Published on 12:00 AM, November 17, 2017

Leonardo da Vinci painting shatters auction records

“Salvator Mundi” sells for $450.3 Million

After 19 minutes of dueling, with four bidders on the telephone and one in the room, Leonardo da Vinci's “Salvator Mundi” sold on Wednesday night for $450.3 million with fees, shattering the high for any work of art sold at auction. It far surpassed Picasso's “Women of Algiers”, which fetched $179.4 million at Christie's in May 2015. The buyer was not immediately disclosed, reports The New York Times.

There were gasps throughout the sale, as the bids climbed by tens of millions up to $225 million, by fives up to $260 million, and then by twos. Toward the end, Alex Rotter, Christie's co-chairman of postwar and contemporary art, who represented a buyer on the phone, made two big jumps to shake off one last rival bid from Francis de Poortere, Christie's head of old master paintings.

The price is all the more remarkable at a time when the old masters market is contracting, because of limited supply and collectors' penchant for contemporary art.

There was a palpable air of anticipation at Christie's Rockefeller Center headquarters as the art market's major players filed into the sales room. Major collectors had traveled here for the sale.

Earlier, 27,000 people had lined up at pre-auction viewings in Hong Kong, London, San Francisco and New York to glimpse the painting of Christ as “Savior of the World”. Members of the public cared little if at all whether the painting might have been executed in part by studio assistants; whether Leonardo had actually made the work himself; or how much of the canvas had been repainted and restored. They just wanted to see a masterwork that dates from about 1500 and was rediscovered in 2005.

But many art experts argue that Christie's used marketing window dressing to mask the baggage that comes with the Leonardo, from its compromised condition to its complicated buying history and said that the auction house put the artwork in a contemporary sale to circumvent the scrutiny of old masters experts, many of whom have questioned the painting's authenticity and condition.

“The composition doesn't come from Leonardo,” said Jacques Franck, a Paris-based art historian and Leonardo specialist. “He preferred twisted movement. It's a good studio work with a little Leonardo at best, and it's very damaged.”

The artwork has been the subject of legal disputes and amassed a price history that ranges from less than $10,000 in 2005, when it was spotted at an estate auction, to $200 million when it was first offered for sale by a consortium of three dealers in 2012. But no institution besides the Dallas Museum of Art, which in 2012 made an undisclosed offer on the painting, showed public interest in buying it. Finally, in 2013, Sotheby's sold it privately for $80 million to Yves Bouvier, a Swiss art dealer and businessman. Soon afterward, he sold it for $127.5 million, to the family trust of the Russian billionaire collector Dmitry E Rybolovlev. Rybolovlev's family trust was the seller on Wednesday night.

 

Source: NY Times