De Kooning Work Sells for Record $20.6 Million
- Share via
NEW YORK — A seminal Abstract Expressionist painting by Willem de Kooning ran away with a contemporary art auction Wednesday night at Sotheby’s, selling for $20.68 million, the highest auction price ever paid for a contemporary artwork.
The $20.68 million bid for “Interchange,” a vigorous composition of slashing brush strokes painted in 1955, surpassed last November’s $17-million sale of Jasper Johns’ “False Start,” which stunned the art world at the time. It was a record price for contemporary art that seemed impossible to beat, but the De Kooning sailed past that mark after breaking the artist’s record of $3.63 million and clearing Sotheby’s high pre-sale estimate of $7 million.
Bidding started at $1.5 million. Then Bo Alveryd, a Swedish dealer living in Switzerland, upped the ante to $6 million as the audience gasped. Several people in the sale room joined the competition and others chimed in on telephones, edging the price upward in increments of $200,000. Finally, a Tokyo dealer who calls himself and his company Mountain Tortoise made the winning bid.
Lucy Mitchell-Inness, head of Sotheby’s contemporary art department, said she wasn’t surprised by the sale because there had been “a lot of interest in the painting” and it is a rare work, synthesizing De Kooning’s themes and techniques of the ‘40s and ‘50s.
“Interchange” was sold from the collection of the late Edgar J. Kaufmann Jr., an heir to a Pittsburgh department store fortune, who bought the painting the year it was made for about $4,000, Mitchell-Inness said.
Alveryd, who buys contemporary art for a group of investors, lost the De Kooning, but he landed Johns’ “Two Flags” for $12.1 million. The oil and encaustic painting of a pair of American flags, hanging side by side, had been valued at $5 million to $7 million.
“Tomlinson Court Park (Second Version),” Frank Stella’s 1959 black painting with concentric rectangles outlined in white, brought $5.06 million from an unidentified telephone bidder, easily breaking the artist’s record of $1.32 million. The painting was sold by Los Angeles collector Robert Rowan, who bought it in 1967 and has frequently loaned it to museums for special exhibitions.
Little more than a year ago, Sotheby’s sale would have been unfathomable, but in today’s overheated contemporary art market, the Wednesday night affair seemed rather like business as usual.
Records were set--a dozen of them--for such artists as Mark Rothko ($3.63 million), Kenneth Noland ($2.04 million), Cy Twombly ($1.7 million) and Robert Motherwell ($1.1 million).
Fifty of the 74 lots offered exceeded the auction house’s most optimistic pre-sale estimates.
The $98.3-million sale total far surpassed Sotheby’s estimate of $50 million to $70 million.
Five lots failed to sell--two works by Jackson Pollock, two by Richard Diebenkorn and one by Andy Warhol--but those disappointments barely fazed the enthusiastic audience.
Routine as these semi-annual, big-ticket auctions seem to be, each has its own character. Wednesday was an unusually hot night for De Kooning, an 86-year-old artist who is said to be suffering from Alzheimer’s disease.
Five De Koonings were offered for sale, and each exceeded its high estimate. “Untitled (Woman),” a 1966 oil valued at $350,000 to $450,000, brought $935,000.
De Kooning was also the top seller in a sale at Christie’s Wednesday of contemporary art. His oil painting “Woman in Landscape No. 10” fetched $825,000, said Christie’s spokeswoman Dana Micucci. The two-day sale of art, which began Tuesday, totaled $83,014,680, double Christie’s previous high for a two-day contemporary art sale, Micucci said.
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.