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Auction PR Publicity Announcements News and Information

Sotheby’s Auction Picasso’s La Lecture Painting for $40.7m

Sotheby’s Impressionist & Modern Evening sale in London was led by Pablo Picasso’s iconic 1932 painting of Marie-Thérèse Walter, La Lecture, which sold to a round of applause for £25,241,250 /$40,711,612 / €29,744,296, more than double the low estimate (est. £12 – 18 million/$18.5-27.8 million). Following a heated bidding contest that lasted six minutes among at least seven bidders, both on the phone and in the saleroom, the work finally sold to an anonymous buyer bidding over the telephone. Achieving a strong total of £68,834,400 / $111,023,004 / €81,114,475, well within the pre-sale estimate of £55,630,000 – 79,250,000**, the sale was 84.5% sold by value. The average lot value for the works sold this evening was £2.15 million/ $3.5 million.

Helena Newman, Chairman, Sotheby’s Impressionist & Modern Art Europe, said: “We were thrilled with the price achieved for Picasso’s La Lecture – an exceptional work from one of the artist’s most celebrated periods. The painting attracted strong pre-sale interest from across the globe, which was manifest in the depth of bidding we saw tonight – no fewer than seven bidders drove the price to a final £25.2 million. Across the sale as a whole, buyers came from 11 countries, with bidding from Asia, Russia, the US and Europe.”

Melanie Clore, Chairman, Sotheby’s Europe, said: “We look forward to continuing the sales this week Looking Closely on Thursday night, an exceptional private collection which is already attracting interest from collectors around the world.”

Looking Closely: A Private Collection comprises 60 lots estimated to fetch in excess of £40 million. Highlights from the sale include Salvador Dalí’s masterpiece Portrait de Paul Eluard (£3.5-5 million) and Frances Bacon’s triptych of Lucien Freud (est. £7-9 million).

Picasso’s La Lecture
The sale of La Lecture brought the painting to Europe for the first time since it was painted in 1932. It is one of a series of defining works in the artist’s oeuvre in which he introduces his young lover Marie-Thérèse Walter as a recognisable figure. The couple’s relationship was kept a well-guarded secret for many years, both on account of the fact that Picasso was then still married (to Olga Khokhlova, a Russian-Ukrainian dancer he had met on tour with Diaghilev) and because of Marie-Thérèse’s age (she was just 17 at the time). Until the period in which this work was painted, Marie-Thérèse only ever appeared in Picasso’s works in code, her features often embedded in the background of his paintings. But by the end of 1931, Picasso could no longer repress the creative impulse that his lover inspired, and over Christmas and New Year 1931 and ‘32, Marie-Thérèse emerged, for the first time, in fully recognisable, languorous, form.

Other notable prices

• A further highlight of the sale was one of the most important works by Marino Marini ever to come to the market: his monumental sculpture of horse and rider L’idea del cavaliere sold for £4,185,250 / $6,750,390 / €4,931,900 (est. £3.7-4.5 million). Similarly, Henry Moore’s important large-scale Reclining Connected Forms achieved £2,057,250 / $3,318,139/ €2,424,264 (est. £1.5-2.5 million).

• Lyonel Feininger’s oil on canvas Raddampfer am Landungssteg of 1912 reali£3,177,250 / $5,124,587 / €3,744,072, more than double its high estimate (est. £1-1.2 million), selling to a buyer in the saleroom following an extended battle among five
bidders. This rare work, showing the artist’s inventiveness at the height of his involvement with the German Expressionist movement Die Brücke, had not appeared at auction since 1949.

• Claude Monet’s Argenteuil, Fin d’Après-Midi of 1872, one of the artist’s first major landscapes of his new home just outside of Paris sold for £3,401,250 /$5,485,876 /€4,008,034 (est. £3.5-4.5 million).

• A new auction record was achieved tonight for a work on paper by Surrealist artist René Magritte with the sale of Le Maître d’École for £2,505,250 / $4,040,718 / €2,952,187. This gouache on paper depicting Magritte’s iconic bowler-hatted man fetched a price over double the pre-sale estimate (est. £800,000 – 1.2 million) and double the previous record for a work on paper.

• A record price in sterling was achieved for Giorgio Morandi’s Natura Morta, which sold for £1,385,250 / $2,234,270 /€1,632,379 (est. £800,000- £1.2 million).

• Sold by lot: 76.2%

• Sold by value: 84.5%

• Of the 42 lots offered, 32 sold

• Over 93% of the sold lots tonight achieved prices at or above their estimate

• Average lot value: £2.15 million / $3.5 million

• 15 works sold for over £1 million, 28 sold for over $1 million

* Please note that Sotheby’s uses HSBC Bank Mid-Market Exchange Rate against Sterling Which for today was 1GBP = 1.61 USD

** Pre-sale estimates do not include buyer’s premium

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