Money Week

The priciest artworks of 2021

The temperatur­e in the art market keeps soaring. Chris Carter reports

-

1. $103.4m – Femme Assise près d’une Fenêtre (MarieThérè­se) (1932). Pablo Picasso’s portrait (pictured) of his muse “as a winged goddess, a modern-day Nike”, was the only artwork to sell for nine figures in dollar terms last year, according to Christie’s in New York. That was an improvemen­t on 2020, when none breached the $100m mark.

2. $93.1m – In This Case (1983). Jean-Michel Basquiat underscore­d his status as the artist of the moment with the sale of this, the last of his three iconic Skull paintings with Christie’s. It was only the second of the three to come to auction, but it didn’t quite reach the $110.5m that Japanese billionair­e Yusaku Maezawa paid for Untitled (1982) in 2017.

3. $92.2m – Portrait of a

Young Man Holding a Roundel (c.1480). Sandro Botticelli’s painting caused a stir at the start of the year when it was auctioned by Sotheby’s. The price was nine times higher than the previous record for a Botticelli of $10.4m, set in 2013, and the second-highest for an Old Master after Leonardo da Vinci’s Salvator Mundi, which sold for $450m in 2017.

4. $82.5m – No.7 (1951). Mark Rothko’s vibrant painting of three luminous and distinct bands of pink, yellow and orange dates from the moment

Rothko developed his signature style of abstractio­n.

It was the highest-selling lot from the Macklowe Collection at Sotheby’s $676m sale, which produced four of the top ten highest auction prices, including…

5. $78.4m – Le Nez (1947). Swiss artist Alberto Giacometti was one of the most important sculptors of the 20th century, and his “craggy, emaciated figures… have come to symbolise the human condition in the wake of World War II”, notes Sotheby’s in its catalogue. Le Nez was the only sculpture to make the top-ten list, bought by crypto entreprene­ur Justin Sun.

6. $71.4m – Cabanes de Bois Parmi les Oliviers et Cyprès (1889). This Provençal scene of a wooden cabin amid olive trees and cypresses in southern France by Vincent van Gogh was the highlight of Christie’s The Cox Collection: The

Story of Impression­ism sale in November, which also featured works by Claude Monet, Paul Cézanne and Edgar Degas.

7. $70.4m – Le Bassin aux Nymphéas (1917-1919). Claude Monet’s impression­ist work of his iconic water lilies was painted towards the end of his career. It was easily the highest-selling artwork from the Sotheby’s evening sale in May, even if it didn’t reach the $110.7m that Monet’s Meules (1890) fetched in 2019, also with Sotheby’s. But it was higher than…

8. $69.3m – Everydays: The First 5000 Days (2021). While the price for a newly “minted” digital artwork (NFT – nonfungibl­e token) still has some way to go before topping Monet’s century-old paintings, or indeed Botticelli’s 500-plusyear-old work, the astonishin­g sum achieved for the work by Beeple (Mike Winkelmann) at Christie’s set off the yeardefini­ng NFT craze.

9. $61.2m – Number 17 (1951). The final two in the list also came from the Macklowe Collection. Sotheby’s achieved a new high auction price for the artist, American painter Jackson Pollock, when it sold the abstract expression­ist work for around twice its pre-sale estimate. Then again, Pollock’s drip paintings only occasional­ly come up for auction.

10. $58.9m – Untitled (2007). Cy Twombly’s 18-foot-wide artwork was the second from this century to make the list, but comes from towards the end of the artist’s long career. Twombly is considered a giant of the 20th century. This work, one of a group of six paintings known as A Scattering of Blossoms, achieved the third-highest price for the artist.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom