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Hendrick van Steenwijk II (?Antwerp circa 1580-1648 ?Leiden), Saint Jerome in his study

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Hendrick van Steenwijk II (?Antwerp circa 1580-1648 ?Leiden), Saint Jerome in his study. Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2013

signed 'H·V· STEINWICK' (lower right, on the chest), oil on copper, 9 7/8 x 7 1/8 in. (25.1 x 18.1 cm.). Estimate $30,000 - $50,000

Provenance: Anonymous sale; Sotheby's, New York, 13 May 1994, lot 27, where acquired by the present owner. 

Literature: J. Howarth, The Steenwyck Family as Masters of Perspective, Turnhout, 2009, p. 234, no. II.D.13, p. 513 (ill.). 

Christie's. Old Master Paintings Part II. 31 January 2013. New York, Rockefeller Plaza.


Jan van Huysum (Amsterdam 1682-1749), A still life with flowers and fruits with a bird's nest and eggs

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Jan van Huysum (Amsterdam 1682-1749), A still life with flowers and fruits with a bird's nest and eggs. Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2013

signed 'Jan van Huysum fecit' (lower right); oil on canvas; 35 1/8 x 28¼ in. (89.2 x 71.7 cm.). Estimate $150,000 - $250,000

Provenance: Captain W. A. Hankey; sale, Galerie Sedelmeyer, Paris, 25 May 1907, lot 85 (2900 francs).
with Rafael Fine Arts, New York, where acquired by the present owner.

Literature: C. Hofstede de Groot, A Catalogue Raisonné, ..., London, 1928, X, p. 377, no. 197.
M.H. Grant, Jan van Huysum: 1682-1749, including a Catalogue Raisonné of the Artist's Fruit & Flower Paintings, Leigh-on-Sea, 1954, p. 28, no. 157.
S. Segal, M. Ellens and J. Dik, The Temptations of Flora: Jan van Huysum, 1682-1749, exhibition catalogue, Waanders, 2007, p. 56, fig. 5.9 (as formerly Altman collection, New York).

Exhibited: London, Royal Academy, Exhibition of Works by The Old Masters and by Deceased Masters of the British School, Winter, 1885, no. 138 (lent by Captain W. A. Hankey).

Christie's. Old Master Paintings Part II. 31 January 2013. New York, Rockefeller Plaza.

Jan van Os (Middelharnis 1744-1808 The Hague), Still life of flowers and fruit

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Jan van Os (Middelharnis 1744-1808 The Hague), Still life of flowers and fruit. Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2013

signed 'J Van Os fecit' (lower center) oil on panel 31 x 23 in. (78.7 x 58.4 cm.). Estimate $70,000 - $100,000

Provenance: Sir Reginald Proctor-Beauchamp, Langley Park, Norwich, by 1878.
with Agnew's, London, where acquired by a private collector, circa 1958; Sotheby's, New York, 27 May 1994, lot 131.
Acquired after the sale by the present owner.

Literature: A. Graves, A Century of Loan Exhibitions 1813-1912, London, 1913, IV, p. 1549.
'Round the Galleries', Connoisseur, October 1968, p. 162.
S. Pavière, Floral Art, Leigh-on-Sea, 1965, pl. 23.
P. Mitchell, Jan van Os 1744-1808, Leigh-on-Sea, 1968, p. 17, no. 2, pl. 2.

Exhibited: London, Royal Academy of Art, Old Masters and deceased masters of the British School, 1878, no. 159.

Christie's. Old Master Paintings Part II. 31 January 2013. New York, Rockefeller Plaza.

Antique chinese helmet, Zhou Dynasty, 1027-770 BC.

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Antique chinese helmet, Zhou Dynasty, 1027-770 BC. Private collection

Earrings with Cabochons and Pendants, Rome, 6th century A.D.

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Earrings with Cabochons and Pendants, Rome, 6th century A.D.

Plat à barbe. Chine. Epoque Kangxi (1662-1722)

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Plat à barbe. Chine. Epoque Kangxi (1662-1722). Photo Pierre Bergé& associés

en porcelaine décorée en bleu sous couverte, rouge de fer et émail or dit «Imari» d'un vase fleuri au centre, le bord à réserves de maisons (fêlure). D_27 cm. Estimation : 300 - 500 €

Pierre Bergé& associés. Mercredi 13 février à 14h00. Paris - Drouot Richelieu - salle 4. EMail : contact@pba-auctions.com - Tél. : Paris +33 (0)1 49 49 90 00 - Bruxelles + 32 (0)2 504 80 30

Plat à barbe. Chine. Epoque Kangxi (1662-1722).

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Plat à barbe. Chine. Epoque Kangxi (1662-1722). Photo Pierre Bergé& associés

en porcelaine décorée en bleu sous couverte, rouge de fer et émail or dit «Imari» d'un vase fleuri au centre, le bord à réserves de maisons (fêlure). D_29 cm. Estimation300 - 500 €

Pierre Bergé& associés. Mercredi 13 février à 14h00. Paris - Drouot Richelieu - salle 4. EMail : contact@pba-auctions.com - Tél. : Paris +33 (0)1 49 49 90 00 - Bruxelles + 32 (0)2 504 80 30

Plat. Chine. Epoque Kangxi (1662 - 1722).

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Plat. Chine. Epoque Kangxi (1662 - 1722). Photo Pierre Bergé& associés

en porcelaine décorée en bleu sous couverte, rouge de fer et émaux or dit «Imari» au centre d'un pot fleuri, les bords à décor de grenades et feuillage. D_35 cm. Estimation : 200 - 300 €

Pierre Bergé& associés. Mercredi 13 février à 14h00. Paris - Drouot Richelieu - salle 4. EMail : contact@pba-auctions.com - Tél. : Paris +33 (0)1 49 49 90 00 - Bruxelles + 32 (0)2 504 80 30


Deux assiettes. Chine, époque Kangxi (1662-1722) et Japon XVIIIe siècle.

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Deux assiettes. Chine, époque Kangxi (1662-1722) et Japon, XVIIIe siècle. Photo Pierre Bergé& associés

en porcelaine décorée en bleu sous couverte, rouge de fer et émail or dit «Imari» de jardinières fleuries. D_21,5 et 25,5 cm. Estimation : 200 - 300 €

Pierre Bergé& associés. Mercredi 13 février à 14h00. Paris - Drouot Richelieu - salle 4. EMail : contact@pba-auctions.com - Tél. : Paris +33 (0)1 49 49 90 00 - Bruxelles + 32 (0)2 504 80 30

Chocolatière. Chine. Epoque Kangxi (1662 - 1722).

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Chocolatière. Chine. Epoque Kangxi (1662 - 1722). Photo Pierre Bergé& associés

en porcelaine décorée en bleu sous couverte et rouge de fer dit «Imari»à décor de fleurs et insectes (manque le couvercle). Estimation : 150 - 200 €

Pierre Bergé& associés. Mercredi 13 février à 14h00. Paris - Drouot Richelieu - salle 4. EMail : contact@pba-auctions.com - Tél. : Paris +33 (0)1 49 49 90 00 - Bruxelles + 32 (0)2 504 80 30

Grand plat. Chine. Epoque Kangxi (1662 - 1722)

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Grand plat. Chine. Epoque Kangxi (1662 - 1722). Photo Pierre Bergé& associés

en porcelaine décorée en bleu sous couverte, rouge de fer et émaux verts et or de lotus et pivoines au centre parmi leur feuillage, l'aile décorée de lotus et chrysanthèmes dans leur feuillage (restaurations). D_47 cm. Estimation :  300 - 400 €

Pierre Bergé& associés. Mercredi 13 février à 14h00. Paris - Drouot Richelieu - salle 4. EMail : contact@pba-auctions.com - Tél. : Paris +33 (0)1 49 49 90 00 - Bruxelles + 32 (0)2 504 80 30

Marc Quinn "The Archaeology of the Baroque", 2012

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Marc Quinn "The Archaeology of the Baroque", 2012 - Painted bronze.

Marc Quinn, "The Evolution of Desire", 2009

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Marc Quinn, "The Evolution of Desire", 2009. Bronze, 500 kg

Marc Quinn, “The Archaeology of Desire”, 2008

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Marc Quinn, “The Archaeology of Desire”, 2008. Patinated bronze, (232 x 295 x 100 cm) 91 5/16 x 116 1/8 x 39 3/8 inches

Marc Quinn, The Origin of the World (Cassis madagascariensis) Indian Ocean, 310

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 Marc Quinn, The Origin of the World (Cassis madagascariensis) Indian Ocean, 310, 2012. Bronze.


Yves Klein (1928-1962) , IKB 217

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Yves Klein (1928-1962) , IKB 217.  Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2013

stamped with the artist's monogram (on the reverse), dry pigment and synthetic resin on gauze laid down on panel, 30¾ x 22in. (78 x 56cm.). Executed circa 1960-1962. Estimate £800,000 - £1,200,000

Provenance: Galleria Apollinaire, Milan.
Gallery Yves Arman, New York.
Marie-Christophe de Menil, New York.
Private Collection, Stockholm.
Kukje Gallery, Seoul.
Acquired from the above by the present owner in 2006.

Exhibited: New York, Salander O'Reilly Gallery, Barnard Collects, The Educated Eye, 1989, no. 20 (illustrated in colour, unpaged).
Luxembourg, Musée national d'histoire et d'art, L'École de Paris? 1945-1964, 1998- 1999, p. 254 (illustrated in colour, p. 255).

Notes: This work is recorded in the archive under no. IKB217 and will be included in the forthcoming catalogue raisonné.

'I seek to put the spectator in front of the fact that colour is an individual, a character, a personality. I solicit a receptivity from the observer placed before my works. This permits him to consider everything that effectively surrounds the monochrome painting. Thus he can impregnate himself with colour and colour impregnates itself in him. Thus, perhaps, can he enter into the world of colour' (Y. Klein, quoted in S. Stich, Yves Klein, exh. cat., Hayward Gallery, London, 1994, p. 66). 

Yves Klein's monochromes form the cornerstones of the artist's entire artistic output. The first and purest expressions of Klein's concept of what he called a 'zone of immateriality' - a mystic void that he believed existed beyond the confines of conventional notions of time and space - the IKB monochromes were so central to Klein's art that the artist came to personally identify the entire purpose of his life and being with them. Klein often referred to himself as 'Yves le Monochrome' and spoke of his art being 'the Monochrome Adventure'. The mysterious, textural expanse of pure radiating colour provides a highly physical manifestation of the inherent dialogue that Klein hoped to induce between the sensibility of the viewer and the vast monochromatic expanse of intense, but immaterial colour emanating from the surface of the work. 

IKB 217 is a monochrome of classic dimensions and scale formerly belonging to Marie-Christophe de Menil, the daughter of the great collectors John and Dominique Menil, the founders of the Menil Foundation in Houston, Texas and among the first great patrons of Klein's art in America. In the years following Klein's premature death in 1962, the Menils acquired several of Klein's greatest works and, as Klein's wife Rotraut has recorded, were, together with the scholar Thomas McEvilley, responsible for both enabling and organizing the first great retrospective of Klein's art ever to be held in America, in Houston in 1982. It was this exhibition, which subsequently travelled to the MoCA in Chicago, the Guggenheim Museum in New York and the Centre Pompidou in Paris that was largely responsible for establishing Klein's International reputation as one of the leading artistic pioneers of the Post-War era. IKB 217 was also previously owned by the Galleria Apollinaire in Milan - the gallery where Klein had first launched his concept of the monochrome in 1957. Measuring 78 x 56cm, IKB 217 is of exactly the same dimensions as the very first group of blue monochromes - all identical in size but priced differently by Klein to emphasize their conceptual status - that Klein had exhibited at the Galleria Apollinaire in 1957. At this exhibition, entitled Monochrome Proposition, Blue Period, the eleven almost identical blue monochrome panels of 78 x 56 cm had been exhibited together as if each was a mysterious devotional object, mounted on a sequence of metal pole brackets that extending away from the wall. 

These icon-like works, which were to have a profound and influential impact on artists such as Lucio Fontana (who bought one work from the show) and Piero Manzoni, marked both the genesis and the agenda of all of Klein's later work. Because of their conceptual significance and centrality within his oeuvre as a whole, Klein would continue to make these singular monolithic statements of pure, immaterial colour at various later stages throughout his career. It was the monochromes, Klein believed, that more than any other of his works, best awoke in man the kind of sixth sense-like awareness of the fundamental reality and presence of the immaterial dimension in life, which he sought to invoke in his audience. 

Through the immateriality of colour in such a pure, concentrated radiant and monochrome form, Klein's aim was to instill the viewers of his monochromes with a profound understanding of similar immaterial presence and reality of 'the Void' that he believed underpins the visible material world of phenomenal reality - our day-to-day world of objects and things. For Klein this realm of the 'immaterial' not only lay outside of man's conventional wisdom but was also to be the arena of his future. Believing the third millennium that we now live in would mark the beginning of a new spiritual age in which the artist as creator would develop a pure freedom within which to interact with this spiritual dimension, Klein sought, through his own creative gestures, to develop man's awareness not only to 'the Void' but also to his own enormous creative potential within that realm. 

Having settled on pure colour as the immaterial medium through which he hoped to 'impregnate' the viewer with this sense of the mystic, Klein selected blue amongst all the colours to be the material vehicle through which to express the immaterial void. Blue was an inevitable choice given that Klein had grown up on the Mediterranean coast in Nice. Of all the colours, Klein considered blue to be the least material and the most infused with a sense of the infinite, being the colour of the sky and of the sea. 

In the application of blue however, Klein wanted to avoid there being any visible sense of surface to his works. They should have no edge and should reveal no brushstrokes, for his monochromes were not to be conceived of as paintings nor as windows but as materializations of 'the Void'. Klein solved these problems by hanging his paintings a few inches away from the wall, softening their edges and corners and by using pigment instead of paint. Pure pigment had an ethereal quality that fitted Klein's purpose perfectly. It was ethereal and seemed like materialized colour when applied to a surface, leaving no visible trace of the manner its application. It also preserved the intensity and radiance of its colour - something that Klein had found was often lost when pigment was mixed with most binding agents.

In order to further stimulate the viewer's sensibility Klein sought a particularly pure tone of blue, one that would radiate with an intensity appropriate for the mystic energy it contained. After much experiment he devised the purest and most intense ultramarine hue he could and had the new colour officially patented in his name. This blue was called 'International Klein Blue' and because they were essentially physical manifestations of this colour it is was by this name that he entitled all his monochrome paintings.
 

Christie's. Post-War and Contemporary Art (Evening Auction) 13 February 2013 London, King Street.

Alberto Burri (1915-1995), Cretto

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Alberto Burri (1915-1995), CrettoPhoto Christie's Image Ltd 2013

signed twice and dedicated 'BURRI in occasione di un anniversario significativo con stima e simpatia a Fiorella ed Emilio. Alberto Burri Roma 31-3-1978' (on the reverse); acrovinyl on cellotex; 27 7/8 x 39 3/8in. (70.5 x 100cm.). Executed in 1975. Estimate £400,000 - £600,000

Provenance: Private Collection, Rome (acquired directly from the artist in 1978).
Acquired from the above by the present owner in the early 1980s.

Notes: This work is registered in the Fondazione Palazzo Albizzini, Città di Castello, under number 7555.

'The painting leads you, it is true, but at the same time it is always you who leads it. Because the painting counts when it is finished and only then. And it doesn't lead you there at all, it is you who arrives there to say it's finished. Allow yourself to be led, by all means, but it is always you who decides when it is finished' (A. Burri, quoted in G. Serafini, Burri, The Measure and the Phenomenon, Milan 1999, p. 225).

'My painting is an irreducible presence which refuses to be converted into any other form of expression' (A. Burri, quoted in G. Serafini, Burri: The Measure and the Phenomenon, Milan 1999, p. 114).

Alberto Burri's Cretto paintings are among the artist's most important and best-loved works. Comprising solely of a monochrome surface of thickly encrusted paint that has been encouraged to crack and breakup into an assisted natural pattern, they are, like most of Burri's works, seemingly authorless and self-defining entities that elegantly articulate their own inherent material nature as a pictorial surface. As such, these fascinating and often surprisingly beautiful works are also startling graphic portraits of the unpredictable forces of nature operating within the logic and the structure of 'painting'. It is in this respect that they represent in many ways the culmination of Burri's life-long working aesthetic.

With its myriad of naturally occurring cracks appearing to magically swell into a large mosaic-like unity at the centre of the canvas, Bianco Cretto is a stunningly resolved work from this important series that Burri made in 1975. Burri had first employed cracked Cretto-like surfaces in works as early as 1951, but it was not until the late '60s and early 1970s that, as this work shows, he was able to develop a technique whereby the nature, degree and resultant form of the paint's cracking was brought largely under his control and the Cretti as a coherent and independent series of works in Burri's impressive were born. The first of Burri's Cretti were made in 1969 and the vast majority of these works date from the early to mid-1970s although Burri would continue to make some works in this way for many years afterwards.

Executed at the height of Burri's preoccupation with this series of works, Bianco Cretto of 1975 is one of the most accomplished and coherent landscape-like images of the entire series. The all-important material energy of the surface of the Cretti has in this work been centralized by its establishing of the largest forms and the deepest cracks in the middle of the canvas. These then appear to radiate and dissipate into smaller and less individual forms as they extend towards the borders of the canvas. The monochrome, abstract landscape of natural energy lines and matter that Burri so establishes in this work is, in this way, expressive not only of a bubbling, volcanically eruptive type of force seemingly lying innate within the picture surface, but also of the creative potential that, this work suggests, lies innate within even such a familiar and conventional material as acrylic paint.

The original inspiration behind the Cretti began in 1958 when, on one of his many visits to California to see his friend Afro, Burri was entranced by the naturally occurring patterns on the cracked desert floor of Death Valley. 'When I was in California, I often went to visit Death Valley' Burri later remembered regarding the Cretti. 'The idea came from there, but then in the painting it became something else. I only wanted to demonstrate the energy of a surface' (A. Burri, quoted in G. Serafini, Burri: The Measure and the Phenomenon, Milan 1999, p. 209).

As in all of Burri's works, the 'energy of the surface' in these works was established thorough a creative partnership between the artist and his material. In the same way as in all his earlier works, the Cretti only appear to be autonomous, self-defining works of art. This unique quality, was in fact the product of careful manipulation by Burri. Burri had often explored the use of crackled paint in his work ever since the 1940s, but it was only in the Cretti that the surface cracking became, seemingly, the sole creative force at work within the painting. The degree of disruption, destruction, alteration and/or change, was in fact always measured and controlled closely by Burri himself in every work. The size of each Cretto for example is affected by the dilution of the acrylic paint mixture that Burri formed and by the thickness of its application and also by the experience of the artist's touch. The vehicle that drives the formation of the work is the medium itself which, on drying, makes the impasto crack. The actual cracking pattern depends therefore on both chance and nature, the artist's sensibility while making the application and on his decision about when to complete this independent process of change. When the cracking process develops the appearance that Burri was happy with and wanted to keep, it would be suspended and sealed by the subsequent application of a vinavil glue. The resultant Cretto is therefore a partnership between the artist and the inherently different and changing nature of his material, the result of an exchange between the artist and life.

Because they are comprised solely of the conventional artistic medium of paint, Burri's Cretti are works that have often been seen as marking the artist's 'return to painting' after many pioneering years spent experimenting with a variety of other media. Such media famously included, sackcloth, plastic, iron, paper and wood - all supposedly 'poor materials' that Burri crafted into their resultant pictorial, or 'painterly' form by manipulating their inherent material properties. Burri's sacks were torn, painted over and stitched together, his plastic melted, stretched and punctured. The wood and the paper was burnt, splintered and fractured and the iron was cut, bent and welded into a series of self-expressive surfaces. Burri's Cretti represent the artist travelling full circle in such material experimentation and the bringing to bear of such experiences on the conventional medium of picture-making: paint.

Christie's. Post-War and Contemporary Art (Evening Auction) 13 February 2013 London, King Street.

Lalique horn and diamond diadem

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Lalique horn and diamond diadem. (Christie's Images)

Lilacs brooch by René Lalique

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Lilacs brooch by René Lalique (Christie's Images).

Belle Epoque Platinum, Gold, Pinkish Orange Tourmaline, Diamond and Pearl Pendant with Chain. 1905

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Belle Epoque Platinum, Gold, Pinkish Orange Tourmaline, Diamond and Pearl Pendant with Chain. 1905

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