Friday, 5th December 2008

 

Bacon's painting sets record for art sale

A painting sold last night at a Sotheby's auction in New York broke the record for a contemporary art sale - the latest evidence that the top end of the art market is insulated from rising economic difficulties in the world economy.

Francis Bacon's painting "Triptych", was sold for $86.3m (€56m), far exceeding the $70m it was expected to go for. The painting is a three-panelled piece which depicts a classical image of a headless corpse being devoured by vultures.

The piece was sold by a European collector who acquired the painting in 1977 at the Paris Galerie Claude Bernard. The buyer was a private European bidder.

Earlier this week Christies hosted a New York auction which raised $350m through 57 pieces. Lucien Freud's painting of a sleeping benefits adviser, which sold for $33.6m to an anonymous European bidder, made headlines as the most expensive piece of art from a living artist.

A Christies spokesman said art is increasingly being taken up as an alternative investment to the financial markets.

Tags: Sotheby's

Brummel

Headline

Mayfair goes Modern

Sebastian + Barquet, a three-year old design gallery based in New York and Chelsea, is opening a new gallery showing museum quality pieces in Mayfair next month, the first in London to focus on international modernism from the 1940s to the 1960s. Its opening exhibition is dedicated to American modernist design and is curated by celebrated architect Eric Parry.

Rich Monitor

Stocking filler: Harrods sells world's most expensive shirt

Harrods, the luxury London-based retailer, is selling a diamond-encrusted shirt valued at £20,000, the world's most expensive shirt ever made. Although the shirt has not yet been sold, it puts paid to the idea of the wealthy having to reign in their spending as a result of the recession.

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