market—and those works generally outperformed the rest. That was true for one of the evening’s top lots, Alexander Calder’s Four Big Dots, held in the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art’s collection for more than 60 years and offered to support future acquisitions and collection care. It sold to a bidder in the room for $8,285,000. Similarly, Georgia O’Keeffe’s Leaves of a Plant (1942), making its auction debut, surpassed expectations by fetching $12,972,500 against an $8-12 million estimate. Acquired by the seller in 1978, the work had debuted in O’Keeffe’s 1943 retrospective at An American Place and was later exhibited widely, including in the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum’s inaugural show in 1997. Among the other top performers was Picasso’s Homme assis (1969), which brought in $15 million—one of the strongest results for the series.

Still, to achieve that sell-through rate, Sotheby’s quietly withdrew at least four lots before the sale, including Wassily Kandinsky’s Study for Improvisation 10 (1910), estimated at $6–8 million. During the auction, auctioneer Oliver Barker noted that Rufino Tamayo’s Brindis (1949) likely failed to find a buyer, despite growing interest in the artist, as its $1-1.5 million estimate appeared overly ambitious.

František Kupka’s Flux et reflux (1923) sold for $5,906,000. Sotheby’s

Sparking moments of bidder excitement were several standout lots from the Joseph H. Hazen Collection, beginning with Robert Delaunay’s Nature morte (1936), which exceeded expectations, hammering at $1.6 million ($2 million with fees) after a lively exchange between bidders in the room and on the phones. Four bidders also chased the next lot, a luminous František Kupka, Flux et reflux (1923), which surged to $4.8 million ($5.9 million with fees)—helped, no doubt, by the Guggenheim’s recent survey on Orphism that reignited interest in the artist’s work. Backed by both a guarantee and an irrevocable bid, the painting—also included in the catalogue for Kupka’s 1975 Guggenheim retrospective—came with the kind of institutional pedigree that may have given it an edge over the following lot, Kupka’s Formes flasques (1919-25), which sold below estimate at $4.3 million ($5.2 million with fees).

Tension resurfaced when Fernand Léger’s La Jeune fille au bouquet (1921), also from the Hazen Collection, failed to meet its $5-7 million estimate, stalling at $4.3 million. A few lots later, Barker reopened bidding and hammered it at $3 million—a clear signal that the seller had adjusted expectations to meet the market where it stood.

As Barker worked to regain momentum following the Giacometti flop, fireworks returned later in the evening. Edvard Munch’s portrait of Heinrich C. Hudtwalcker drew five phone bidders and hammered at $1.5 million ($1.8 million with fees), selling to a collector in Asia. Immediately after, a heated bidding war broke out over one of the earliest portraits of Cézanne’s partner and future wife, Hortense Fiquet. Portrait de Madame Cézanne (1877) opened at $3.9 million and hammered at $6 million ($7,370,000 with premium). With only two other portraits of Fiquet having come to auction in the past 25 years, the result marked the second-highest price ever achieved for the subject.

Lot 25, Paul Cézanne’s Portrait de Madame Cézanne (circa 1877) sold for $7.3 million. Sotheby’s

Sotheby’s sale also saw notably heightened participation from Asian clients. Among the highlights was Henri Matisse’s Le Bouquet d’anémones, dated 1918 and painted during the pivotal early years of the artist’s celebrated Nice period. Acquired by a Chinese collector, the work had been held in the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art’s collection for over 75 years and was offered to support the museum’s acquisitions fund. It sold swiftly for $1.2 million ($1,514,000 with premium).

Far less enthusiasm greeted a Mark Rothko from 1968, despite its strong provenance—long part of the collection of Carla Panicali, the influential Italian gallerist who oversaw Marlborough Gallery’s Rome branch in the 1960s. Opening at $2.8 million, the work hammered at $4.2 million, right within its $3.5–5 million estimate ($4,930,000 with premium).

Before the evening wrapped, Barker had the satisfaction of closing on one of the night’s most memorable moments with An Important Double-Pedestal Lamp by Frank Lloyd Wright, originally commissioned for the Susan Lawrence Dana House in Springfield, Illinois, over a century ago. Though more esoteric, appealing to a narrower collector base, the lot ignited a prolonged bidding battle and hammered after ten minutes at $6.1 million ($7,492,000 with fees). As the most important Wright work ever brought to auction, it not only doubled its low estimate but shattered the architect’s previous record of $2,903,500—selling for nearly four times the price it achieved when last offered at Sotheby’s in December 2002.

Lot 36, Frank Lloyd Wright’s An Important Double-Pedestal Lamp for the Susan Lawrence Dana House, Springfield, Illinois sold for $7.5 million. Sotheby’s

In the final stretch of the sale, both Henry Moore sculptures landed within estimate: Mother and Child on Ladderback Chair brought in $523,400, while Seated Woman on Bench sold in-room for a modest $482,600. Meanwhile, momentum appears to be building around another British sculptor, Lynn Chadwick. With Perrotin recently staging a slate of major exhibitions beginning in Paris during Art Basel, the final lot of the night—Three Elektras, one of the largest Chadwick works ever brought to auction—closed the sale on a high note, hammering at $2,002,000, well above its $1.2-1.8 million estimate.

A tense night at Phillips delivers records with women artists shining

Opening the evening earlier at 5 p.m., Phillips launched the week’s sales with a noticeably cautious tone. In a market where the once-reliable lure of youthful, fresh paint has lost momentum—at least in evening sales—the house leaned more heavily on established, blue-chip names for its Modern and Contemporary Evening Sale. Even so, the auction house managed to deliver a surprisingly confident result, bolstered by the fact that 90 percent of the lots were either fresh to market or hadn’t appeared at auction in more than 15 years. The sale achieved a total of $51,952,350 across thirty-six lots, after four were withdrawn and another four went unsold.

Grace Hartigan’s The Fourth (1956) sold for $1,633,000. Jean Bourbon

Leading the night at Phillips was Jean-Michel Basquiat’s Untitled, originally acquired by Swiss dealer Bruno Bischofberger and now offered from the personal collection of David Bowie. Opening at $3.8 million, the work landed at $5.4 million in the room ($6,594,000 with premium), exceeding its $4.5-6.5 million estimate. Another Basquiat work on paper from 1985/1986 also outperformed expectations, selling for $2,964,000.

Women artists shone throughout the evening, with Phillips strategically spotlighting new or historically overlooked names—an approach that sparked regional bidding far beyond the U.S. That was the case with Colombian artist Olga de Amaral, who made her evening sale debut with an early piece from her Images Perdidas series, inspired by pre-Columbian weaving traditions and spiritual symbolism. Opening at $220,000, the work quickly attracted multiple bidders online and in the room, doubling its estimate in under three minutes. It ultimately hammered at $920,000 to a bidder in the room, setting a new auction record for the artist at $1.2 million with fees—four times its $300,000-500,000 estimate. The result follows several years of mounting international interest in de Amaral’s work, bolstered by her representation with Lisson Gallery and further consolidated by her major exhibition at Fondation Cartier in Paris.

Olga de Amaral’s Imagen perdida (1996) soared to four times its estimate at $1.2 million. Bonnie H Morrison

Another standout was Austrian artist Kiki Kogelnik, who made her auction debut with a 1973 painting—the same year as her first exhibition in Austria. Opening at $85,000, the lot quickly climbed to $280,000 amid active international bidding online and over the phones, ultimately closing at a record $355,600 with fees.

The night also delivered a new record for Grace Hartigan, a long-overlooked and now rightly reassessed female force within Abstract Expressionism. The Forth, a large-scale, animated abstraction from 1959, hit the rostrum with authority. Described in the catalogue as “an explosive convergence of American identity, postwar ambition and painterly force,” the fourteen-foot-wide canvas opened at $400,000 and soared to $1.3 million after ten minutes of spirited bidding ($1,633,000 with premium). The work came with distinguished provenance, having once belonged to banker, philanthropist and former U.S. Ambassador to Belgium William A. M. Burden Jr., who exhibited it in Brussels the following year through the U.S. State Department’s Art in Embassies program, which placed works by leading American artists in diplomatic residences abroad. Last sold at Christie’s in 1997 for just $24,000, the painting more than doubled its $600,000 low estimate and marked an 18 percent jump over Hartigan’s previous record, set by Early November (1959), which sold for $1.38 million at Christie’s on May 12, 2022. Could this finally signal Hartigan—youngest of the Ab-Ex circle—is on course to join the market rise of Joan Mitchell and Helen Frankenthaler?

Kiki Kogelnik’s Rainy (1973) sold for $355,600. Phillips

A new record was also set last night at Phillips for another Colombian contemporary artist, Ilana Savdie, who has been making her New York debut with White Cube since the gallery announced her representation in 2023. The vibrant hues and layered textures of her Imperial diet, y otros demonios (2021), opening at $80,000—more aligned with her primary market pricing—sparked a fierce contest between online and phone bidders, culminating in a showdown between a bidder in Lebanon and another in Austin. The latter ultimately secured the work for $228,600, setting a new auction record for the rising artist.

The opening lot, a painting by Japanese artist Yu Nishimura, fell short of his recent high of $296,100 set at Sotheby’s this past February, hammering after a few muted bids at $220,000 ($279,400 with fees), despite the buzz surrounding his addition to David Zwirner’s roster. Perhaps a sign the market isn’t ready to sustain a meteoric ascent when prices stray too far, too fast from the primary range. James Turrell, by contrast, set a new record at Phillips with Ariel from his ongoing Glass Series, which hammered at $520,000 ($660,400 with fees), marking the Light and Space pioneer’s Evening Sale debut.

Some of the evening’s most anticipated lots just scraped past their low estimates. Ed Ruscha’s Alvarado to Doheny sold after a few limp bids for $4.9 million with fees—likely to its guarantor, via the house’s head of private sales. Lot 16, Gerhard Richter’s portrait of Sigmar Polke—once in the collection of Blinky PAlermo—similarly hovered at its threshold, selling for $4,174,000 after a slow rise from a $2.3 million opening bid, with Phillips’s global chairman ultimately taking it home.

But the night’s most visibly rattled moment came with Richard Prince’s Killer Nurse. As auctioneer Henry Highley approached the lot, he was handed a note that visibly threw him off balance—something had gone awry. A bidder may have backed out or retracted a commitment. After a tense few minutes of “dialing for info,” the work finally hammered at $2.6 million, shortly after Highley, with forced cheer, relayed a “great message from private sales” that appeared to salvage the situation, bringing the final price just over the low estimate at $3,206,000 with fees.

Still, the tension lingered, and Highley struggled to fully recover his rhythm. Although the Thiebaud cake found a home (selling for just short of its low estimate at $1,270,000 to Korean dealer and collector Hong Gyu Shin), most of the final lots were passes—including a seminal Frank Stella from the 1970s, a gilded mirror by Jeff Koons and a Richard Prince from his Cowboy series.

The May auction marathon continues tonight with Christie’s 21st Century Evening Sale and tomorrow with Sotheby’s The Now and Contemporary Evening Auction.



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TEFAF Delivers Museum Quality—and Sales—Despite Market Uncertainty

Strong sales showcased TEFAF’s continued ability to attract sophisticated buyers across multiple collecting categories. Photo: Jitske Nap

The energy on opening night was palpable, according to TEFAF New York director Leanne Jagtiani. “No matter how consistent it is year after year, I’m always dazzled by the quality of work our exhibitors bring to the Armory,” she told Observer. “Walking through the booths, you could sense the enthusiasm—exhibitors clearly felt the vibrant energy of the crowd and were engaged in meaningful conversation.” Indeed, some dealers reported near-immediate sales, and others quickly found themselves in deep talks with promising collectors. And while murmurs about a champagne shortage and swapped-out tulips were read by some as signs of austerity, the fair once again affirmed its standing as the premier marketplace for the exceptional, regardless of the economic climate.

SEE ALSO: Frieze and NADA New York’s Early Sales Signaled Buyer Confidence

David Zwirner opened the fair with a solo presentation of elegantly suspended sculptures by Ruth Asawa, accompanied by a series of works on paper that captured her poetic and process-driven approach with quiet precision. Reflecting a deep engagement with nature, geometry and process-based making, Asawa looped wire into ethereal, biomorphic tridimensional crochet, challenging the boundaries between sculpture, craft and drawing while exploring the relationship between space and form, light and shadow. The gallery sold four sculptures priced between $320,000 and $2.8 million and six works on paper priced between $50,000 and $160,000.

Ruth Asawa at David Zwirner’s booth. © 2025 Ruth Asawa Lanier, Inc. Courtesy David Zwirner

That same day, Ortuzar Projects, in collaboration with Marc Selwyn Fine Art, sold Lee Bontecou’s iconic Untitled (1959) for a price reportedly in the $2 million range. The museum-quality presentation highlighted Bontecou’s visionary fusion of postwar anxiety and cosmic wonder—her signature machine-organic hybrids forged from industrial detritus. Evoking both space probes and bodily voids, Bontecou’s cratered forms exist somewhere between lunar landscapes and anatomical maps, channeling a haunting new relationship between humanity and the cosmos.

Meanwhile, Thaddaeus Ropac reported rapid sales of nearly every Daniel Richter canvas in the fair’s first few hours. Two large oil paintings—sperlingskleine WEISE (2024) and Triumph des Höhnischen—each surpassed $470,000. “It’s been an extremely busy opening, perhaps even more so than last year,” said the Austrian dealer, noting the “very positive response” to Richter’s new paintings from TEFAF’s reliably sophisticated and informed buyer base.

SEE ALSO: The Art Market Defies Doom and Gloom at Independent, Esther and Future Fair

Standing out for both quality and curatorial strength was Robilant Voena’s booth, which included a monumental pink Andy Warhol tribute to celebrities, Myths (Multiple) (1981), in dialogue with a rare and graceful brass sculpture by Melotti, three rare Fucsia slashes and a fourth work by Lucio Fontana, along with ceramics by the Argentinian pioneer of space and matter. “We are very happy with the attendance of our clients and collectors! TEFAF has also been incremental in supporting our presence in New York, especially as we have reopened our new gallery close by,” commented Robilant Voena. “We have seen a healthy mix of American and European attendees.”

Another long-time exhibitor at TEFAF, the London- and Italy-based gallery Cardi reportedly placed several works with American collectors, including historical pieces such as Piero Manzoni’s Achrome (1962), priced above $330,000; Agostino Bonalumi’s Bianco (1989), with an asking price of $120,000; and décollages by Mimmo Rotella, each listed at $55,000. The gallery also sold two works by contemporary Italian-born, New York–based artist Davide Balliano for $35,000 each—he will have a solo exhibition at Tina Kim gallery in the coming months. “In this particular moment, I felt collectors’ response was both responsible and solid—they’ve slyly returned to the market, sensing this is a buy moment,” gallery owner Nicolo Cardi told Observer. By Monday, the gallery had also placed works by Josef Albers and Raymond Pettibon and had a Richard Serra and a Mimmo Paladino on reserve.

Tornabuoni Arte—an Italian gallery and TEFAF veteran specializing in postwar masterpieces—also reported strong sales to new buyers from the U.S. and Europe, including a metaphysical piazza by Giorgio De Chirico, an embroidery and ballpoint pen airplane work by Alighiero Boetti, a poetic piece by Claudio Parmiggiani and a work by Mimmo Rotella, while a striking white Lucio Fontana remains on hold.

Robilant + Voena’s offerings. Robilant & Voena

Some of the offerings at TEFAF also aligned intriguingly with the upcoming spring marquee auctions. As Barbara Gladstone’s personal collection heads to the block—led by Richard Prince’s iconic Nurse—the series made a parallel return across the fairs: Gana Art from Seoul presented a Masquerade Nurse from the 2000s, originally acquired from Gladstone’s collection in 2014 by a Korean collector and now offered with a $5.5 million price tag. Gladstone Gallery brought works from the dealer’s private holdings, including a suite of George Condo drawings, most of which were acquired directly from the artist and had never been seen on the market before. The gallery swiftly placed forty-five of them, with prices ranging from $15,000 to $150,000.

While TEFAF New York leans toward the modern and contemporary, it wasn’t all blue-chip masterworks. Sprüth Magers showcased a new series of bronze reliefs by Anne Imhof, translating her visceral, performance-based explorations of the body, identity and societal tension into a material language rooted in permanence. Returning to the Park Avenue Armory after her unforgettable live performance, DOOM, Imhofs Untitled (Silas) (2024) sold to a private U.S. collection for €250,000. A suite of drawings from her Cerberus series (2024), mapping the tension between human and animal, gesture and emotion, also went to a European collector.

Quite timely with the daily news, Leon Tovar was offering a large-scale, humorous Fernando Botero portrayal of a pope, El Nuncio (1987). León Tovar, owner of the gallery, expressed his excitement about the unexpected alignment, describing it as a “magical coincidence.” The curatorial concept of their booth this year was inspired by the movie Conclave and the idea of unification, with other works by Latino masters such as Rufino Tamayo and Wifredo Lam. “It is just a magical coincidence; Pope Francis dies, an American pope is elected, and here we have this impressive work by Botero, which represents precisely that link between art and spirituality,” Tovar said. The painting had an asking price in the $3 million range.

Meanwhile, as its two galleries stage museum-quality exhibitions devoted to modern and contemporary masters, Gagosian dedicated its entire TEFAF booth to a solo presentation of works by the talented young figurative painter—and Larry’s former girlfriend—Anna Weyant. By the end of opening day, the gallery had reportedly placed Spring Florals, a large-scale canvas priced at $300,000, along with eight intimately scaled new paintings priced at $90,000 each. Depicting jewelry items such as pearl bracelets, gold chains and daisy pendants rendered inside jewelry boxes with minimal detail, these trompe l’oeil works—explicitly conceived for the fair—created a tidy visual dialogue with the rest of the presentation. In the end, though, they read more as virtuosic exercises in decorative hyperrealism than meaningful critiques of consumerism, despite their conceptual pretense.

Anna Weyant, Pearl Bracelet (Sold), 2025; Oil on canvas, 8 1/4 x 8 1/4 inches. © Anna Weyant Photo: Maris Hutchinson Courtesy Gagosian

Kasmin also reported the sale of a group of works spanning a broad price range—from Yves Klein’s iconic La Victoire de Samothrace, sold for $17,500, and a gelatin silver print of his memorable performance Leap Into the Void, October 27, for $35,000, to Janaina Tschäpe’s oil stick on canvas Summer thoughts (2025), sold for $95,000. Additional placements included a pencil and charcoal on paper by Jannis Kounellis priced at $25,000, two Hugo McCloud oil paintings at $115,000 each and Mariko Mori’s crystal-like sculpture Plasma Stone II (2017-2018), sold for $325,000.

Similarly strong on the contemporary side was White Cube, which placed Tracey Emin’s visceral You please me (2022) for nearly $400,000, a group of Julie Mehretu’s etchings for $250,000 and Ed Ruscha’s acrylic on canvas Brave Men Study I (1995).

Among the standout works, Galerie Lefebvre presented a stunning Amedeo Modigliani drawing—a distilled formal study of the human head, clearly inspired by African masks and Cycladic sculpture. Originally conceived as a sketch for a lost 1911 sculpture, the work now stands as the sole surviving testament to this level of synthesis and mastery in Modigliani’s practice. During the preview, the dealer confided to Observer that, given the response at the fair confirming its rarity and power, he was seriously considering keeping it for himself. Another gem: a vibrant 1984 Jean-Michel Basquiat on a blue background at Van de Weghe’s booth, shown alongside miniature works by Alexander Calder and Henry Moore—and a floor piece by Carl Andre that fairgoers kept unwittingly stepping on, too distracted by the overall quality of the presentation to notice.

A notable presence in Salon 94’s booth was the work of Aboriginal artist Mantua Nangala, whose market and institutional presence has surged in recent years. Her intricate acrylic-on-linen dot paintings visualize the sacred landscape of Marrapinti in the Gibson Desert, translating ancestral Dreaming stories into rhythmic, almost cartographic compositions that link micro and macro worlds. Priced around $80,000 each, they offer a contemporary language for inherited knowledge—anchored in tradition but speaking fluently to today’s global art stage. The gallery also sold several works by Alev Ebüzziya Siesbye and Mitsuko Asakura in the $40,000-90,000 range.

Meanwhile, Richard Saltoun spotlighted generations of pioneering fiber artists from across geographies, with standouts including wall tapestries by Magdalena Abakanowicz—one originally featured in the seminal 1969 MoMA exhibition “Wall Hangings”—and a luminous gold piece by Olga de Amaral, timed to coincide with her evening auction debut and a major show at Fondation Cartier. Lisson Gallery, instrumental in building De Amaral’s international market, also placed her Tierra y fibra 3 (1988) alongside Sean Scully’s Wall Tappan Deep Red (2025) for $500,000, Dalton Paula’s Zacimba Gaba (2025) for $200,000 and Kelly Akashi’s Be Me (A Thousand Flowers) (2021) for $50,000, following her memorable recent show at the gallery during last Frieze Los Angeles.

TEFAF runs through May 13. Photo: Jitske Nap

Here, the demand for Impressionist masters remains strong. David Tunick sold a Cézanne double-sided portrait drawing of the artist’s only son in the six-figure price range. Also in the early days of the fair, French dealer Almine Rech sold a delightfully feminine portrait of a woman by Marie Laurencin—priced between $300,000 and $350,000—a figure who was extremely active within the same Parisian artistic circles of the early 20th Century but has only recently been reconsidered by the market. Rech also placed works by Ali Cherri ($150,000-170,000), Zio Ziegler ($55,000-70,000), Inès Longevial ($40,000-50,000), a new painting by Chloe Wise ($25,000-30,000) and one work by Dylan Solomon Kraus ($20,000-25,000).

As TEFAF remains a stage for both discoveries and rediscoveries, one of the most remarkable inclusions in this year’s edition is a recently resurfaced portrait of an African prince by Gustav Klimt, long thought lost during World War II. Presented by Vienna’s Wienerroither & Kohlbacher Gallery with a €15 million price tag, the extraordinary painting underwent meticulous cleaning, confirming its prestigious attribution. Believed to have remained with Klimt until it hit the block at Vienna’s Samuel Kende auction house in 1923 with a starting price of 15,000 crowns, the work was likely acquired by Ernestine Klein and her husband, a wine wholesaler, as referenced in records from a 1928 “Secession” exhibition—its last known public appearance. The Kleins fled Austria in 1938 as the Nazis took power, living secretly in Monaco and likely leaving the painting behind. It remained unaccounted for until its recent resurfacing and is now back on the market, following a restitution settlement with Ernestine Klein’s heirs.

This year, ninety-one 91 dealers and galleries from thirteen countries and four continents brought their best to New York City. Photo: Jitske Nap

TEFAF, unfortunately, was likely the spring art fair hit hardest by the new tariffs, with dealers facing added costs and bureaucratic complications, particularly in categories like design, antiquities and jewelry, which were present in smaller numbers compared to the Maastricht edition. Still, true quality triumphed over red tape. Friedman Benda sold a unique Wendell Castle piece from 1966 on the first day, while Didier Ltd, a gallery specializing in artist-designed jewelry, quickly placed a seductive gold pendant medallion featuring a sunken-relief rampant bull by Pablo Picasso—made in collaboration with his dentist, Dr. Philippe Châtaignier—as well as a textured gold pendant with a red enamel bird by Georges Braque.

On the antiquities side, a particular standout was the Roman head of a bearded god from the 2nd century AD presented by Charles Ede. The sculpture was striking for its expressive realism: heavily lidded eyes gaze forward with incised irises and drilled crescent pupils, offering a rare glimpse of classical naturalism at the height of the Roman Empire—a period marked by peace, prosperity, imperial stability and cultural grandeur. Meanwhile, David Aron Ltd presented two fascinating Cycladic Venus sculptures, powerful and essential representations of femininity. In the early days of the fair, the gallery also sold a remarkable hollow-cast bronze Horus Falcon dated to the Late Egyptian Period—a time when the falcon’s symbolism carried deep religious and artistic meaning, tied to the god revered as the unifier and protector of the nation. The piece came to market with prestigious provenance, having once belonged to the celebrated Swedish art historian and collector Dr. Emil Hultmark. Another standout in the booth was a set of Corsican bronze objects from the late Bronze Age (circa 900 B.C.), discovered near Ajaccio between 1800 and 1890. The set contains three bow fibulae, including the largest with a typical violin-bow form, together with a dagger, a uniform bronze (likely a belt buckle), a pommel, a disc—possibly part of a horse harness or brooch—and three simple rings that may have been used as a form of proto-currency.

Overall, TEFAF’s steady activity across price points reflects a U.S. art market that is still one of the most fertile grounds for high-end sales. Increasingly selective, American collectors are buying, but only when a work delivers true quality and exceptionality—this fair’s bread and butter.



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