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fine art

This Picasso masterpiece could be the world’s most expensive painting when sold at auction

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May 11, 2015, 8:00 AM ET
BRITAIN-ART-AUCTION-PICASSO
Employees of Christie's auction house hold up Spanish painter Pablo Picassos Les femmes dAlger (Version O) during a press preview in London on April 10, 2015. Les femmes dAlger (Version O), a vibrant cubist work last auctioned in 1997 when it nearly tripled the expected price, is estimated to fetch about 140 million USD at auction in New York in May, by far the highest price ever for a work of art on the auction block. AFP PHOTO / JUSTIN TALLIS RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE, MANDATORY MENTION OF THE ARTIST UPON PUBLICATION, TO ILLUSTRATE THE EVENT AS SPECIFIED IN THE CAPTION (Photo credit should read JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP/Getty Images)Photograph by Justin Tallis — AFP/Getty Images

A vividly-colored painting by Pablo Picasso is expected to set a new world record for an artwork when it is sold at auction in New York on Monday evening.

The $140 million estimate for Picasso’s “Les femmes d’Alger (Version “O”),” a cubist work last auctioned in 1997 when it nearly tripled expectations, is the highest pre-sale price ever accorded an auction offering.

Close behind, Giacometti’s 1947, 70-inch (180-cm) bronze, “Man Pointing,” is set to sell for $130 million, which would easily eclipse his record for sculpture of $104.3 million held by “L’Homme qui marche I.”

Both will be sold at Christie’s on May 11, a sale billed as “Looking Forward to the Past,” which augments its Impressionist/modern and contemporary auctions. The 35 lots are expected to fetch half a billion dollars.

“The high prices we see are a reflection of both rarity and surging demand,” said Jussi Pylkkanen, Christie’s global president. “Asian collectors have been increasingly active lately, bringing a new competitive dynamic, especially when it comes to top-quality masterpieces.”

With prices for top-tier works of art at an all-time high, records for paintings and sculpture appear certain to fall at upcoming spring auctions in New York by Christie’s and Sotheby’s.

Sotheby’s top offering is Mark Rothko’s untitled yellow and blue 1954 oil, which is expected to sell for as much as $60 million. It is also featuring six Monets expected to total more than $78 million, led by “Nymphéas,” estimated at $30 million to $45 million.

In all, some $2 billion worth of art will be offered to well-heeled, increasingly global collectors competing for an ever-shrinking supply of so-called trophy works, ranging from van Goghs and Picassos to Rothkos and Warhols.

“The supply of strong examples remaining in private hands is shrinking fast,” said Simon Shaw, worldwide co-head of Impressionist art at Sotheby’s, speaking in particular of the auction house’s Monet offerings.
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“The result is fierce competition that leads to the results we have witnessed recently,” he added.

Other highlights include van Gogh’s “L’Allée des Alyscamps,” (in excess of $40 million) and Roy Lichtenstein’s 1962 pop art “The Ring (Engagement),” which Sotheby’s expects will sell for about $50 million.

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