Tag Archives: Paul Cu00e9zanne

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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Nine Must-See Art Exhibitions to Catch in Philadelphia This Spring

An installation view of “Kelly Kozma: Watch Me Backflip” at Paradigm Gallery + Studio. Courtesy of Paradigm Gallery + Studio

The city of brotherly love and sisterly affection is ready to greet art lovers with a heated exhibition season that not only raises questions but answers them, too. How do archaeologists preserve ancient Assyrian artifacts in the current conflict and destruction? Find out at the Penn Museum. How did two paintings by Paul Cézanne, in the collections of the Barnes Foundation and the Philadelphia Museum of Art, cause a huge media kerfuffle? How do contemporary artists turn fabrics and recycled everyday materials into large installation art? How did Asian American artists and activists use art to voice their resilience? We at Observer are a curious bunch, and the following art exhibitions in Philadelphia did much to slake our thirst for knowledge.

“Kelly Kozma: Watch Me Backflip”

Paradigm Gallery + Studio, through June 1, 2025

Watch Me Backflip” is a solo exhibition featuring the work of mixed-media and fiber artist Kelly Kozma. It uses repurposed material to show the significance and interconnectedness of small interactions within the broader environment. The artist has created a massive 22-foot circumference installation of 35,000 hand-stitched circles—a cosmic work titled Iguana & Myrrh, Magma & Reef. Objects like greeting cards, packages, clothing and threads become part of large-scale, colorful patterns. Engaged in minimal-waste practice, Kozma also utilizes materials like paper scraps and loose threads for the works in the show, which displays more than twenty mixed media works as a large assemblage. Here, her stitches create threads between the people in her life and the objects she interacts with to remind audiences of the dangers of overconsumption and emotional apathy.

“Soft/Cover”

The Fabric Workshop and Museum, through August 17, 2025

Soft/Cover” explores how artists utilize fabric and screenprinting to create objects whose significance lies in their relation to the human body. Drawing on the connection between textiles and other disciplines, such as fashion and architecture, the exhibition shows new and rarely displayed works from The Fabric Workshop and Museum’s collection—each created by artists-in-residence in collaboration with FWM’s Studio team. Inspired by some of FWM’s earliest residencies in the late 1970s and early 1980s, “Soft/Cover” celebrates artists who have created everything from everyday workwear to costumes but also expanded beyond garments to design bedding, umbrellas, furniture and large-scale installations. Eight new resident artists were commissioned for the exhibition to further expand the Workshop’s history and mission: to open pathways for these artists’ ideas, introducing new materials and forms to their evolving practices.

“Preserving Assyria”

Penn Museum, through February 2026

As one of the world’s first empires, Assyria, as an ancient civilization, is unique in that it still has a profound influence on Iraq’s cultural identity. While ISIS (the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria) actively attempts to erase and distort this part of history, this exhibition shows how Iraqi archaeologists, with support from Penn archaeologists and international partners, are reclaiming and protecting their cultural and artistic heritage during and after conflict. Centered on the recently excavated Mashki Gate in Nineveh, Iraq—a monumental Assyrian site destroyed in 2016—the exhibition highlights touchable 3D replicas of Assyrian reliefs on view alongside sixteen artifacts from the Penn Museum’s Near East collection. “Preserving Assyria” is on view in the Merle-Smith Galleries on the Lower Level, in harmony with the museum’s permanent Middle Eastern collection.

An installation view of “Preserving Assyria” at the Penn Museum. Courtesy of Penn Museum

“The Battle of the Bathers”

Barnes Foundation, through September 15, 2025

Dr. Albert C. Barnes, whose collection forms the basis of the Barnes Foundation, purchased The Large Bathers in 1933. This masterpiece is the crown jewel of his collection of more than 50 paintings by the French painter Paul Cézanne. Four years after the purchase, however, a public feud erupted when the Philadelphia Museum of Art acquired another version of the Bathers. The quality of each work was scrutinized while the press hurled itself into the controversy. “The Battle of the Bathers,” which features archival letters, clippings and photographs, traces Dr. Barnes’ purchase of his Large Bathers to explore its clash with the PMA in the media and expose the heated tensions that gave rise to the strife.

The main room of the Barnes collection in 1942. Photograph by Angelo Pinto, courtesy of the Pinto family. Photograph Collection, Barnes Foundation Archives

“The Quest for Truth in the Idea of the Garden”

The Charles Addams Fine Arts Gallery, University of Pennsylvania, through June 8, 2025

Co-curated by professor and artist Ken Lum and scholar Xianghua Liu, this international touring exhibition showcases contemporary artworks rooted in the transformation of traditional garden culture. Featuring contributions from thirty renowned contemporary artists as well as faculty and students from Minzu University of China—the nation’s leading institution for minority groups—the exhibition celebrates artistic innovation and the pursuit of knowledge. The selected works explore how minority cultures creatively respond to the environmental challenges of the modern world. Despite its somewhat unwieldy title, “The Quest for Truth in the Idea of the Garden: China Garden Cultural Contemporary Art International Tour Exhibition” aptly draws from both Eastern and Western religious traditions and philosophical views of nature to showcase the deep interconnection between eternal concepts, the cosmos, the Earth and human culture.

Xianghua Liu, Recumbent Travel, 2024; installation photography, 60 x 50.6 inches. Courtesy of Xianghua Liu

The 124th Annual Student Exhibition

Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, through June 1, 2025

Experience the creative energy of the next generation of artists in the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts’ 124th Annual Student Exhibition—a showcase of work by graduating MFA, post-baccalaureate, certificate and BFA students. The ASE is more than just an exhibition—it represents a milestone in these artists’ journeys as they step into professional practice and contribute to Philadelphia’s vibrant cultural landscape. For collectors, art lovers and first-time buyers, it offers a unique opportunity to discover and acquire original works by some of the most promising emerging talents. Featuring hundreds of works across painting, drawing, printmaking, sculpture and illustration, the exhibition is entirely curated, installed and managed by the students themselves and reflects the institution’s deep commitment to equipping students with the artistic and professional skills needed to thrive. One look and it’s clear these young artists are ready to leave their mark on the art world.

Viewers at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts’ Annual Student Exhibition. Courtesy of Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts

“Crescendo: How Art Makes Movements (1981-1999)”

Asian Arts Initiative, through June 28, 2025

Crescendo: How Art Makes Movements (1981-1999)” is a historical survey of multidisciplinary art projects that intersected with Asian American social movements between 1981 and 1999. Drawing inspiration from jazz and improvised music from the Black Arts Movement, the show attempts to redefine the presence of Asian Americans beyond the politics of representation. The exhibition’s title is a metaphor for the growing sociopolitical activism of the ’80s and ’90s, when Asian American artists thrived with major achievements in the creative arts through collaborative explorations, and the show has three sections focused on different collective projects: Asian Improv aRts/Records, the Afro Asian Music Ensemble and the East Side Band.

“Boom: Art and Design in the 1940s”

Philadelphia Museum of Art, through September 1, 2025

Philadelphia Museum of Art’s newest exhibition dives deep into the art and design of the World War II and post-war years, when major changes in politics, science, economics, industry and arts and culture occurred in the wake of global catastrophe. In this period of turmoil, artists brought new ideas to their work across media—from fashion and textiles, craft and design to printmaking, drawing, photography, painting and sculpture. “Boom: Art and Design in the 1940s” is a testament to the creative spirit that flourished despite the restrictions and adversity of the era and showcases art from across the decade, with works drawn entirely from the museum’s permanent collection.

Cristóbal Balenciaga, Woman’s Evening Ensemble: Dress, Overdress, Bustle, and Petticoat, Spring 1951, Silk taffeta with applied pleated silk organza, cotton piqué. Gift of John Wanamaker, Philadelphia, 1951. Courtesy of Philadelphia Museum of Art

“The Shape of Light: Form and Shadow in Motion”

Stanek Gallery Philadelphia, through June 28, 2025

The Shape of Light: Form and Shadow in Motion” invites viewers to experience the dynamic interplay between form and light. Featuring works by Roger Chavez, Barbara Fisher, Leah Kaplan and Michael Quadland, the show brings together a diverse range of media to examine how light both animates and alters our perception of form. Through themes of transformation and transition, the artists explore the dramatic tension between light’s illuminating force and shadow’s defining absence.



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