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Octagonal mirror with animals, flowerets, and floral scrolls, early or mid-Tang dynasty, late 7th–first half of 8th century

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Octagonal mirror with animals, flowerets, and floral scrolls, China, early or mid-Tang dynasty, late 7th–first half of 8th century

Octagonal mirror with animals, flowerets, and floral scrolls, China, early or mid-Tang dynasty, late 7th–first half of 8th century. Cast bronze and applied gold plaque with repoussé, chased, and ring-punched decoration. Purchase, Freer Gallery of Art, F1935.6a-b © 2017 Smithsonian Institution

The mirror’s diminutive size (slightly more than two inches in diameter) and finely worked gold back suggest its preciousness. Carried in a wide sleeve of a garment or in a silk pouch, mirrors such as this were probably owned by members of the Tang elite. The technique of using a silver or gold plaque to decorate the reverse of a bronze mirror first appeared during the Tang dynasty, and it was rarely found in later periods. Here, the craftsman first shaped a thin sheet of gold into raised designs of animals and flowers, and then he used extremely fine tools to define the details of the animals’ fur. Last, the gold plaque was attached to the bronze body with a filling material between them. It remains a mystery, however, as to how the craftsman made the tiny front and back legs of each animal completely raised above the ground, giving a sense of three-dimensionality to the animals in relief.


Square mirror with floral medallion, plant sprays, birds, and insects China, mid-Tang dynasty, 8th century

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Square mirror with floral medallion, plant sprays, birds, and insects, China, mid-Tang dynasty, 8th century

Square mirror with floral medallion, plant sprays, birds, and insects, China, mid-Tang dynasty, 8th century. Cast bronze, gold and silver sheets with chased decoration, and lacquer. Purchase, Freer Gallery of Art F1944.8 © 2017 Smithsonian Institution

The decoration on the back of this mirror was done in pingtuo, one of the most sumptuous decorative techniques developed during the Tang dynasty. To produce this design of four mythical birds surrounded by butterflies amid vegetal scrolls and sprays, craftsmen cut thin sheets of precious metals into delicate patterns and added minute details to the plumage of birds and other areas, possibly with a small chisel. Then they set these delicate cut-outs in the wet ground of a lacquer-based mixture (derived from the sap of the lacquer tree) that served as an adhesive. When dry, the surface was polished. The dark, matte lacquer ground enhances the shiny, luxurious quality of the decoration. The Tang elite indulged in acquiring luxuries decorated with the pingtuo technique to such an overwhelming extent that in 772 the emperor Daizong (reigned 762–779) had to issue a sumptuary law to ban its application—but it met with little success. 

Lobed mirror with birds, animals, and floral scrolls, China, early or mid-Tang dynasty, late 7th–first half of 8th century

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Lobed mirror with birds, animals, and floral scrolls, China, early or mid-Tang dynasty, late 7th–first half of 8th century

Lobed mirror with birds, animals, and floral scrolls, China, early or mid-Tang dynasty, late 7th–first half of 8th century. Cast bronze and applied silver plaque with repoussé, chased, and ring-punched decoration and mercury gilding. Purchase, Freer Gallery of Art, F1954.22 © 2017 Smithsonian Institution

Mirrors were durable treasures. When not in use, mirrors such as this, backed with an elaborately decorated silver plaque, may have been protected in silk wrappers. Traces of fabric impressions are still visible on the raised bronze rim of the mirror.

Rembrandt van Rijn, "the Braunschweig terrier", around 1637

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Rembrandt van Rijn, "the Braunschweig terrier", around 1637, Herzog Anton Ulrich Museum in Braunschweig. 

The Herzog Anton Ulrich Museum in Braunschweig discovered a chalk drawing of a dog has been identified as a work by Dutch master Rembrandt van Rijn. Known as "the Braunschweig terrier," the image is believed to date from around 1637; it has been in the museum's collection since 1770.

Exhibition brings to light one of the founding myths of ancient Egypt: The Mysteries of Osiris

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Colossal statue of the god Hapi, Thonis-Heraklion, Bay of Abukir, Egypt (SCA 281). Photo: Christoph Gerigk © Franck Goddio, Hilti Foundation.

ZURICH.- After Paris and London for the first time in a German-speaking country: A fascinating exhibition at Museum Rietberg in Zurich shows the latest underwater archaeological finds. 

On 10 February 2017, the exhibition Osiris – Egypt’s Sunken Mysteries opened at Museum Rietberg in Zurich. The exhibition brings to light one of the founding myths of ancient Egypt: the Mysteries of Osiris. 

Osiris – Egypt’s Sunken Mysteries presents highlights of the excavations directed by Franck Goddio and his team from the European Institute for Underwater Archaeology (IEASM) in collaboration with the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities in the western part of the Nile Delta. Some 300 artefacts are presented in a 1300 m2 display space. Most were discovered in the recent underwater excavations and are augmented by some forty splendid exhibits on loan from the museums of Cairo and Alexandria — rare objects which have never before been seen in a German-speaking country, and even some that have never been seen outside Egypt. 

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Statue of the wrapped, on The abdomen of Osiris, Egyptian Museum, Cairo  (CGC 38424). Photo: Christoph Gerigk © Franck 

The exhibition consists of three sections. The first presents the myth of Osiris and its protagonists. The second, most important section is devoted to the archaeological sites and the evidence for the ritual celebration of the Mysteries of Osiris. In the third and last section, visitors will discover how the ancient myth evolved and how the representation of the gods changed over time. 

The objects discovered by the archaeological divers at the bottom of the sea are set against a spectacular backdrop of changing mood, colours and lighting, featuring underwater photographs and videos. 

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Oil lamp, Thonis-Heraklion, Bay of Abukir, Egypt (SCA 1568). Photo: Christoph Gerigk © Franck Goddio, Hilti Foundation.

The Legend of Osiris 
Osiris, the son of the Earth and the Sky was killed by his brother Seth, who cut his body into 14 pieces and threw them into the Nile. Isis, sister and wife of Osiris, put the body of the god back together again using her magical powers, and conceived their son, Horus. Osiris then became the Lord of the Afterlife, and Horus, victorious against Seth, received Egypt as his heritage. 

We know from the so called “Decree of Canopus” (238 BC), one copy of which was discovered in 1881 at Kom el-Hisn, that in a town called Heracleion, as in most other towns of Egypt, the Mysteries of Osiris were celebrated in the great temple of AmunGereb. According to the text on the stela, in the delta the ritual culminated in a long nautical procession along the canals, which took Osiris from the temple of Amun-Gereb to his sanctuary in the town of Canopus.

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Osiris statuette of bronze and votive boat of lead at the sea bottom in Thonis-Heraklion, bay of Abukir, Egypt (SCA 1081, 1039). Photo: Christoph Gerigk © Franck Goddio, Hilti Foundation.

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Stele of Thonis-Heraklion, Bay of Abukir, Egypt (SCA 277). Photo: Christoph Gerigk © Franck Goddio, Hilti Foundation. 

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"Osiris, Egypt’s Sunken Mysteries” at the Rietberg Museum Zurich, from February 10 2017: Installation of the colossal statues in the forecourt of the museum. ©PPR/Manuel Lopez.

Frances Lehman Loeb Center acquires rare medieval Limoges Eucharistic Dove

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Eucharistic Dove, 1215-1235. Champlevé enamel, parcel gilt and engraved copper, circular base and hinged lid later. Photo: Courtesy of Sotheby’s.

POUGHKEEPSIE, NY.- The Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center at Vassar College announces its acquisition of a 13th century Limoges Eucharistic Dove. 

The piece is exquisite, featuring Champlevé enamel, parcel gilt and engraved copper on a circular base. The purpose of a Eucharistic Dove was to hang above the altar both suggesting the dove of the Holy Spirit and, in fact, housing the consecrated wafer symbolic of the body of Christ in the Catholic Mass in a small compartment. 

This beautiful object is a perfect marriage of medieval form and function, the dove both embodying the symbolic earthly form of the Holy Spirit and the symbolic body of Christ at the same time,” says James Mundy, the Anne Hendricks Bass Director of the Art Center. “The dove will be of considerable use in the teaching of the history of art, medieval history and the history of religion.” 

The dove is also an important addition to the Art Center’s collection. “This work provides us with a fine piece of medieval enamel,” says Mundy. “It’s also a rare object,” he says, noting that such pieces are rarely on the auction market. The Art Center acquired the dove from Sotheby’s earlier this year. 

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Eucharistic Dove, 1215-1235. Champlevé enamel, parcel gilt and engraved copper, circular base and hinged lid later. Photo: Courtesy of Sotheby’s.

Almost all of the Limoges enamel Eucharistic doves were produced between 1215 and 1235 in France. This dove can be traced back to the Frédéric Spitzer Collection in Paris in the late nineteenth century. It was illustrated in the three-volume auction sale catalogue of his collection in 1893. These doves are extremely rare; only five other public collections in the United States have any: the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Boston Museum of Fine Art, National Gallery, Walters Art Museum, and Denver Art Museum. Worldwide, there are only about forty surviving examples. 

As medieval sacred objects go, it would be difficult to think of one more important than this,” enthuses Andrew Tallon, Associate Professor of Art. “Such objects are extremely rare, found only in the collections of the greatest museums—such as the Met, Louvre or the Musée de Cluny. Having this Eucharistic Dove in the collection of the Art Center anchors the medieval and Renaissance gallery, already augmented by the presence of works on loan from the Met and the Cloisters, as a mandatory stop on the world map of medieval collections for connoisseur and amateur alike.” 

The dove will be on view beginning in March.

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Eucharistic Dove, 1215-1235. Champlevé enamel, parcel gilt and engraved copper, circular base and hinged lid later. Photo: Courtesy of Sotheby’s.

Exhibition of works by Claude & François-Xavier Lalanne opens at Robilant+Voena

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Claude Lalanne, Choupatte, 2014. Bronze with green patina, 55 x 66 cm.

ST. MORITZ.- Robilant+Voena present Claude & François-Xavier Lalanne, an exhibition of works by the French artist duo on view at their St Moritz gallery from 17 February to 27 March 2017. 

François-Xavier (1927 - 2008) is renowned for his large-scale sculpture animals that often contain secret compartments or double as functional furniture, such as his 1964 Rhinocrataire – a life-size rhino with a desk concealed in its stomach. Claude (b1924) has been recognised for her flora-inspired jewelry and sculptures that are made by employing contemporary electro-plating techniques. 

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Claude Lalanne, Pomme d'Hiver, 2015. Bronze, 216 x 188 x 188 cm, 85 1/8 x 74 1/8 x 74 1/8 in. Edition of 8 + 4 AP (#8/8).

The exhibition Domesticated Beasts & Other Creatures, held at the Whitechapel Gallery in 1976 launched their career, and gradually, as the couple were acknowledged in retrospectives and commissions in France, their pieces entered important international collections through the championing of their work by interior designers and tastemakers. In particular, François-Xavier’s realistic bronze cast sheep, alongside lily vanes casts by Claude, were displayed in the library of Yves Saint Laurent and Pierre Bergé. Furthermore, their work became part of the eclectic collection of Gunther Sachs, displayed in his penthouse at the Palace Hotel at St Moritz. The English artist Allan Jones once recalled staying in Sachs' St Moritz penthouse, stating: "It was the most ritzy place I had ever been in. One wall of the apartment seemed to be entirely glass, with a breath-taking view of the Alps. There were Lichtenstein panels around the bathroom, a flock of Lalanne sheep on the carpet and the set of my sculptures." 

The Lalannes’ work has been growing in popularity and in recent years achieved iconic status, propelled by the 2009 Christie’s Paris sale of Yves Saint Laurent’s collection and enhanced by a major retrospective at Musée des Arts Decoratifs in Paris in 2010, curated by one of their most ardent fans, the architect Peter Marino, who owns around 40 works by the artists. Their cult-like following has grown exponentially and now includes private collectors from around the world such as Tom Ford, Karl Lagerfeld, Marc Jacobs, François Pinault and Bernard Arnault.  
 

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Claude Lalanne, Pomme (Moyenne), 2011/2015. Bronze, 65 x 51 x 49 cm, 25 5/8 x 20 1/8 x 19 1/4 in. Edition of 8 + 4 AP (#2/8 A)

Several of François-Xavier’s iconic pieces will be exhibited: his famous Moutons Transhumant (1991) and Moutons de Laine (1965/1974), a flock of woolly sheep used as seating arrangements will be presented along with Babouin (1984), a cast-iron baboon whose stomach doubles as fireplace. 

At the age of 91, Claude is still actively producing artworks from her home and studio near Fontainebleau, France, and for this exhibition she has produced a number of new sculptures including Choupatte (2015), an oversized bronze cabbage head with birdlike talons. Choupatte is amongst Claude’s most recognisable artworks and a design that has frequented her work over the last five decades. Also included in the exhibition will be Pomme d’Hiver (2015), Pomme (Moyenne) (2011/2012) and Crocodile Banquette (2012/2013) a bronze and brass bench designed around interwoven crocodile shapes.

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François-Xavier Lalanne, Babouin, 1973/2000. Cast iron, 139 x 80 x 70 cm, 54 3/4 x 31 1/2 x 27 1/2 in. Edition of 8 + 4 AP (AP 1/4)

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Claude Lalanne, Chaise feuilles bambou (gauche), 2010/2011. Bronze, 73.5 x 33 x 29 cm, 29 x 13 x 11 3/8 in. Edition of 8 + 4 AP (#3/8 F)

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Claude Lalanne, Console aux branchettes, 2008/2013. Bronze and brass 85 x 120 x 35 cm, 33 1/2 x 47 1/4 x 13 3/4 in. Edition of 8 + 4 AP (#4/8 A)

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Claude Lalanne, Crocodile banquette, 2012/2013. Bronze and brass, 80.6 x 127 x 57.2 cm, 31 3/4 x 50 x 22 1/2 in. Edition of 8 + 4 AP (#4/8)

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Claude Lalanne, Osiris, 2015/2016. Bronze, 32 x 33.5 x 33.5 cm, 12 5/8 x 13 1/4 x 13 1/4 in. Edition of 8 + 4 AP (#6/8 B)

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François-Xavier Lalanne, Bougeoir Nénuphar1978. Porcelain bisque, copper and inox, 21 x 34.5 x 31 cm, 8 1/4 x 13 5/8 x 12 1/4 in.

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François-Xavier Lalanne, Canard de Sèvres, 1978. Porcelain bisque, copper and inox with 5 bunches of flower water lilies, 31 x 69 x 100 cm / between 22 x 40 x 38 cm and 21 x 25 x 38 cm.

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François-Xavier Lalanne, Mouton de laine, 1967/1976. Wool, aluminium, copper & wood, 88 x 100 x 48 cm, 34 5/8 x 39 3/8 x 18 7/8 in.

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Claude & François-Xavier Lalanne, Mouton Transhumant, 1991. Epoxystone and bronze, 90 x 104 x 39 cm, 35 3/8 x 41 x 15 3/8 in. Edition of 250 (#4/250).

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François-Xavier Lalanne, Singe avisé (moyen), 2005/2006. Bronze, 41 x 33 x 29 cm, 16 1/8 x 13 x 11 3/8 in. Edition of 8 + 4AP (#4/8)

A greyish-green jade, huan, 2nd-1st millennium BC

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Lot 806. A greyish-green jade, huan, 2nd-1st millennium BC. Estimate USD 5,000 - USD 7,000 © Christie's Images Ltd 2017.

The thin disc has a large central aperture with very slightly rounded inner wall, and the semi-translucent stone has a satiny polish. Together with a mottled brown and beige jade disc, Shang dynasty (c. 1600-1100 BC), the semi-translucent stone has some cloudy opaque alteration on one side. 3 7/8 and 3 3/8 in. (9.8 and 8.5 cm.) diam.

Provenance: The Erwin Harris Collection, Miami, Florida, by 1995.

Christie's. The Harris Collection: Important Early Chinese Art, 16 March 2017, New York, Rockefeller Center


Phillips announces highlights from the 20th Century & Contemporary Art auctions in London

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Miquel Barceló (b. 1957), Muletero. Mixed media on canvas, 130.8 x 161.2 cm (51 1/ 2 x 63 1/ 2 in.). Executed in 1990. Estimate: £2,500,000-3,500,000. Image courtesy of Phillips.

LONDON.- This March, Phillips 20th Century & Contemporary Art auctions will bring together a selection of celebrated international names. The Evening Sale includes paintings by Josef Albers, Frank Auerbach, Wade Guyton and Christopher Wool; important artworks by Japanese artists Yoshitomo Nara, Takashi Murakami and Yayoi Kusama; and pieces by renowned Italian Futurists Giacomo Balla and Gino Severini. Comprising 30 lots, the 20th Century & Contemporary Art Evening Sale will take place on 8 March and is estimated to realise in excess of £15 million. The 20th Century & Contemporary Art Day Sale on 10 March features 180 lots and is estimated to total in the region of £6 million. 

Peter Sumner, Senior International Specialist of 20th Century & Contemporary Art and Deputy Chairman for Phillips Europe: “We are looking forward to seeing another season at Phillips of well curated, high quality works, setting a strong momentum for the year ahead. A leading highlight is Barceló’s Muletero, a truly exceptional example from the artist’s ‘Bullfight’ series, and we are also thrilled to build upon recent strong results at Phillips in both London, New York and Hong Kong by offering great works by Josef Albers, Yoshitomo Nara, and Rudolf Stingel, as well as many others." 

The 20th Century & Contemporary Art Evening Sale is jointly led by Miquel Barceló’s Muletero, one of the artist’s highly-celebrated bullfight pictures (estimate: £2,500,000-3,500,000). This large-scale work was painted at a pivotal point in Barceló’s career, after he had moved to Africa and imbued his paintings with a newfound sense of clarity and luminosity. The theme of the bullfight is engrained in Spanish culture and artistic tradition and in Muletero, the artist focuses directly on the ballet of the bullfight as a metaphor for painting itself. 

Rudolf Stingel is represented in the Evening Sale with three important works, including the mesmeric vision that is Untitled (Plan B) (estimate: £2,500,000-3,500,000), which belongs to a series inspired by Stingel’s 2004 Plan B installation at Grand Central Terminal in New York. The work, executed in 2008, sits within Stingel’s wider oeuvre as a celebrated example of his revolutionary artistic practice, testing the boundaries between abstraction and figuration as well as the limits of individual materials, colours and wider concepts. A network of undulating patterns and warm golden hues, the artist combines enamel with the more traditional medium of oil, creating a glossy layer over the work and arguably reimagining the oil painting for the 21st century. 

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Rudolf Stingel, Untitled (Plan B), 2008. Oil and enamel on linen, 241.3 x 193 cm (95 x 75 7/8 in.). Executed in 2008. Estimate: £2,500,000-3,500,000. Image courtesy of Phillips.

The Evening Sale champions Japanese Contemporary art, featuring Yayoi Kusama’s Infinity Nets (BSGK) (estimate: £300,000-500,000), Takashi Murakami’s An Homage to Monopink, 1960 E (estimate: £600,000-800,000) and Yoshitomo Nara’s Missing in Action (estimate: £1,200,000-1,800,000). Building upon Phillips’ success in Hong Kong in November 2016, when a world auction record was set for Yoshitomo Nara for a single work on paper, Missing in Action bears the hallmarks of the artist’s pictorial style. Nara is known for integrating the multifaceted and even contradictory qualities inherent in children – their being at once naïve and precocious, complicated yet carefree, sweet though wicked. The painting depicts a figure with a troubled expression, who gazes piercingly and relentlessly at the viewer. 

Italian Futurism comes to the fore this March, with museum quality works on paper by Giacomo Balla and Gino Severini. Balla’s Automobile in corsa – studio, from 1913-1914, stands amongst his first explorations of Futurism (estimate: £300,000-400,000). The work offers a window into the defining thematic concerns of the early Futurists, which centred on the glorification of modernity and the triumph of humanity over nature. Balla conjures the speed of a moving vehicle which appears to race across the page. Focusing on the machine and on the body, both Balla and Severini employ innovative means to address freedom and ingenuity. Severini best expressed his Futurist ideas through the theme of the dancer, and Danseuse et violoniste captures the artist’s exploration of the balance between figuration and abstraction (estimate: £1,200,000-1,800,000). The drawing, formerly in the collection of the art critic Albert Schneeberger, was included in Gino Severini: The Dance 1906-1916, the exhibition curated by Daniela Fonti at the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice, in 2001. 

Executed in 1974, Michelangelo Pistoletto’s Particolare di deposizione is a prime example of the artist’s career-defining series, the Quadri specchianti or mirror paintings (estimate: £500,000-700,000). Pistoletto blurs the boundaries between fiction and reality by printing photographs on reflective panels of highly-polished stainless steel. Confronted with their own reflection, viewers are urged to interact with Pistoletto’s compositions, forming part of an eternal, improvised performance. The interplay between time and space is investigated through Pistoletto’s use of religious iconography, with the present work directly referencing a biblical scene with contemporary figures. Executed at the highest point in the development of the mirror series, Particolare di deposizione demonstrates the artist’s mastery of his instantly recognisable technique which has become one of the most iconic series of 20th century art. Executed in 1974, Michelangelo Pistoletto’s Particolare di deposizione is a prime example of the artist’s career-defining series, the Quadri specchianti or mirror paintings (estimate: £500,000-700,000). Pistoletto blurs the boundaries between fiction and reality by printing photographs on reflective panels of highly-polished stainless steel. Confronted with their own reflection, viewers are urged to interact with Pistoletto’s compositions, forming part of an eternal, improvised performance. The interplay between time and space is investigated through Pistoletto’s use of religious iconography, with the present work directly referencing a biblical scene with contemporary figures. Executed at the highest point in the development of the mirror series, Particolare di deposizione demonstrates the artist’s mastery of his instantly recognisable technique which has become one of the most iconic series of 20th century art. 

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Michelangelo Pistoletto, Particolare della deposizione, 1974. Estimate: £500,000-700,000Image courtesy of Phillips.

The 20th Century & Contemporary Art Day Sale on 10 March will be led by George Condo’s Jean-Louis' Girlfriend (estimate: £150,000-200,000) and Sherrie Levine’s Parchment Knot: 3 (estimate: £120,000-180,000). Alongside these significant works the sale will offer a diverse selection of highly sought after contemporary artists including Gabriel Orozco, Adrian Ghenie, Peter Fischli & David Weiss, Yoshitomo Nara, among others. 

Jean-Louis' Girlfriend is a testament to the distinctive style of psychologically unnerving portraiture developed by George Condo in the latter half of the 20th century. The present work is rendered in an amusing and bold figurative manner, with two animal heads stacked on the woman’s neck where the face would usually be depicted. Using clean lines against a stark background, Condo creates an effect which is both elegant and disturbing, serving to further anthropomorphise the creatures.

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George Condo,  Jean-Louis' Girlfriend, oil on canvas, 152.5 x 122 cm (60 x 48 in.). Painted in 2005. Estimate: £150,000-200,000Image courtesy of Phillips.

A pair of bronze dragon-head terminals, Western Zhou Dynasty, 11th-10th century BC

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Lot 807. A pair of bronze dragon-head terminals, Western Zhou Dynasty, 11th-10th century BC. Estimate USD 2,000 - USD 3,000 © Christie's Images Ltd 2017.

Each is heavily cast as a bottle-horn dragon head, the tops of the horns with whorl motifs. 2 in. (5.1 cm.) high

Provenance: The Erwin Harris Collection, Miami, Florida, by 1982.

Christie's. The Harris Collection: Important Early Chinese Art, 16 March 2017, New York, Rockefeller Center

A bronze pole finial, Late Shang Dynasty, Anyang, 12th-11th Century BC

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Lot 808. A bronze pole finial, Late Shang Dynasty, Anyang, 12th-11th Century BC. Estimate USD 4,000 - USD 6,000 © Christie's Images Ltd 2017.

The upper section is cast in relief on both sides with a taotie mask flanked by ears below a pair of large up-curved horns, and the conical lower section is flat cast with simplified taotie masks. The bronze has a smooth, mottled olive-green patina and traces of cinnabar. 4 ¼ in. (11 cm.) high, stand

Provenance: Sotheby Parke Bernet, New York, 11 May 1978, lot 13.
The Erwin Harris Collection, Miami, Florida.

NoteCompare the two pole finials of this type, each similarly surmounted by a pair of curved, scale-cast horns above a mask: the first illustrated by B. Karlgren in a Catalogue of the Chinese Bronzes in the Alfred F. Pillsbury Collection, Minneapolis Institute of Arts, 1950, pl. 96, no. 73, has, like the Harris finial, a taotie mask; the other in the Frederick M. Mayer Collection, sold at Christie's London, 24-25 June 1974, lot 221, has a human mask. See, also, the example with taotie mask illustrated in "The Exhibition of Early Chinese Bronzes," B.M.F.E.A., No. 6, Stockholm, 1934, pl. V (3), which was found at Anyang.

Christie's. The Harris Collection: Important Early Chinese Art, 16 March 2017, New York, Rockefeller Center

A bronze Ge-halberd blade, Late Shang Dynasty, 12th-11th Century BC

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Lot 809. A bronze Ge-halberd blade, Late Shang Dynasty, 12th-11th Century BC. Estimate USD 5,000 - USD 7,000 © Christie's Images Ltd 2017.

The curved butt is crisply cast on each side with a recessed design of a humanoid face shown in profile below a headdress or upswept hair, and the nei is pierced with a single hafting hole. The tapered blade is heavily encrusted. 15 ¼ in. (38.8 cm.) long

ProvenanceLester Wolfe Collection, New York, by 1974.
Christie’s New York, 6 June 1985, lot 89.
The Erwin Harris Collection, Miami, Florida.

NoteCompare the ge-halberd blade in the Museum van Aziatische Kunst, Amsterdam, which has a similarly shaped and decorated butt, illustrated by C. Deydier, Les Bronzes Chinois, Paris, 1980, p. 231, no. 99..

Christie's. The Harris Collection: Important Early Chinese Art, 16 March 2017, New York, Rockefeller Center

A bronze ritual wine vessel and cover, you, and a bronze ritual wine ladle, Western Zhou dynasty (circa 1046-771 BC)

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Lot 810. A bronze ritual wine vessel and cover, you, and a bronze ritual wine ladle, Western Zhou dynasty (circa 1046-771 BC)Estimate USD 6,000 - USD 8,000 © Christie's Images Ltd 2017.

The you is cast in high relief around the shoulder with two taotie masks flanked by two long-tailed birds, their tails terminating at loops to which are attached the animal head-surmounted ends of the arched handle. The cover is also cast with a band of birds flanking simplified masks between raised tabs at the ends and below a pierced, open finial. The ladle has a deep bowl and an arched shaft joined to the flattened, flared handle by a small bovine mask. You 8 ½ in. (21.6 cm.) high with handle; ladle 8 in. (20.3 cm.) long, box

ProvenanceLadle: Sotheby Parke Bernet, New York, 12-13 March 1975, lot 124.
Both: The Erwin Harris Collection, Miami, Florida, by 1995.

Christie's. The Harris Collection: Important Early Chinese Art, 16 March 2017, New York, Rockefeller Center

A bronze knife with rattle, 13th-11th Century BC

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Lot 811. A bronze knife with rattle, 13th-11th Century BC. Estimate USD 6,000 - USD 8,000 © Christie's Images Ltd 2017.

The tapering blade has a raised median rib on each side that extends from the center of the ribbed hilt which is set at one end with a small attachment loop below the eight-strap, openwork rattle pommel. 11 3/8 in. (29 cm.) long

ProvenancePrivate collection, Paris; Hôtel Drouot-Richelieu, Paris, 18 October 1996.
The Erwin Harris Collection, Miami, Florida.

NoteCompare the similar knife of slightly smaller size (26.2 cm.) in the Shanghai Museum illustrated by Ma Chengyuan, Ancient Chinese Bronzes, Oxford University Press, 1986, p. 80, pl. 141.

Christie's. The Harris Collection: Important Early Chinese Art, 16 March 2017, New York, Rockefeller Center

Rare Georg Baselitz masterpiece set to break artist record at Sotheby's sale in London

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Georg Baselitz, Mit Roter Fahne (With Red Flag), 1965. Courtesy of Sotheby’s.

LONDON.- A rare masterpiece by the German painter Georg Baselitz (estimated £6.5m-8.5m) is set to break the record for the artist at auction when offered at Sotheby’s Contemporary Art Evening Auction in London on 8 March 2017. Mit Roter Fahne (With Red Flag), 1965, from the artist’s ground-breaking ‘Heroes’ series, is a painting that cemented the artist’s reputation as one of the most provocative and compelling voices of the post-war era. 

Baselitz’s striking canvas is one of an outstanding group of 17 works by German artists to feature in Sotheby’s flagship contemporary auction in London, representing around a quarter of lots on offer. Further highlights include Gerhard Richter’s desolately beautiful Eisberg (estimate: £8-12m; dedicated release available here), Anselm Kiefer’s monumental Athanor (estimate: £1.5-2.5m), Sigmar Polke’s Pop-inspired Die Schmiede (estimate: £1-1.5 million), a major painting by Martin Kippenberger (estimate: £3-4 million), alongside key works by Wolfgang Tillmans, Albert Oehlen, Thomas Schütte, Günther Förg, Günther Uecker and Michael Krebber. 

Alex Branczik, Sotheby’s Head of Contemporary Art, Europe said “Seismic moments of social and political change in history have always created seismic changes in art, something we undoubtedly see in post-war Germany. Many of these artists tackled challenging; some might say profound, subject matter, while at the same time creating new visual languages which redefined European art history.” 

The Growth of German Contemporary 
The market for German contemporary art has gone from strength to strength in recent years, led by the £30.4m ($46.3m) achieved for Gerhard Richter’s Abstraktes Bild at Sotheby’s London in 2015, a record for any living European artist. Richter is just one from a wave of German post-war masters defining today’s contemporary art market. 

• Over the last 5 years there has been a 31% increase in the number of bidders on German Contemporary Art at Sotheby’s auctions worldwide. 

• In Sotheby’s flagship Evening London contemporary sales in 2016, around 20% of the works offered were by German artists. 

• At Sotheby’s October 2016 ‘Frieze Week’ sales in London, the 9 works offered by German artists accounted for 43.3% (£20.76m) of the overall sale total. 

• In the last two years alone, new auction records have been set for Wolfgang Tilmans, Gerhard Richter, Albert Oehlen, Thomas Schütte, Georg Baselitz, Martin Kippenberger, Günther Uecker, Sigmar Polke, Michael Krebber and Günther Förg. 

AUCTION HIGHLIGHTS 

Born in 1938 and aged seven at the end of the Second World War, Georg Baselitz once poignantly described the past that he inherited by saying, “I was born into a destroyed order”. Considered one of the most important painters of his time, the artist has assiduously challenged the realities of history and art history in order to deliver a searing analysis of human existence in the era following the Second World War. Just as Berlin and the Wall became concrete metaphors for the global stand-off of the Cold War, so Baselitz’s Hero paintings today stand as icons of a history that informs our existence in the Twenty-First Century. 

The tremendous import of Mit Roter Fahne is attested to by its storied exhibition history, having been displayed in countless retrospectives of the artist’s work across the globe, including the landmark retrospective at the Royal Academy of Arts in London in 2007, curated by Norman Rosenthal. The painting is expected to surpass the current auction record for the artist (£4.69 million / $7.45 million) in Sotheby’s March sale. 

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Lot 6. Georg Baselitz, Mit Roter Fahne (With Red Flag), 1965. Oil on canvas 161.9 by 130.8 cm, 63¾ by 51½ in. Estimate: £ 6,500,000 — 8,500,000. Photo: Sotheby's.

Executed on a monumental scale, Anselm Kiefer’s Athanor is a provocative exploration into Germany’s past, and the vicissitudes of history and memory. On 27 February 1933 the Reichtsag, home to the German parliament, burned down. The event is now seen as pivotal in the establishment of Nazi dictatorship in Germany, with Hitler manipulating the incident to expel the Communist party from parliament and imprison its leaders. In Athanor the building appears shell-like, as if we are witnessing the last burning embers of the fire. This pioneering work must be seen as one of the artist’s most important and ambitious paintings. 

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Lot 18. Anselm Kiefer, Athanor, 1991. Oil, sand, ash, gold leaf and lead foil on canvas, 281.9 by 381.6 cm, 111 by 150¼ in. Estimate: £1,500,000-2,500,000. Photo: Sotheby's.

Gerhard Richter’s Eisberg is the ultimate example of the artist’s rejuvenation of the landscape painting genre. No other subject has fascinated the artist so extensively nor occupied him over such a long period, yet the total number of the landscape paintings that Richter has made is relatively low, making them rare in his oeuvre. A masterclass in technique, composition and subject matter, Eisberg is the largest of only three paintings Richter made on the subject, based on photographs taken during a journey through the icy straits of Greenland in 1972. At the time, the artist’s marriage to Ema was in crisis; his Eisberg series are widely considered to be a metaphor for the artist's state of mind. The National Gallery, Prague, has requested that this work be included in the artist’s first retrospective in the Czech Republic, due to open in April 2017. 

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Lot 8. Gerhard Richter, Eisberg, 1982. Oil on canvas, 100.5 by 151 cm, 39⅝ by 59½ in. Estimate: £8,000,000-12,000,000. Photo: Sotheby's.

Executed in 2005, Freischwimmer 119, belongs to Wolfgang Tillmans’ highly coveted eponymous series, whose title refers to German levels of swimming proficiency, and embodies the artist’s most conceptually complex and visually enigmatic contribution to contemporary art. Created in the darkroom without the use of a camera, these works echo the avant-garde photographic experiments of Man Ray and György Kepes. However unlike these early iterations of the photographic medium, the exact process behind Tillman’s Freischwimmer works is shrouded in mystery. In 2000, Tillmans was the first photographer and non-British artist to win the Turner Prize and his multifaceted practice will be celebrated with a seminal exhibition at Tate Modern, London from February to June 2017.  

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 Lot 2. Wolfgang Tillmans, Freischwimmer 119, 2005. Chromogenic print, in artist’s frame, 180.6 by 237.8 cm, 71⅛ by 93⅝ in. Estimate: £80,000-120,000. Photo: Sotheby's.

Die Mutter von Joseph Beuys is one of two monumental paintings depicting the artist’s likeness in the guise of Joseph Beuys’ mother. The portrait is based upon a photograph of the Joseph Beuys - the legendary conceptual artist - as a child walking with his mother. In the source image the face of Beuys’ mother is obscured, hidden underneath a rain-hat in a grainy photograph. By presenting his own distinctive image in place of Beuys’ mother, Kippenberger satirizes and undermines the revered legacy of the godfather of German conceptualism, placing himself at the heart of art historical debate. 

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Lot 16. Martin Kippenberger, Die Mutter von Joseph Beuys, 1984. Oil on canvas, in 4 parts 240 by 200 cm, 94½ by 78¾ in. £3,000,000-4,000,000. Photo: Sotheby's.

Hailed by Sigmar Polke as “one of his most important paintings”, Die Schmiede presents an extraordinary multi-layered painting; with its fusion of abstraction and figuration, and appropriation of Pop imagery, it strikingly combines several elements that were of particular importance to the artist’s output during the 1970s. Born in 1941, Polke came of age in an environment rife with political conflict and division in the critical decades following the Second World War. In 1963, when he was just twenty-two years old, Polke and his contemporaries Gerhard Richter, Manfred Kuttner and Konrad Lueg, staged a direct response to the climate of their upbringing by initiating the radical stylistic notion of Kapitalischer Realismus (‘Capitalist Realism’); a pithy riposte to the state-sponsored ‘Socialist Realism’ of the German Democratic Republic as well as the aesthetics of consumer culture that dominated Western Europe.

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Lot 46. Sigmar Polke, Die Schmiede, 1975. Acrylic and metallic paint on cotton, 150 by 130.4 cm, 59 by 51⅜ in. Estimate: £1,000,000-1,5000,000. Photo: Sotheby's.

 


Medieval Byzantine Carved Garnet Gold Signet Ring, Byzantine empire, circa 8th–10th century AD

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Medieval Byzantine Carved Garnet Gold Signet Ring, Byzantine empire, circa 8th–10th century AD. Image courtesy Romanov Russia.

A hammered shank of the ring is attached to an oval bezel shaped as a stylized quatrefoil – an ancient symbol of good luck, health, and fortune. The ring is set with a carved garnet intaglio (seal) which incorporates a star and a crescent shaped element within a palm leaf border

A very finely crafted high carat gold medieval ring. Ring size 5.75 (16 mm). Price: $8,500

Romanov Russia.

Gold Signet Ring, Greek, Classical t

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Ancient Gold Signet Ring, Greek, Classical to early Hellenistic period, 5th–4th century BC. Image courtesy Romanov Russia.

A cast gold ring with elongated oval bezel is engraved with a female figure holding two snakes (Snake Goddess). Weight 7.36 grams. All original, intact and wearable. Ring size 8. Price: $35,000

Romanov Russia.

Ancient Rock Crystal Gold Swivel Signet Ring, Greek, Archaic period, circa 600 – 500 B.C.

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Ancient Rock Crystal Gold Swivel Signet Ring, Greek, Archaic period, circa 600–500 B.C. Image courtesy Romanov Russia.

An ancient gold swivel – signet ring with a finely carved rock crystal scarab (Scarabaeus beetle). The underside is a signet engraved with a crawling snake. The rock crystal scarab measures 20 x 18 mm (7/8 x 11/16 in.). Approximate ring size 12  (22 mm). Price: $35,000

In ancient jewelry, the scarab was a symbol of protection, vitality and good luck. Rock crystal, a precious stone in antiquity, was thought to be a special form of real ice.

Similar scaraboid rings with swivel bezels from the 6th and 5th centuries BC may be viewed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York city. This ring appears to be superior to the rings on display at the Metropolitan. 

Romanov Russia.

Ancient Head of Medusa Gold Ring, circa 300 BC

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Ancient Head of Medusa Gold Ring, circa 300 BC. Image courtesy Romanov Russia.

This high carat gold Hellenistic stirrup-shaped ring is designed as a gold disc with a horizontally positioned archaic relief head of Medusa.  Framed by two rows of gold twisted wires. The ring is solid, wearable and in excellent condition. Diameter of the disc 20 mm (6/8 in.). Weight 7.56 grams. Approximate ring size 6 – 6.5 (16 x 18 mm). Price: $12,000

Accompanied by a metal analysis report which indicates ring’s metal composition as 94.25% gold, 5.21% silver, 1.25 copper and 0.03% nickel.

The term Hellenistic refers to the period between the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC and the rise of the Roman Empire in 31 BC.

Hellenistic world included ancient Greece, Greek colonies and countries conquered by Alexander the Great which were directly influenced by the Greek art and culture.

Romanov Russia

A Medieval Byzantine Garnet and Gold Men’s Signet Ring, Byzantine Empire, circa 5th–8th centuries

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A Medieval Byzantine Garnet and Gold Men’s Signet Ring, Byzantine Empire, circa 5th–8th centuries. Image courtesy Romanov Russia.

This one-of-a-kind ancient gold stirrup-shaped ring is bezel-set with an oval flat top cabochon cut garnet. Surrounded by a row of small gold beads flanked by two larger gold beads. Weight 5.72 grams. Ring size 9.25. Price: $7,500. 

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