Painting by Pollock Brings Record Price
NEW YORK — A three-part auction of contemporary art Monday night rang up $27.9 million in sales and set a spate of records on the eve of the conclusion of a 10-day sale of Andy Warhol’s collection.
Jackson Pollock’s 1955 painting, “Search,†said to be the Abstract Expressionist’s last canvas, was sold to a Japanese dealer for $4.8 million, a record for contemporary art sold at auction. The previous record was $3.6 million for a Jasper Johns painting called “Out the Window.â€
Pollock’s 5-by-7 1/2-foot abstraction, executed in the artist’s celebrated “drip†style, was part of the estate of Belle Linsky, a patron of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
The Pollock was offered in a $20.8-million sale by Sotheby’s that also set records for Franz Kline, Warhol and Los Angeles artist Richard Diebenkorn. An unidentified American dealer paid $1.9 million for Kline’s 1951 black-and-white abstraction, “Ninth Street.†Warhol’s classic Pop painting, “Coca Cola Bottles,†brought $1.4 million from an anonymous bidder. Diebenkorn’s 1957 figurative oil, “July,†commanded $1.2 million from an unidentified buyer.
Rang Up $5.2 Million
The Warhol sale rang up $5.2 million and brought the nine-day total from the artist’s estate to $22.3 million. The final session this morning is expected to push that figure to at least $23 million.
Sotheby’s had expected the entire 10-day auction of 10,000 items in Warhol’s collection to gross no more than $15 million, but the sale soared past that estimate last Saturday.
Unlike last week’s sales, which offered the public an eclectic array of Warhol’s jewelry, furniture, bric-a-brac and memorabilia, the Monday evening event, open only to ticket holders, was strictly devoted to fine art. Works by the Pop artist’s well-known colleagues, estimated to sell for up to $450,000, were the most expensive items in the Warhol auction.
A 1967 untitled oil and crayon work by Cy Twombly became the surprising star of the Warhol sale when Karsten Greve, a dealer from Cologne, W. Germany, bought it for $990,000. Sotheby’s had predicted that it would sell for $300,000 to $400,000.
“Screen Piece,†a gray abstraction by Jasper Johns, estimated at $350,000 to $450,000 fetched $660,000. Two of Roy Lichtenstein’s early Pop canvases stayed somewhat closer to their estimates. “Sailboats,†expected to bring $350,000 to $450,000, brought down the gavel at $605,000, while “Laughing Cat,†estimated at $200,000 to $300,000 commanded a price of $319,000.
Prices Not Reached
All 22 lots in the Warhol sale found buyers, but nine of the 52 lots in a sale of works consigned by various owners failed to reach their reserve prices and were bought in by the auction house.
Part of the Monday night sale was a benefit that raised $1.9 million for an AIDS care program at St. Vincent’s Hospital. Of the 15 works donated by artists, a recent untitled watercolor by Jasper Johns brought the top price of $350,000.
Johns will be in the spotlight again tonight, when Christie’s puts “Diver,†a huge, five-panel painting, on the block in another contemporary art sale. Advertised as “the most important painting by a living artist ever to be auctioned,†Johns’ encyclopedic abstraction is estimated to bring between $3.5 million and $4.5 million. But it will have to do a bit better than that to surpass Pollock’s newly established record of $4.8 million.
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.