Velazquez Portrait Sells for $4.7 Million at London Auction

11 December '11 by the editors | Source: www.bloomberg.com

A rediscovered painting by Velazquez sold for 3 million pounds ($4.7 million) at an auction in London today as wealthy international collectors battled for trophy Old Master paintings.

The head-and-shoulders portrait of an unknown middle-aged man had been found among a group of paintings entered for sale at the Oxford branch of Bonhams in August 2010. The well- preserved canvas was identified as a Velazquez by the Dublin- based scholar Dr. Peter Cherry and described as dating from about 1630.

It had formerly been owned by the obscure 19th-century U.K. artist Matthew Shepperson. The painting was re-offered at the company’s Bond Street headquarters with an estimate of 2 million pounds to 3 million pounds. It was bought by New York dealer Otto Naumann., who was in the room and beat a telephone bidder.

“I was amazed,” Naumann said in an interview. “I was prepared to pay double that. It was very dirty. Maybe people were worried how it would clean. It was bought for stock. I will do what dealers do, restore it and try to get more.”

Works by 17th century Spain’s greatest artist rarely appear for sale. The auction record for Velasquez is the 8.4 million pounds given for a half-length canvas of Saint Rufina at Sotheby’s (BID) in London July 2007.

Yesterday evening, Christie’s International offered a slimline selection of 36 Old Master paintings that raised 24.1 million pounds, with 72 percent of the lots successful. Five records were achieved, headed by the 6.9 million pounds given by a telephone buyer for the large figure-packed canvas, “The Battle between Carnival and Lent” by Pieter Brueghel the Younger.

The Flemish renaissance painting, based on a 1559 work by the artist’s father, had been bought by its seller for 3.3 million pounds at the same auction room in December 2006. International Bids

The successful bidder was a client represented by Cecile Bernard, head of Christie’s Paris Old Master department, underbid by a Russian-speaker on another telephone.

Buyers hailed from expanded international clientele of nine different countries, said Christie’s.

Following a presale exhibition in Hong Kong last month, an Asian commission bidder claimed four lots in the range of 100,000 pounds to 400,000 pounds. Trade bidding, unless on behalf of private collectors, was subdued.

New private buyers from emerging economies tend to start buying from auction houses rather than commercial galleries. Dealers, many of whom had a quiet Tefaf Maastricht fair in March, were priced out of the most desirable works and were unwilling to take on middle-range pictures, some of which have fallen in value. Investment Security

“Collectors want the security of really good pictures,” said the London-based dealer Jean-Luc Baroni, who paid a record 2.3 million pounds for a 17th century painting of an old man leaning on a window sill by the 17th-century Dutch artist Govaert Flinck that hadn’t been seen at auction for 150 years. “Dealers are finding it difficult. No one wants to buy the tired things.”

The most highly estimated lot at Christie’s failed to sell. Goya’s portrait of Don Juan Lopez de Robredo, the splendidly waistcoated embroiderer to King Carlos IV of Spain, had been valued at 4 million pounds to 6 million pounds.

Offered by a Spanish collector, this formal portrait of a portly middle-aged man was deemed one of the artist’s less appealing subjects and didn’t attract a bid. It last appeared at auction in 1992 when it also failed to sell.


Read entire article...


More news

British artist Damien Hirst will fill 11 Gagosian galleries worldwide with shows of his 'Spot' paintings, many for sale. But how much is too much?
11 December '11
www.latimes.com


An outstanding, unfinished Édouard Manet portrait of a woman sitting sedately on a balcony has had a temporary export bar placed on it by the government in the hope that someone will raise £28m to keep the painting in the UK.
09 December '11
www.guardian.co.uk


Participatory art, as it turns out, is not all fun and games. The New Museum, whose exhibition of the work of the Belgian-born artist Carsten Höller has been packing in crowds since it opened last month, has raised its general admission price to $16, from $12.
09 December '11
artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com


Booming art prices have produced plenty of "treasures in the attic" of late, and this week could see another when a painting first valued at 300 pounds ($470) is set to fetch up to three million after Bonhams discovered it was by Velazquez.
07 December '11
www.reuters.com


A painting attributed to one of Rembrandt's students has now been identified as one done by the master's hand. An advanced x-ray technology has revealed outlines of a self-portrait by a young Rembrandt underneath an oil painting of an old bearded man.
07 December '11
www.artfixdaily.com


Art experts have signed a petition to stop drilling into a fresco in Florence's Palazzo Vecchio which may be hiding a Leonardo Da Vinci work.
07 December '11
www.bbc.co.uk


Although Leonardo da Vinci died almost half a millennium ago, he has had a great year. The success of his show at the National Gallery in London has been sensational.
07 December '11
www.bloomberg.com


Being told that a work of art is fake alters your response to it, researchers at Oxford University have found.
07 December '11
www.telegraph.co.uk


Traders snared in a conmen's scam are pursued with demands to pay huge sums for an advertising listing.
05 December '11
www.guardian.co.uk


Art Miami, Miami’s longest running contemporary art fair and anchor fair to the City of Miami, announced at the close of the fair’s fourth day (Saturday) that collective sales exceeded the 2010 figures by more than double.
05 December '11
www.artfixdaily.com


The 3rd edition of Miami International Art Fair (MIA), one of America's most exciting mid-winter contemporary art fairs, will return January 12-16, 2012 with a dynamic ensemble of 28 international galleries representing artist from Europe, Latin America, United States and Asia.
05 December '11
www.artdaily.org


Even a show-off like me finds this new, super-rich art-buying crowd vulgar and depressingly shallow.
05 December '11
www.guardian.co.uk


Days after Manhattan’s 165-year-old Knoedler & Co. art gallery unexpectedly closed, a London hedge- fund executive sued it and its former director, Ann Freedman, accusing them of selling a forged Jackson Pollock painting.
05 December '11
www.bloomberg.com


Sotheby's London Old Master and British Paintings Evening and Day Sales on 7th and 8th December 2011 will offer a selection of important works of exceptional quality and rarity, many of which have remained in private collections for decades, including the masterpiece by Jan Steen Card Players in an Interior (est. £4.5-6 million).
05 December '11
www.artdaily.org


By the end of Art Basel Miami Beach’s VIP preview this week, art dealer Kavi Gupta sold 35 sculptures by Chicago-based artist Theaster Gates.
04 December '11
www.bloomberg.com


The Winter Antiques Show celebrates its 58th year as America's most prestigious antiques show, providing museums, collectors, dealers, design professionals and first-time buyers with opportunities to see and purchase exceptional pieces showcased by 75 exhibitors.
04 December '11
www.artfixdaily.com


This fair is one of three to be studied in a Swiss sociology project.
01 December '11
www.theartnewspaper.com


Last night, Art Miami, the city’s longest running contemporary art fair and anchor fair, hosted an unprecedented Opening Night VIP Preview, which unveiled a compelling array of works from internationally renowned modern and contemporary artists from the 20th and 21st centuries.
01 December '11
www.artfixdaily.com


Featured dealer
Follow ArtListings
Search dealers
Fill in name


New on ArtListings
Art & Antiques Fairs
Museum exhibitions
Videos
Follow ArtListings