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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Christie’s Art Auction Brings In $93 Million

Suzanne Muchnic Los Angeles Times

Confirming claims that the art market is back in full force, but without the speculators that drove it crazy in the late 1980s, Christie’s racked up a total of $92.7 million Monday night in an auction of 29 Impressionist and Post-Impressionist works from the collection of the late John and Frances L. Loeb.

With a Cezanne portrait bringing in $23.1 million and a Manet self-portrait fetching $18.7 million, the auction’s take was the highest in a single evening since the art market crashed in 1990 and the largest sum ever realized at Christie’s for any group of artworks consigned by a single owner.

“It was an extremely exciting sale,” auctioneer Christopher Burge said following the hourlong event, in which he coaxed higher prices from the packed salesroom and from collectors who placed their bids by telephone. “It was very gratifying to see the depth of bidding and the enthusiasm for these great works of art.”

The auction house had estimated that sales would total between $73.2 million and $98.7 million.

Following last week’s successful round of sales of contemporary art at Christie’s and Sotheby’s, the Loeb sale offered high-quality material from a well-known New York collection at a moment when the art market seems to be enjoying renewed confidence. The sale had been the most eagerly awaited art auction in several years and was expected to bring out heavy hitters. It did.

The top price was paid for Paul Cezanne’s 1888-90 portrait of his wife, “Mme. Cezanne Seated in a Yellow Chair,” but it brought $23.1 million, slightly less than its high presale estimate of $25 million. Although the artist painted many likenesses of his model and wife, Hortense Fiquet, during their long relationship, the Loeb painting is from an important series of four portraits in which she wears a red housedress and sits calmly, either folding her hands or holding a flower.

Purchased by the Loebs for $125,000 in 1956, it is the only one of the series that had remained in private hands.

Commanding the second highest price of $18.7 million was Edouard Manet’s “Self-Portrait (Manet With Palette).” One of only two paintings in which the artist depicted himself alone, it offers a penetrating view of Manet’s face with his torso and arms loosely painted, as if caught in the process of picking up pigment on his brush and moving it toward an unseen canvas. Created around 1878, the painting was valued at about $15 million and easily surpassed that mark, finally going to a telephone bidder. The Loebs had purchased the painting in 1958 for the then-hefty price of $176,800 at Sotheby’s London’s celebrated sale of the collection of New York investment banker Jakob Goldschmit, which marked the moment when prices of Impressionist art finally exceeded those of works by Old Masters.

“Seated Dancer in Pink Stockings,” Henri de Toulouse Lautrec’s pensive portrayal of a ballet dancer resting backstage, was estimated at $8 million to $10 million. Burge finally cracked his gavel at $14.5 million, ending a protracted battle among telephone bidders. The price broke the artist’s record of $12.9 million, set in May 1990, just before the market crashed, for the painting “Mademoiselle Jeanne Fontaine.”

A Cezanne landscape, “View of l’Estaque,” depicting a seaside village near Marseilles, where the artist often rented a cottage and garden, also was valued at $8 million to $10 million. It was sold for $12.6 million.