Prior Years Archive:
In her first publication, arts writer and editor of the AFR magazine Katrina Strickland tells the fascinating story of how artists’ spouses (mostly widows) handle legacies and often large estates, and how in the process can emerge the most successful artists.
By David Hulme & Brigitte Banziger on 19-Dec-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Christmas Reading: Affairs of the Art – Love, Loss and Power in the Art World: How An Artist Becomes Immortal or Not

This is a cover and title sure to attract the eyes of buyers who would not usually go for non-fiction: the millions of fans of romance novels. It certainly offers some of the elements, but sadly starts when the romance is over: after the death of the artist, and deals with the decidedly unromantic issues of money, influence and power.

By Terry Ingram on 18-Dec-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Star performances by two Christie's Australia execs

Without even a saleroom in Australia, Christie's local representative Ronan Sulich is going gangbusters in modern Chinese art. Also coincidentally reaching out to an international audience, his predecessor Roger McIlroy has a career in television ahead of him.

By Terry Ingram on 16-Dec-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Bonhams changes gear in Australia

Bonhams Australia is closing its decorative arts department following a stall in the market place which has lasted for more than its four years of direct operation in Australia and shows little sign of reversing.

The move also signals a change in direction for the global group of which it is part and which is now taking on the two major fine arts companies, Sotheby's and Christie's in a serious manner in Europe and the US.

 

A new visual arts magazine presents exclusive contributions by some of Australia’s most respected art professionals. The topics range from critical reviews of art fairs and exhibitions, auction updates, noteworthy shows and important art collections to new appointments in the art industry and current projects.
By David Hulme & Brigitte Banziger on 12-Dec-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Art Consulting Association of Australia launches online art magazine

A new visual arts magazine presents exclusive contributions by some of Australia’s most respected art professionals. The topics range from critical reviews of art fairs and exhibitions, auction updates, noteworthy shows and important art collections to new appointments in the art industry and current projects.

 

Gifts in kind to approved Australian art museums, galleries and libraries under the Cultural Gifts Program took a tumble last year with approved donations totalling $49 million, a fall of $9 million from the previous year. Geelong Art Gallery could hardly resist Theodore Hines untitled landscape (1878) – two figures by a lake made as an anonymous gift via the CGP program and highly complementary to its collection.
By Terry Ingram on 10-Dec-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

The 2012/13 Cultural Gifts Program: Gifts Lost To The Market - Hopefully For Good.

Gifts in kind to approved Australian art museums, galleries and libraries took a tumble last year as more art collectors favoured a veering art market - selling rather than gifting.

For the year ended June 30, 2013 the Cultural Gifts Program received 590 applications (previously 660) and approved donations with a total value of $49 million, a fall of $9 million or 15.5 per cent from the previous year's total of $58 million.

 

04-Dec-2013

Sale of 'best-kept secret' art collection of Trevor Kennedy to overseas buyer under threat

Sydney Morning Herald journalist Julie Power writes that the businessman Trevor Kennedy's plan to sell his $20 million art collection, which includes the earliest known portrait of a European in Australia after the First Fleet arrived, to a buyer in Singapore has been threatened. Mr Kennedy has been fighting the federal government for the right to export the collection in its entirety. Because it contains valuable historical items, Mr Kennedy's agent John Hawkins was refused permission to apply for a single export licence.

By Terry Ingram on 01-Dec-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Local buyers dip their lids* for icons, OBEs and straw hats

It took just over 9000 paintings to gross $102 million at Australian and New Zealand art auctions last year. This was less than the price of a single major painting on the international auction market. Far less, indeed given one such, a portrait of Francis Bacon sold for a world auction of $US142.4 million at Christie's in New York in October.

01-Dec-2013

Con artist Ronald Coles apology not the real deal

For more than a decade, art dealer Ronald Coles defrauded his hapless clients, lying to them repeatedly about the paintings they had invested in and evading their desperate demands for what they were owed. But when the 66-year-old fraudster finally walked to the witness box on Friday, it appeared a mea culpa was not foremost in his mind, writes Paul Bibby in the Sydney Morning Herald.

01-Dec-2013

Sydney barrister Louise McBride in court clash with Christie's over allegedly fake Albert Tucker artwork

Anne Davies writes in the Sydney Morning Herald that barrister Louise McBride is taking on one of the world's most prestigious auction houses, Christie's, over an allegedly fake Albert Tucker work she bought in 2000.

The latest piece of West Australia's non-indigenous material heritage, a substantial 90 by 70 cm bust-length early 19th century portrait in oils of Admiral Sir James Stirling, the first Governor of the colony sold in a Nottingham saleroom for more than 16 times its top estimate.
By Terry Ingram on 29-Nov-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

A piece of real Stirling makes serious money

When the previous piece of West Australia's non-indigenous material heritage, a silver salver, turned up in a British regional saleroom, it was withdrawn as it was technically a fake. The latest piece to be offered came up on November 27 in a Nottingham saleroom without any such inhibitions and sold for more than 16 times its top estimate.

Brett Whiteley's <i>To Repeat Without Repeating</i>, 1973 graced the cover of Deutscher+Hackett's catalogue of the 27 November 2013 sale in Melbourne. It sold for $190,000 hammer last night, a 15% increase on its last sale for $165,000 hammer at the height of the market in 2007.
By David Hulme & Brigitte Banziger on 28-Nov-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Emily adds colour to Deutscher+Hackett sale

What is chosen for a cover lot of an auction catalogue can make for interesting insights. Not necessarily is it the most expensive offering of the night, but perhaps a painting that is beautiful, decorative and able to set off a whole catalogue of works. So, not surprisingly, Brett Whiteley makes it on to the front of fine art auction catalogues probably more than most other well-known artists, with the perfect mix of his work being wonderfully illustrative and contemporary, but not too much so, and also wonderfully expensive.

Sotheby Australia’s offering of 60 important Australian works of art finished the auction house’s year on a positive note last night in Melbourne, setting three new artist records, including for Lin Onus when his bold, European commissioned, 1995 nude, Robyn (lot 17) sold for at $340,000 ($414,800 IBP) after spirited bidding. The sale realised $2,700,470 including buyer’s premium and sold 82% by value and 66.7% by number.
By Petrit Abazi on 27-Nov-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Sotheby’s Ends Residency at the Top End of Collins Street with Top Results

Sotheby Australia’s offering of 60 important Australian works of art finished the auction house’s year on a positive note last night in Melbourne, setting three new artist records.

The tightly curated and selected works in the catalogue reflected the company’s continuing inclination to include only the rarest and most historically important works into their third and final fine art sale for the year. Although a sale of ‘Important Australian Art’, there was a dominant international flavour about the collection of works. Over one third of the lots on offer were either produced overseas or repatriated from international collections.

There was a touch of the 1980s about results of Bonhams' sale of Important Australian Art the Byron Kennedy Hall in Sydney on November 25 with dead artists and an artist who was then becoming fashionable providing most of the proceeds. The sale, however, grossed only $2.1 million and half the lots went unsold. The cover lot, Herbert Badham's <i>On the Roof</i> made $256,200 (IBP) , well above the estimate of $100,000 to $150,000, and seven works by Ethel Spowers sold for a total of $349,530 (IBP).
By Terry Ingram on 26-Nov-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Buyers dig deep for dug-ups

With dead artists and an artist who was then becoming fashionable providing most of the proceeds, there was a touch of the 1980s about results of Bonhams' sale of Important Australian Art the Byron Kennedy Hall in Sydney on November 25. The sale, however, grossed only $2.1 million and half the lots went unsold.

The contribution of the dead, including new artists' records, was not enough to offset a hesitancy also heightened by the inclusion of Aboriginal tribal artefacts. These mostly failed to sell despite similar items firing at previously separate Aboriginal sales.

The Evatt Collection of Bark Paintings and Sculpture held by Bonhams in Sydney on 24 November, grossed $929,944 IBP against estimates of $494,900 to $753,400, with only 15 of the 319 lots offered failing to find buyers. The work <i>Lightning Spirit (Namarrkon)</i> by Lofty Bardayal Nadjamerrek, who has a distant link to the elders of rock art, achieved the highest price of $47,580 (IBP) against an estimate of $7000 to $10,000.
By Terry Ingram on 25-Nov-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Clive Evatt's bets pay off double

Sydney barrister Mr Clive Evatt appeared to have backed the wrong horse with his perceived emphasis on barks when launching the Hogarth Gallery with its specialised Gallery of Dreams in Sydney in 1971.

At about that time dot paintings began rolling out of the art centre to inflate to as much as 10 times the value of barks which were in a media that had been around for at least 150 years.

 

Chinese buyers were out in force at Mossgreen's Spring Auction Series, where the highest price in the sale was for a gilt-bronze seated Buddha, which was estimated at $20,000-30,000, but sold for $170,800 to a buyer said to live only yards from the auction house.
By Terry Ingram on 21-Nov-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Byron Bay beekeeper's Buddhist bonanza

Number 149 was a lucky number for Mr Robert Bleakley, founding CEO of the first Sotheby's International branch in Australia , at Mossgreen in Melbourne this week. The Chinese buyer holding that number bought most of the top lots including those consigned by Mr Bleakley, the now Byron based beekeeper with a fascination for Buddhism.

18-Nov-2013

Three-way battle over Western Desert artist Tommy Watson not a pretty picture

Amos Aikman writes in The Australian that the niece of one of Australia's most celebrated indigenous artists is in talks with galleries around the country to gain control of his work, in the midst of a bitter feud involving two top art dealers. Tommy Watson - a septuagenarian Western Desert painter whose works have sold for record prices and are held in galleries around the world - is at the centre of a tug of war between his former dealer and manager, John Ioannou; his current dealer, Chris Simon; and members of his own family.

17-Nov-2013

Art rules for SMSFs still rigid

Sky high prices for artwork in New York this week have failed to raise the spirits of Australian arty types with self-managed super funds. Despite the year drawing to a close and with a new government in Canberra – there’s still no sign of an easing of the rules on SMSFs investing in artwork that were tightened up in 2011.

17-Nov-2013

Slice of history on art auction block

Auctioneers are expecting top prices for a rare collection of rubble next week. But’s not just any rubble – it’s a collection of samples from the long-lost Pink and White Terraces, which will go under the hammer at an art auction. It’s the largest collection to be offered in one lot  from the natural formation, described as the “eighth wonder of the world.” The terraces on the edge of Lake Rotomahana near Rotorua, disappeared in 1886 when Mt Tarawera erupted, killing 120 people, burying a village and causing widespread damage. Part of the terraces were rediscovered in 2011, about 60 metres below the surface of the lake.

A decision on the fate of the collection of work by explorer artist Thomas Baines (1820-1875), provisionally sold through Christie's London by the Royal Geographical Society for £4.6 million to an unidentified collection in Australia, had been deferred for six months and will go to the Australian buyer if no party in the UK can be found to match this sum.
By Terry Ingram on 14-Nov-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Aussie heritage bite stokes strong UK reaction

While the National Gallery and the National Maritime Museum (NMM) in London were fighting over who should own a painting of a wild dog and a kangaroo by 18th century British artist George Stubbs, a quiet battle over another major piece of joint British-Australian heritage for which an export permit has been sought from Britain, has been raging.

 

A lavishly decorated Japanese hand scroll sold for $74,000 plus buyers premium or more than 10 times its top estimate at Vickers and Hoad Auctioneers in Sydney on November 11.
By Terry Ingram on 13-Nov-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Lotus lot sells to London for lots of lolly

A lavishly decorated Japanese hand scroll sold for $74,000 plus buyers premium or more than 10 times its top estimate at Vickers and Hoad Auctioneers in Sydney on November 11. Sold to a telephone bidder against competition from one of the several locally based Japanese players in the room, the interest suggests there is life yet in the faded Japanese antiquities market although the scroll was also important as a piece of Buddhist art which sometimes has a following of its own.

13-Nov-2013

Margaret Olley: Art collector buys home for $2.8 million

The final work of the late artist Margaret Olley sold at auction on Tuesday evening when her Paddington home sold to a local art collector and painter for $2.8 million. It was a hotly contested auction held off-site, with more than a handful of active bidders and a fast succession of offers once the opening bid of $2 million was made.

12-Nov-2013

Mowbray completes Webb's purchase

Mowbray Collectables has brought the hammer down on its purchase of Auckland-based Webb's auction house, priced at at least $1.3 million. The listed Otaki company signalled earlier this year its intention to buy the 51 per cent balance of Webb's auction house it did not already own.

07-Nov-2013

Artistic legend Leonard Long passes away at 102

Robert Crawford writes in The South Coast Register that renowned Australian artist and former Shoalhaven resident Leonard Long OAM has passed away aged 102. He died early Sunday morning in a Melbourne hospital. A prolific oils landscape artist, he will be remembered for his generosity in donating paintings (to many different organisations, to help raise funds) and for his help to many young artists.

07-Nov-2013

George Stubbs' kangaroo and dingo paintings to stay in UK

BBC News reports that  two George Stubbs paintings are to stay in the UK after the National Maritime Museum bought them with the help of a £1.5m donation from shipping magnate Eyal Ofer. The 18th century works were commissioned after Captain James Cook's first Endeavour voyage to the Pacific. They were put under an export bar in January after being sold to a buyer outside the UK, and sparked an appeal backed by David Attenborough to keep them in the UK.

Two batches of Australian travel posters of the 1930s took off smoothly when offered in London and New York thanks to the man who designed the flying kangaroo logo and the discovery of a bit of previously unknown refined elegance Down Under.
By Terry Ingram on 04-Nov-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Poster market moves into comfortable inflight mode

When catalogues of London and New York sales featuring some of Australia's top travel posters were distributed in October a very different off-putting image to the landscape they promoted appeared on the front pages of the New York Times and the London Daily Telegraph and on TV screens in both and many other countries.

03-Nov-2013

German police recover 1,500 modernist masterpieces 'looted by Nazis'

About 1,500 modernist masterpieces – thought to have been looted by the Nazis – have been confiscated from the flat of an 80-year-old man from Munich, in what is being described as the biggest artistic find of the postwar era. The artworks, which could be worth as much as €1bn (£860m), are said to include pieces by Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, Marc Chagall, Paul Klee, Max Beckmann and Emil Nolde. They had been considered lost until now, according to a report in the German news weekly Focus.

Brett Whiteley's 'My Armchair', 1976 (lot 42), set a new auction record for the artist and constitutes the second highest price ever paid for an Australian painting at auction with a hammer price of $3.2 million or $3.927 million including buyer's premium, selling through Menzies in Melbourne on 31 October 2013.
By David Hulme & Brigitte Banziger on 01-Nov-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Whiteley's Armchair Rocks

It has been a long time since the boom year of 2007 when the print media were excited enough to splash an Australian art auction story on the front page and the bull market was waiting with baited breath for the next great and good auction record to be broken. This week, Melbourne's The Age was happy to oblige prior to last night's auction.

By Terry Ingram on 01-Nov-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Rose withers, Rapotec gathers ground

Interest in William Rose (1929 - 1997) continues to wither even when his works appear in the fertile fields of the arbitrage market ready for picking for offering afresh in Australia. Eight works by Rose from an Australian collection offered in Edinburgh on October 5 in an Interiors sale have been returned to the vendor's residence in France after being passed in at an auction held by Lyon and Turnbull.

By Terry Ingram on 31-Oct-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

An International Friendly Occasion

Deutscher and Hackett shipped its very special Donald Friend offering from Melbourne to Sydney for sale because that was where the interest was thought to be. But one third of it went overseas with a big buyer in Bali taking much of this.

The pursuit of undervalued lots took a spirited turn at the Fine Decorative Arts + Jewellery + Fine Art auction held by Lawson's on Thursday October 24 when a folio of nine pencil drawings by Adam Gustavus Ball sold for $13,000 or $16,300 with the 25 per cent buyers premium.
By Terry Ingram on 28-Oct-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Adam Gustavus Ball drawings a great catch, says Blackheath dealer

The pursuit of undervalued lots took a spirited turn at the Fine Decorative Arts + Jewellery + Fine Art auction held by Lawson's at Leichhardt on Thursday October 24 when a folio of nine pencil drawings of various sizes, but averaging around 20 by 30 cm each by Adam Gustavus Ball (lot 683) sold for $13,000 or $16,300 with the 25 per cent buyers premium (incl. GST).

By Terry Ingram on 25-Oct-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Lost - One of the last of the Levesons

One of the last links with the George Bell School and the Leveson Street Gallery, the Melbourne commercial gallery which took many of its leading artists, has been cut with the death on October 24 of the artist Dorothy Mary Braund at the age of 86 . Jillian Holst of the Eastgate Gallery said Braund might not have been entirely happy to have this reported as Braund was a private person who lived almost exclusively for her art. But it was important for the preservation of the artist's memory and her art.

25-Oct-2013

Resale scheme scrutinised

The commercial art sector seeking relief from the resale royalty will have to wait until a government review of the scheme is completed this year. Arts Minister George Brandis says he will examine the review findings before determining the fate of Labor's resale royalty, which was introduced in 2010, writes Matthew Westwood in The Australian.

24-Oct-2013

Friend collection should 'bolster reputation'

The most significant collection of paintings, sketches, furnishings, ceramics and wood carvings from the late artist Donald Friend is set for auction in Sydney on Sunday. The 242 lots valued at more than $1 million are not from Friend's estate, nor are they owned by his partner or family. They belong Attilio Guarracino, his friend and occasional agent, writes Michaela Boland in The Australian.

18-Oct-2013

Goldie portrait could hit $1m

An Auckland auctioneer is hoping a Goldie painting can reach $1 million when it goes up for sale next month. Kawhena was painted in 1892 when the artist was only 22. It has an estimated price of $600,000 to $800,000 but, because of its importance, could go for significantly more, International Art Centre director Richard Thomson said.

17-Oct-2013

Art loses its appeal to super funds

Michaela Boland writes in The Australian that the value of art and collectables in self-managed superannuation funds plummeted 27 per cent the year after the federal government tightened the rules governing acquisitions. The Australian Taxation Office estimated the total collectables held in SMSFs to be worth $513 million at June 2012 - compared with the ATO's estimate of $699m at June 2011 when the new rules came into force.
 

08-Oct-2013

Amazon: Art Collections a Click Away

When Judy DeFord, a retired high school art teacher in Seattle, received an e-mail from Catherine Person Gallery recently, she saw a familiar name on its list of artists. It was a former student of hers, Allyce Wood. “I thought, ‘Great!,’ and I decided to make a purchase,” Ms. DeFord said.
But instead of making the 10-minute trip to the gallery, she logged onto Amazon Art, a fine-arts and collectibles category that Amazon introduced on Aug. 6.

08-Oct-2013

Sotheby’s Adopts Shareholder Rights Plan Amid Loeb Action

Sotheby’s has adopted a shareholder-rights plan to protect itself from hostile takeovers after hedge-fund manager Daniel Loeb increased his stake in the auction house and called on the chief executive officer to resign. The board adopted the so-called poison pill after the “recent rapid accumulations of significant portions” of outstanding common shares, Sotheby’s said in a statement. The move could make an attempt to take control of the company more costly.

04-Oct-2013

Sotheby's boss should resign says activist investor

The activist investor Daniel Loeb says auctioneer Sotheby's is lagging behind its rival Christie's and has called for its boss to go. He says William Ruprecht enjoys the perks of a "long-gone era of imperial CEOs", that includes club memberships.

03-Oct-2013

Hoard of stolen paintings worth $1.5m recovered in police raid

Paintings stolen from the Sydney penthouse of property developer Peter O'Mara have been uncovered by police during a raid on a house in the city's southwest. Police discovered a hoard of 18 artworks estimated to be worth more than $1.5 million.

The sale of Australian art at Christie's in London on September 26, was not an idyllic experience writes Terry Ingram from London. The most expensive work in the sale, Bush Idyll by Frederick McCubbin, which had once set an auction record for Australian art was estimated at £1.2 million to £1.8 million but was passed in £1.1 million.  It was one of the two top lots which failed to find a buyer in the sale, heightening the rough passage Australian art is having in London at the moment.
By Terry Ingram on 27-Sep-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Christie's London Australian Art Sale: Idyllic market hits rough patch

Members of the old guard turned out in force to attend the sale of Australian art held by Christie's in London on September 26, writes Terry Ingram from London.

The sale was not an idyllic experience although it might have been code named that. The most expensive work in the sale was Bush Idyll by Frederick McCubbin, (lot 22) which had once set an auction record for Australian art.

The McCubbin, estimated at £1.2 million to £1.8 million was passed in £1.1 million compared with the $A2.3 million it had made at Christies in Sydney in 1998.

26-Sep-2013

Matisse-inspired Brett Whiteley masterpiece up for auction

A Brett Whiteley masterpiece hidden from public view for almost 40 years is to be put up for auction next month. My Armchair is expected to break the record for a Whiteley painting. Art entrepreneur Rod Menzies believes the painting will sell for $3 million to $4 million
 

The critics, reviewing the Australia exhibtion at the Royal Academy of Arts In London, have understandably kow-towed to Sidney Nolan and I think he comes out at his cheekiest in his painting of a rear view of a horse with Ned Kelly as the rider. The figure morphs into a kind of Delphic god and has been used as the poster for the exhibition.
By Terry Ingram on 24-Sep-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

The Royal Academy Australia exhibition: A golden opportunity missed

There are plenty of paintings in golden frames in the exhibition Australia which opened at London's Royal Academy at the weekend and continues until December 8. These include the once most expensive Australian art work ever painted, the confident and optimistic  Golden Summers by Sir Arthur Streeton, writes Terry Ingram from London.

 

 

20-Sep-2013

Art sale to plug pension deficit

As previously reported in the Australian Art Sales Digest, the Royal Geographical Society (RGS) is selling paintings valued at £4.2m to plug a deficit in its pension scheme. The works, by the English artist Thomas Baines (1820-75), which record the early history of Australia, seem destined to go to the southern hemisphere, subject to the granting of an export licence. There is further background in this article published in The Art Newspaper.

19-Sep-2013

Australia's London art spectacular is a 'clumsy embarrassment'

For the long-anticipated show of Australian art at the Royal Academy of Arts, the opening night was always going to be a joyous affair. The problem is that nobody looks at the art at an opening. Having already spent hours inspecting this exhibition, I felt like a party-pooper when people gushed: "Isn't it wonderful?" No, it is not, writes John McDonald in  The Age.
 

19-Sep-2013

Sotheby's chairman Geoffrey Smith reignites bitter fight with former lover Robert Gould

Sotheby's chairman Geoffrey Smith has reignited the bitter public spat with his former lover, Robert Gould, over millions of dollars worth of art.

Lewis Morley, the celebrated social, fashion and theatrical photographer of the 1960s, who took the iconic photo of the period of the showgirl Christine Keeler naked and facing backward in a chair, died at the age of 88 this week in a North Shore nursing home.
By Terry Ingram on 06-Sep-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Morley swinging sixties archive follows Neville's - overseas

A second swinging sixties archive has gone offshore, writes Terry Ingram.

That may be where it belongs but it is a big loss all the more...as is the artist who created it.

The archive is that of Lewis Morley, the celebrated social, fashion and theatrical photographer who died at the age of 88 this week in a North Shore nursing home when according to his family his heart simply and peacefully stopped beating.

Watercolours commissioned to promote smoking sold for up to 200 times their estimates at an auction held by Julian Aalders in Sydney on September 1. One of the watercolours, Chilly Beauty, by Hu Boxiang (1896-1989) led the pack selling for $97,170 (including 18.5 per cent BP ) against estimates of $300 to $600, writes Terry Ingram.
By Terry Ingram on 03-Sep-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Tobacco company's non-smoking ladies catch the eye

Watercolours commissioned to promote smoking sold for up to 200 times their estimates at an auction held by Julian Aalders in Sydney on September 1. One of the watercolours, Chilly Beauty, by Hu Boxiang (1896-1989) led the pack selling for $97,170 (including 18.5 per cent BP ) against estimates of $300 to $600, writes Terry Ingram.

Cockfighter by Roland Strasser (1895-1974) failed to put up much of a fight when the oil on canvas was knocked down for $15,000 plus premium (25 per cent) or half the lower estimate at a Lawson's regular weekly Thursday antique, jewellery and art auction on August 28.
By Terry Ingram on 02-Sep-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

As Bali bubbles Friend fires and Strasser struggles

Cockfighter by Roland Strasser (1895-1974) failed to put up much of a fight when the oil on canvas was knocked down for $15,000 plus premium (25 per cent) or half the lower estimate at a Lawson's regular weekly Thursday antique, jewellery and art auction on August 28.

<i>Off</i>, 1963 by the British abstract master Bridget Riley, smashed its estimates of $60,000-$80,000 achieving a hammer price of $820,000, more than ten times the high estimate, at the Deutscher + Hackett auction on 28 August.
By David Hulme & Brigitte Banziger on 29-Aug-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Bridget’s London Blitz - “Off” goes off

Whilst not the exact inspiration for Geoffrey Rush’s portrayal of a world-famous auctioneer in his new movie ‘The Best Offer’, lead auctioneer Roger McIlroy was still a big help for the Oscar winning actor, passing on his knowledge of the craft of fine art auctioneering. Certainly when it comes to performing, McIlroy was not far off an Oscar winner of his own last night at Deutscher + Hackett’s sale of 166 lots of Australian and International Fine Art at Paddington Town Hall in Sydney.

In total Deutscher + Hackett sold $6.45 million of art, with clearance rates of 70% by volume and 86% by value.

The sale raised $1.97 million (incl. premium of 22%) for the 20 works sold from the 48 work catalogue, compared with a pre-sale estimate range of $5-6.7 million, representing a clearance of just under 42%, including the much-hyped Aborigines of Van Diemen’s Land by Robert Neill, which was bid to reserve and sold to the phone for $180,000.
By Jane Raffan on 28-Aug-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Sotheby’s Mixed-Bag Fine Art a Lucky Dip

Set to move from their Queen Street premises at year’s end, Sotheby’s must have been thankful last night that seats in the small space were reasonably filled, and the atmosphere aided by the presence of television cameras and lights, as this gave the room a sense of fulfilment and cachet that was not borne out by results.

28-Aug-2013

Woman's purchase of dodgy Margaret Preston print sparks warning about fake art sales

ABC News reports that when academic Nina Burridge opened the frame of a Margaret Preston print she had bought from a live sale from Arthouse Auctions in Sydney , she could not believe her eyes.  "Oh no, I've done my money. I thought I was buying a limited edition Margaret Preston linocut or woodcut and I thought I got a very good deal because I paid around $300 for it," she said. What she discovered, instead, was a page, cut out of a catalogue.

 

The Davidson Auctions' Collector and Estate auction in Sydney on August 24 included 35 lots of watercolours by Neville Henry Cayley (1854–1903) and his son Neville William (1886–1950) with all the lots selling and a new record set for Cayley Senior, with the first lot in the sale, <i>Nesting Pair of Rosellas in a Bush Landscape</i>, 1889 selling for $20,000 ($23,960 incl. BP).
By Terry Ingram on 27-Aug-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Bird feed brings out the peckers

The Davidson Auctions' Collector and Estate auction in Sydney on August 24 proved the principle that if you put out enough of a particular type of feed anyone who relishes it will come out and peck away until it is all gone.

By , on 26-Aug-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Liberal Party to announce major change to super art laws?

The art market rarely features in election campaigns but according to a Robert Gottliebson report in Business Spectator over the weekend:  "In the last few days I have been in the company of people very close to the art community. I have never seen them looking so happy. "They have reason to believe that Tony Abbott will allow self-managed funds to hang their art investments on the walls of the homes of fund beneficiaries."

 

26-Aug-2013

Raising the Roo: Stubbs painting sparks rival appeals from UK and Australia

More than two centuries after London was enchanted by first sight of "The Kongouro from New Holland", following Captain Cook's historic first voyage to Australia, the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich (NMM) and the National Gallery of Australia are battling to acquire remarkable paintings by George Stubbs, in which the artist struggled to represent the kangaroo and a dingo, neither of which he had seen in the flesh writes Maev Kennedy in The Guardian

 

A large (48 by 71 cm) watercolour A Settler and Her Daughter with Maoris at Wanganui, with Mount Ruapehe Beyond by the trans-Tasman artist has come to light in the UK and will be included in the much heralded Australian travel auction being held by Christie's in London on September 25.
By Terry Ingram on 25-Aug-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Room for Australian art finds in wake of NZ discovery

Australian collectors and curators probably would have preferred a previously known painting by the artist to have turned up.

But a previously unknown painting by Johan Alexander Gilfillan (1793-1864) has come to light which might even out the prices between Australian and New Zealand colonial art.

22-Aug-2013

Art dealer Ronald Coles guilty of multi-million-dollar fraud

He was one of Australia's leading art dealers, raking in millions of dollars each year and enjoying a lavish lifestyle of luxury cars and celebrity lunches. But in Parramatta District Court on Thursday, Ronald Coles admitted to multi-million-dollar fraud perpetuated over more than five years – and he is now facing jail. In a firm voice, the 65-year-old pleaded guilty to 15 counts of fraud and deception as a director, and to larceny as a bailee, committed over the past 10 years.

The top priced Nolan as per the estimates, was the wool tapestry <i>Constable Fitzpatrick and Kate Kelly</i> estimated at $50,000 to $80,000, which made $110,000 hammer, or $134,750 with BP.
By Terry Ingram on 21-Aug-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

A bit of a bounce at Bonhams

The current fashion for modernism triumphed at the sale of Important Australian Art by Bonhams in Melbourne on August 20.

The power of a single buyer and the emergence of Sir Arthur Streeton from copyright were also reflected in the unexpectedly buoyant results.

20-Aug-2013

Glover work set for brush with record

A John Glover Tasmanian landscape that has been in the same collection for almost two centuries is set to be auctioned in London next month with an asking price of $3 million to $4.34m. If it sells within that range, it will set a new record for the colonial landscape painter who immigrated to Tasmania in the years after British settlement, writes Michaela Boland in The Australian.

A Melbourne collector has consigned what now appears to be a great art find and sleeper to the Important Australian Art sale being held by Sotheby's Australia in Sydney on August 27. The painting, <i>Aborigines of Van Diemen's Land</i>, a small oil on panel by the little known Robert Neill was exhibited by Robin Hood's Gallery of Fine Arts in Somerset House in Hobart Town in March-April 1851 and has been seen only once publicly since then.
By Terry Ingram on 18-Aug-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Consignor liberates his library - and lets a sleeper go

Mr Denis Joachim is the distinguished Melbourne collector - unnamed in the catalogue - who has consigned one of the what now appears to be a great art find and sleeper to the Important Australian Art sale being held by Sotheby's Australia in Sydney on August 27. The painting, Aborigines of Van Diemen's Land , a small oil on panel by the little known Robert Neill (1801-52), is claimed to be the very earliest oil of the Indigenous Tasmanians, the Palawa.

18-Aug-2013

Australian art at London’s Royal Academy

The idea of a “national art” is surely out of date in our internationalist times. Yet many countries still wrestle with the concept of an artistic identity. And such categories are useful to museums and galleries: the Royal Academy’s big autumn show, simply called Australia, spans 200 years of the country’s art history. Famous names will rub shoulders with artists familiar only to connoisseurs, contemporary conceptualists will collide with Aboriginal artists and narrative-minded Victorians (from the era, not the state). The RA is calling it the “most significant survey of Australian art ever mounted in the UK”, writes Jane Ure-Smith in the Financial Times.

The dispersal includes three works by Brett Whiteley, acquired in 1962 from Whiteley's show at Mathiesen Fine Art in London. Some of the other Whiteleys in the show were acquired by British public collections.
By Terry Ingram on 11-Aug-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Dispersal by decorating duo brings business to three salerooms in two countries

The impending dispersal of the collection of interior decorator Mr Alex Aitken and illustrator Mr Alfredo (Bouret) Gonzalez is the third time in 18 months that saleroom habitués will have been reminded of the extraordinary contribution made by Australians to the world of style in the 1960s and 1970s.

10-Aug-2013

Fine art auction season kicks off

Over the next couple of weeks there are several major fine art auctions in Auckland and Wellington which have some big name artists and big prices as well as reasonably priced photographs and artists prints

09-Aug-2013

Plunging sales crisis for indigenous art

On the eve of the 30th annual National Aboriginal and Islander Art Award in Darwin, the indigenous art market is in crisis, felled by a combination of chaotic government policies, low buyer demand and an oversupply of new works, writes Nicholas Rothwell in The Australian

 

08-Aug-2013

Royalties scheme shines stark light on a divided landscape

Australia's complex resale royalty right for visual artists was launched in June 2010, with good intentions and much fanfare. It had an ambitious goal: to bring calibration and a degree of fairness to the art trade's frothy, speculative heights, writes Nicholas Rothwell in The Australian.

 

08-Aug-2013

Royalties to flow with return of Sidney Nolan widow

A decision by Sidney Nolan's widow to reclaim her Australian citizenship could prove lucrative following a ruling to include her late husband's art in the government's resale royalty scheme, says Tim Douglas, writing in The Australian. The artist's works had been exempt from the scheme -- a 5 per cent surcharge on the second and subsequent sales of an original work of more than $1000 - because Mary Nolan, the artist's sole beneficiary who lives in Britain, relinquished her citizenship after Nolan's death in 1992.

07-Aug-2013

Big Blue over a Whiteley settled, but jury still out on authenticity

The case brought against a leading art consultant over the $2.5 million sale of an alleged fake Brett Whiteley painting has been dismissed by the NSW Supreme Court. But questions remain as to whether the painting referred to as Lavender Bay, signed and dated ''Brett Whiteley 1988'', is genuine, writes Andrew Taylor, in the Sydney Morning Herald .

By Terry Ingram on 05-Aug-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Whiteley legal action settled.

The suit by a Sydney banker Mr Andrew Pridham against Melbourne art dealer Ms Anita Archer was dismissed by Justice I. Harrison in the Supreme Court in Sydney today. (Monday)

Owners of businesses in Sydney's Queen Street, once the undisputed hub of the NSW antique trade, will welcome reports that Ros Palmer, a doyen of the decorator end of the trade, has sold her property at number 30 for a reputed $2.75 million to Sotheby's Australia.
By Terry Ingram on 05-Aug-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Display window and ground floor beckons Sotheby's to Queen Street, Woollahra

Owners of businesses in Sydney's Queen Street, Woolahra, once the traditional hub of the NSW antique trade, will welcome reports that Ros Palmer, a doyen of the decorator end of the trade, has sold her property at number 30 for a reputed $2.75 million to Sotheby's Australia.

By Terry Ingram on 05-Aug-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

National Museum of Australia hooks some fine weed

The National Museum of Australia has emerged as the buyer of an exquisite album of seaweed specimens sold as lot 133 at Gowans Auctions antique sale in Hobart on June 29 for $8500 plus 15 per cent buyers premium, writes Terry Ingram

 

 

02-Aug-2013

Record price for New Zealand artist

New Zealand artist Alvin Pankhurst, who won his first art award as a seven-year-old at school, has achieved a record price at a sale of important early and rare art in Auckland. His 2006 oil on acrylic on canvas, called About Time, sold for $55,000 at an auction at the International Art Centre last night.

01-Aug-2013

Convict painting a rare find

A rare portrait by a Tasmanian convict is expected to create competition between public institutions when it is auctioned in Sydney next month, writes Lucy Shannon in The Australian. The watercolour painted in 1846 by Thomas Wainewright depicts Thomas Giblin, a one-time director of the Bank of Van Diemen's Land.
 

This watercolour of Brisbane's main railway station by J J Hilder was sold for $12,000 plus BP by Theodore Bruce in Sydney, but it is the type of work Leonard Joel in another city, tradition-bound Melbourne, could be on the lookout for, now that it has Anne Phillips as a full time representative in Sydney.
By Terry Ingram on 31-Jul-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Anne Phillips clocks on to Joels in Sydney

The managing director of Melbourne based auction house Leonard Joel, Mr John Albrecht, is reviving NSW ambitions for the company with the appointment of Ms Anne Phillips as its full time representative in Sydney.

By Terry Ingram on 31-Jul-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Royalty cut-off brings Streetons off the walls

Sir Arthur Streeton was born May 8 1857 but his death on September 2, 1943 is of more interest to the art trade and far more likely to be celebrated.

Sydney's old established Union, University and Schools Club has found itself the owner of a seriously valuable large sculpture when Lord Leighton's <i>An Athlete Wrestling a Python</i>, sold for £494,000 ($A820,000) at Christie's sale of <i> Victorian & British Impressionist Art</i> in London on July 11.
By Terry Ingram on 25-Jul-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

London sale lifts value of Union Club mascot

It is just as well Sydney's old established Union, University and Schools Club did not go ahead and sell its prize piece of Victorian sculpture five years ago, as proposed in 2008, for on July 11 it found itself the owner of a seriously valuable large sculpture in its foyer. At Christie's sale of Victorian & British Impressionist Art sale the club's bronze sculpture, Lord Leighton's An Athlete Wrestling a Python, is from the same edition which yielded a specimen sold at Christie's in London for £494,000 ($A820,000).

 

At a sale by Young's Auctions on July 12 at its rooms in East Hawthorn, Melbourne a poster by Melbourne artist Esther Paterson for Melbourne's Savage Club, known as <i>Women Not Allowed </i>sold for $2000. The title was a reference to attendance at the event and the notorious exclusive attitude of the clubs to women. Obviously the poster's warning did not apply to the buyer, or the market would have been much depleted.
By Terry Ingram on 25-Jul-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Interest in pencil drawings sharpens up

Interest in the pencil drawings appears to have sharpened lately as a result of the appearance of two rare caches of works on the Melbourne auction market. The interest is hardly a bubble - although a very rare early drawing of a "bubble" was included among one of the offerings – but they drawings created a buzz rare to recent mixed vendor art and antique sales.   

24-Jul-2013

Significant Kiwi artworks up for auction

An auction featuring some of this country's most significant artists includes works owned by Eric and Kathy Hertz, who died when their plane crashed into the sea near Kawhia in March. Among the paintings being auctioned are a 1910 oil of  Arawa chieftainess Rakapa by Charles Frederick Goldie, which is expected to bring up to $250,000. 

21-Jul-2013

NGA's offloaded Shiva statue takes pride of place in Abu Dhabi

In the opaque world of art buying, one man's trash is another gallery's treasure. In this case, a 1000-year-old bronze statue of Shiva sold by the National Gallery of Australia to help purchase a larger Shiva from a disgraced antiquities dealer has turned up in the collection of one of the world's leading museums, reports Andrew Taylor, the Arts reporter for the Sydney Morning Herald.

20-Jul-2013

Money repaid after Blackman artworks turn out not to be his

Art collectors who thought they bought genuine Charles Blackmans have been refunded $120,000 after the expert who authenticated the works admitted he got it wrong, writes Rick Feneley in the Sydney Morning Herald.
 

19-Jul-2013

Sidney Nolan work takes wing, after 65 years

A rare Sidney Nolan giant bird painting will be offered for sale for the first time in 65 years when it goes under the hammer at Sotheby's Australian art sale in Sydney next month, writes Michaela Boland in "The Australian"

A major painting <i>Evening After a Storm, Near the Island of St Paul</i> 1854 (detail shown) by Eugene von Guerard, previously 'whereabouts unknown' has turned up in Sweden and been repatriated for the front cover of a Melbourne art dealer's catalogue.
By Terry Ingram on 17-Jul-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

A Perfect Storm

A major painting previously "whereabouts unknown" has turned up in Sweden and been repatriated for the front cover of a Melbourne art dealer's catalogue. The painting  Evening After a Storm, Near the Island of St Paul 's 1854 by Eugene von Guerard (1811-1901) is the cover painting for the collection From Van Diemen's Land to the MCG put together for sale by Melbourne-based Ms Lauraine Diggins, writes Terry Ingram.

By Terry Ingram on 16-Jul-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Litsa Veldekis returns to Menzies, while D'Lan Davidson moves to Mossgreen as auction industry takes stock.

Two auction houses have responded to difficult markets by the very different strategies of re-appointing a former stalwart and redistributing duties among existing staff. A third has taken an expansive view and appointed a competitor's departing staff, writes Terry Ingram.

 

By Terry Ingram on 16-Jul-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Australian connections at Bonham's London sales

At Bonhams New Bond Street rooms in the July 16 sale of prints, The Joke by Ethel Spowers ( 1890-1947) sold for £85,250.

The colourful 1932 linocut was among the body of work done by the artist inspired by Claude Flight's modernistic prints.

 

An unlikely death has taken place at Knowsley Hall in Derbyshire whose occupant, the Earl of Derby sold a $7 million collection of early colonial drawings to Sydney's Mitchell Library two years ago.
By Terry Ingram on 10-Jul-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Art primate shot

One of the likely beneficiaries of what is believed to have been the biggest ever Australian colonial art deal was shot dead after being pursued in a helicopter police chase last month.

The beneficiary, a male primate from a safari park in Derbyshire, was shot, reportedly trying to protect his only female from being abducted by antagonistic males, writes Terry Ingram.

09-Jul-2013

The art of deception: How forgers get away with it

As police smash yet another counterfeit ring in Germany and Israel, Georgina Adam looks at why this billion-dollar business is growing – and why buyers are so easily taken in.

In a highly rewarding piece of arbitrage of the kind that has been lacking in the Australian saleroom since the early days of the internet made global communications available to all, four panels from an altar- piece which went through a Melbourne auction room for $30,000 in March this year sold for £181,875 including BP at  Christie's in London on July 3  writes Terry Ingram.
By Terry Ingram on 05-Jul-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

The heavenly ascent of a Melbourne altar find

Four panels from an altar- piece which went through a Melbourne auction room for $30,000 in March this year sold for £181,875 including BP at  Christie's in London on July 3.

The result pointed to a highly rewarding piece of arbitrage of the kind that has been lacking in the Australian saleroom since the early days of the internet made easy global communications available to all, writes Terry Ingram.

02-Jul-2013

Shiva picture in book backs up looting theory

A 900-year-old granulite sculpture of Shiva with Nandi that the Art Gallery of NSW acquired from disgraced dealer Subhash Kapoor, has been strongly linked to a temple in southern India.

Douglas E. Barrett's 1974 book Early Cola Architecture and Sculpture 886-1014 AD contains a picture of a carving indistinguishable from the 112cm Shiva that the Sydney gallery paid $300,000 for in 2004, writes Michaela Boland in The Australian.

 

The Art Gallery of NSW has emerged as the buyer of The Breakfast Table 1958 by John Brack at Bonhams sale of the Reg Grundy and Joy Chambers-Grundy collection by Bonhams Australia in Sydney on June 26, acquired with funds from the Art Gallery of NSW Foundation and the Australian Masterpiece Fund.
By Terry Ingram on 01-Jul-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

AGNSW makes big breakfast of Grundy

The day is obviously beginning earlier for the director and staff of the Art Gallery of NSW, writes Terry Ingram. After missing out on the splendid "lost Impressionist" In the Afternoon by  John Peter Russell at Sotheby's in Melbourne on May 16 the gallery has now emerged as the buyer of The Breakfast Table 1958  (lot 45) by John Brack at Bonhams sale of the Reg Grundy and Joy Chambers-Grundy collection by Bonhams Australia in Sydney on June 26.

01-Jul-2013

It's Olleymania as bidders show precious little reserve

Spectators were spilling out the doors and some bidders had to wave paddles high above their heads to be seen by the auctioneer, as more than 500 people turned out for the final dispersal of Margaret Olley's distinctive bric-a-brac and domestic artworks at the National Art School in Sydney yesterday, reports Michaela Boland in The Australian.

28-Jun-2013

Straw hat, brushes under the hammer in Olley estate firesale

A collection of Margaret Olley's paintbrushes and a signature straw hat will be auctioned this weekend in the final dispersal of the late artist's estate. Mossgreen auctioneers will wave a gavel over 318 lots of the artist's jewellery, bric-a-brac, paintings and furniture at the National Art School on Sunday afternoon. A garage sale vibe will prevail, with items priced from $5 for a straw hat to $45,000 for an interior scene painted by Olley, writes Michaela Boland in The Australian.
The auction of 99 works from Reg and Joy Chambers-Grundy, held by Bonhams Australia in Sydney on June 26 grossed $19.6 million to become the most valuable single owner sale in Australia. A very satisfactory total of 84 per cent of the collection was sold by lot and 85 per cent by value, with 12 new artist auction records being set, including for the top lot of the auction, Fred Williams' You Yangs Landscape 1, 1963 which sold for $2,287,500 including premium.
By Terry Ingram on 27-Jun-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Twist of fortune for prize collection

The auction of 99 works from Reg and Joy Chambers-Grundy, held by Bonhams Australia in Sydney at the Overseas Passenger Terminal in Circular Quay on June 26 grossed $19.6 million to become the most valuable single owner sale in Australia. Being sold as the Grundys reduce the number of houses they occupy from six to three, it did this despite being only half the Grundy collection, writes Terry Ingram.

The couple, whose wealth derived largely from the acquisition of the local franchise of the TV games show Wheel of Fortune in 1981 were not entirely blessed by good fortune this week. The appointment of a new Prime Minister taking place at the same time clearly enjoyed a higher rating than the sale as many reserved seats were not taken and the bidding was long, drawn-out and people's minds were elsewhere.

A New Guinean wooden carved roof figure sold for an unprecedented €2.5 million (AU$3,520,000) including buyers premium at the Christie's auction of tribal art in Paris on June 19. The sum was a new record for any piece of Oceanic art and more than double the estimate, writes Terry Ingram from Paris
By Terry Ingram on 23-Jun-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Savage Spirit's €2.5 million sprint

A New Guinea wooden carved roof figure designed to ward off evil cast its spell at the Christie's auction of tribal art in Paris on June 19. Expecting some excitement from this well known great rarity, the packed room was entranced, giving the lot a rapturous round of applause when it sold for an unprecedented €2.5 million (AU$3,520,000) including buyers premium. The sum was a new record for any piece of Oceanic art and more than doubled the estimates which ranged from €750,000 to €1 million, writes Terry Ingram.

 

21-Jun-2013

Jeffrey Smart dead at 91

Painter Jeffrey Smart has died peacefully of renal failure, aged 91. Adelaide-born Smart, who relocated to Italy in 1964 "slipped away" in hospital Thursday evening Australian time, said Stuart Purves, one of two gallerists who represented the painter in Australia.

19-Jun-2013

First choose a pretty sitter: rules that can send the value of a painting sky high

A reclining woman, a cricket bat or a well-bred horse are all fundamental to the sale price of paintings, according to a set of rules developed by one of Britain's most distinguished experts on modern art. Philip Hook, the senior specialist at Sotheby's who declared last week that red paintings sell for up to 50 per cent more than equivalent works in drab colours, has identified dozens of hidden rules that subtly determine whether an auction room is clamorous or hushed.

15-Jun-2013

Affairs of the Art

How is an artist's reputation made? And how is it maintained after death? Katrina Strickland,  arts editor of The Australian Financial Review, explores these eternal and infernal questions by concentrating in particular on the way artists' estates are managed in Australia. The main characters in this book are the widows and other relations, or the estate executors, of a sample of 15 postwar Australian artists, most of whom have had work sold at auction for sums involving six and sometimes seven figures.

It is not every day that one finds an Australian artist's work given pride of place in a top tier art gallery at the world's most spectacular art fair. That is exactly the case with two sculptures and two works on paper by Robert Klippel showcased on his own wall at Art Basel with Galerie Gmuryznska.
By David Hulme & Brigitte Banziger on 13-Jun-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Robert Klippel - Good As Gold

It is not every day that one finds an Australian artist's work given pride of place in a top tier art gallery at the world's most spectacular art fair. That is exactly the case with two sculptures and two works on paper by Robert Klippel (1920 - 2001) showcased on his own wall at Art Basel with Galerie Gmuryznska, founded in 1965, with commercial spaces in Zurich, Zug and St. Moritz, which attracts high rolling art collectors from around the globe, with 300 private jets rumored to land at Basel airport.

At Art Basel, Tasmanian photographer Simryn Gill has an extraordinarily large space showcasing her series of photographs titled 'My own private Angkor' 2007-2009, write David Hulme and Brigitte Banziger from Switzerland.
By David Hulme & Brigitte Banziger on 13-Jun-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Art Trifecta 2013: Hong Kong, Venice and Basel

Not necessarily at Art Basel Hong Kong, but certainly at the Venice Biennale and now at Art Basel in its 44th edition, Australians are pretty thin on the ground. Melbourne-based art consultant Sophie Ullin tells us: 'It is usually the same familiar faces that you see here in Basel and it really feels a bit exclusive'. It is no doubt a logistical challenge to get to the three big openings in the space of less than three weeks, especially from the Antipodes.

Work attributed to French artist Lazarre Bruandet, whose paintings appear in Paris’s Musée D’Orsay, is among the European artists represented at the Philips Australia auction of the estates of Eric Westbrook, former director of the National Gallery of Victoria, and artist Dawn Sime.
By , on 12-Jun-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Paintings from the estate of Eric Westbrook, former director of the National Gallery of Victoria to be sold.

Notable 18th and 19th century European paintings along with works by an Australian art industry icon will be the major feature of Philips Auctions latest sale from noon Sunday June 16 at 47 Glenferrie Road, Malvern. Works attributed to French artists Lazarre Bruandet, whose paintings appear in Paris's Musée D'Orsay, and Charles Eschard - who has works on display at Musée Caen and the Louvre - are among the European artists involved in the auction, which also includes several Italian paintings from the same period.

A price of one million kroner (hammer), $Au194,000 with premium - or five times the estimate - has been paid for Shipwreck off an Australian Coast by Eugene von Guerard at a Stockholm saleroom, writes Terry Ingram.
By Terry Ingram on 08-Jun-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Aussie Lifeboat For Sinking Ship

A price of one million kroner - or five times the estimate - has helped offset some of the disappointment felt by the elderly Swedish vendor for being told a painting he had consigned was by Eugene von Guerard.

 

08-Jun-2013

Gallery paid art smuggler $3.8m for 'treasures' of India

A joint investigation by The Weekend Australian and The Los Angeles Times has uncovered copies of invoices indicating that the NGA went on a $3.8 million buying spree, acquiring six precious Indian artefacts between 2005 and 2008 from alleged Indian smuggling mastermind Subhash Kapoor, writes Michaela Boland in The Australian.
 

04-Jun-2013

Aboriginal artist Dorothy Napangardi killed in car crash

ABC News reports that prominent Aboriginal artist Dorothy Napangardi was killed in a car accident near Alice Springs at the weekend. Napangardi was regarded as one of Australia's leading contemporary Aboriginal artists, and her works are contained in major collections around the world.

02-Jun-2013

Art dealers face new scrutiny

Eamonn Duff writes in the Sydney Morning Herald, that Gallery owners may be forced to operate under licence and use trust accounts under sweeping new art industry changes to be considered by the federal government. Arts Minister Tony Burke has called a summit with the nation's peak visual arts body, the National Association for the Visual Arts, with a view to introducing new measures to provide greater protection for professional artists and the public.

01-Jun-2013

Aboriginal art loses its lustre

A modest crowd braved the cold to attend Sotheby's Australia's Aboriginal art sale on Tuesday night. They assembled in the beige meeting room where the company holds its auctions, several floors below its offices in Anzac House, at the Paris end of Melbourne's Collins Street. Some of the items on offer were considered to be exceptional, but the sight of the same old faces didn't do much to pique the interest of those attending, writes Michaela Boland in The Australian

30-May-2013

Christie’s London hoping for record Australian art sale

The painting that held the record price for an Australian artwork at auction for nearly a decade before the modernists run of 2006-10, and was once owned by a member of the Waterhouse racing family, is coming back to market. Frederick McCubbin’s 1893 painting Bush Idyll has been consigned to Christie’s London for its annual Australian art sale, to be held on September 26. The auction, which also includes a John Glover priced at £1.8 million to £2.5 million ($2.8 million to $3.9 million), has been timed to coincide with the Royal Academy of Art’s big survey of Australian art, which opens only days earlier in the British capital, writes Katrina Strickland in the Australian Financial Review..

Above, Sir Alfred Munnings, <i>The Ford</i>, 1910, oil on canvas, signed lower left and dated, 34.5 x 45 cm, estimate AU$150,000 to AU$300,000, to be offered for sale at Davidson Auctions on 1st June.
By David Hulme & Brigitte Banziger on 18-May-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Sydney auctioneer Robert Davidson “more joyous” with consignment of two early important horse paintings by Sir Alfred Munnings

Robert Davidson of Davidson Auctions has pulled off a big win in the horse stakes: the two paintings by British master Alfred James Munnings (1878 – 1959) in his upcoming fine art auction on 1st June are sparkling early examples of the artist’s oeuvre.

One of the most understated sales promotions of the year is for the collection put together by one of Australia's most flamboyant collectors, the late Mr Emmanuel Margolin and the emphasis is on porcelain, vases and clocks in the Sevres manner, mounted animal trophies, and the ecelecticism for which the exuberant character was well known.
By Terry Ingram on 16-May-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Modest exit for a mega player

One of the most understated sales promotions of the year is for the collection put together by one of Australia's most flamboyant collectors.

The private collection of antiques and decorative arts being sold by Mossgreen Auctions in its rooms in Melbourne on Monday 20th May belonged to the late Mr Emmanuel Margolin, writes our corrospondent, Terry Ingram

15-May-2013

At almost $1 million, Whiteley bath painting hot property

A Brett Whiteley painting that has been held in a private US collection for more than 40 years has fetched just under $1 million – more than $600,000 above the reserve – at auction. In its first major auction in its new Collins Street premises on Tuesday night, Sotheby's Melbourne sold Woman in a Bath 1, 1963, to a telephone bidder for $976,000, well above the pre-sale estimate of between $200,000 and $300,000

Lady Casey’s collection had the honour of kicking off the auction and lot 1, Eugene von Guerard’s engaging pair, (one shown above) Police Paddock 1855, did not disappoint yielding a sound $180,000 winning bid against a low estimate of $150,000
By Sophie Ullin on 29-Apr-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Deutscher + Hackett: Increased Confidence meets with Raised Expectations

Deutscher + Hackett’s first auction for 2013 was a sale that demonstrated the burgeoning confidence in the market place accompanied by rising expectations which, lamentably at this early stage of recovery, were not always quite in accord. Even so, the auction was certainly successful with a tally of $4.5 million IBP and 77% clearance rate by volume.

25-Apr-2013

Several surprises at D and H fine-art auction

Quality art attracted competitive bidding at Deutscher and Hackett's first fine art auction for the year in Melbourne last night, but it was cold comfort for the rest that was on offer. Of the 138 artworks offered for an estimated $4.8million to $6.5m, 75 per cent found buyers. The auction house recorded total sales of $4.5m, including the buyers premium.

Charles Leski and Paul Sumner of Mossgreen Auctions are to become Australia's third largest auction house and will merge their operations and base them at the old Sotheby's premises at 926 High Street Armadale, the former Armadale Picture Theatre.
By Terry Ingram on 23-Apr-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Curtain lifted on old theatre purchase. Leski and Sumner merge.

The rationale for the recent purchase by “associates” of Charles Leski of Sotheby's old rooms in Melbourne's Armadale has become clearer with the disclosure that Leski and Paul Sumner of Mossgreen Auctions are to become Australia's third largest auction house and will merge their operations and base them there, writes Terry Ingram.

23-Apr-2013

Fraudster's art under hammer

Two paintings once owned by fake Tahitian "prince" Joel Morehu-Barlow will be offered for sale tomorrow at Deutscher and Hackett's fine art auction in Melbourne. Unlike the carnivalesque auction of Barlow's goods held in Brisbane last month, the two paintings have not been marketed with reference to the fraudster.

Ethel Spowers, 'The Giant Stride', sold for a swinging £85,250 ($126,330) at Bonham’s London on 16 April.
By David Hulme & Brigitte Banziger on 18-Apr-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Ethel Spowers comes out swinging

The Grosvenor School’s best modernist printmakers continue to produce extraordinary saleroom prices at Bonham’s’ London sale on 16 April. Spurred on by the breakthrough sale last year of Gust of Wind for £114,050 ($168,986), all including buyer’s premium), Spowers’ The Giant Stride, a linocut from an edition of 50, sold for £85,250 ($126,330).

17-Apr-2013

Agents Descend on a New York Gallery, Charging Its Owner

Outside the rarefied world of art dealers and collectors, where discretion is often prized nearly as much as the art itself, the Nahmad family does not attract the same recognition as some of their fellow billionaires. But for those who trade in multimillion-dollar paintings, they have long been a major presence at the premier auctions held every spring and fall at Sotheby’s and Christie’s, where they often descend, wives and children included, and have been known to argue loudly with one another, even while others around them engaged in more genteel bidding.

16-Apr-2013

Family to auction obscure Streeton landscape

Tullochs Auctions in Launceston usually specialises in colonial furniture but tomorrow's auction will feature a mid-sized Arthur Streeton oil painting too. The auction house says the landscape was painted during the 1930s. It has been owned by members of the Tresise family since 1949 when, according to Singapore-based headhunter Ian Tresise, his parents bought it from an art gallery in Melbourne. The pastoral scene depicted in the painting is evocative of Victoria's Western District farming region and the auction house has called the painting Dunkeld, the name of a town there.
 

12-Apr-2013

New Zealand art auction draws $2m

An art auction of "unprecedented quality and calibre" and boasting some of the biggest names in contemporary New Zealand art pulled in around $2 million when the works went under the hammer in Auckland last night. More than 200 collectors attended Art + Object's first major art event of the year in Newton, with phone and online bidders from as far away as Europe also bidding on the 66 pieces.

For well over a decade David Roche, who died in Adelaide on March 27 at the age of 83, was by far Australia's biggest collector of antiques. On at least 50 overseas trips, Roche purchased 18th and early 19th century decorative arts with an estimated value of over $70 million which have been channelled into the David Roche Foundation and  will be on public view at a property in Melbourne Street, North Adelaide.
By Terry Ingram on 10-Apr-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

The warm heart of the man from Icicle. Australia's biggest antique collector leaves $70 million bequest

For well over a decade David Roche, who died in Adelaide on March 27 at the age of 83, was by far Australia's biggest collector of antiques, writes Terry Ingram. On at least 50 overseas trips, many also coinciding with the dog competitions he judged, Roche purchased 18th and early 19th century decorative arts with an estimated value of over $70 million. These have been channelled into the David Roche Foundation, which he established in 1999 and which  will be housed and a substantial part on public view at a property in Melbourne Street, North Adelaide.

The National Gallery of Australia has jumped into the international art market by agreeing to purchase a pair of Australian related works of a kangaroo and a dingo by the British 18th century animal painter George Stubbs, through London dealer Neville Keating. The works have been in the possession of descendants of the botanist Joseph Banks family since their execution.
By Terry Ingram on 05-Apr-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Two hunters abandon chase but Radford sniffs out roo and dingo

While the director of the National Gallery of Australia, Ron Radford, is now lunging into the international art market with a bid for a pair of Australian related works by the British 18th century animal painter George Stubbs, two other “big spenders” in their own particular specialities will be missing from the Australiana market this year.

30-Mar-2013

Top dollar paid at rare art at auction

A sale of unique New Zealand art, including work by acclaimed artists Ralph Hotere and Charles F. Goldie, exceeded expectations when it went under the hammer on Wednesday night. The event, at Webb's auction house in Auckland, caused excitement amongst art collectors due to the rarity of the paintings on offer.

The most important lot in the Deutscher and Hackett sale was a wonderful and rare 1881 sketchbook containing 14 images in black and blue ink on paper by the Aboriginal stockman Tommy McRae. There were several bidders with the eventual winner taking home this most rare and perfect prize for $228,000.
By Adrian Newstead on 29-Mar-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Aboriginal art continues its rise on a steadily improving market.

It looked like an accident waiting to happen. At the start of the Deutscher and Hackett auction of Aboriginal & Oceanic Art in Melbourne on March 27, there were just 55 people in the room, half of whom were dealers: including Hank Ebes, Adam Knight and William Mora, Vivien Anderson and Ken McGregor. The largest vendor, Delmore Gallery’s Don Holt, looked anxiously from the wings as the sale began with 20 of his own works by the legendary Emily Kngwarreye up for sale.

For their 24 April auction, Deutscher and Hackett have announced the consignment of two very early Von Guérard views of Police Paddock – better known today as the site of the MCG, consigned from the Estate of the Lady Casey.
By Meaghan Wilson-Anastasios on 28-Mar-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Deutscher and Hackett kick a goal with early von Guérard views of Police Paddock

Tonight may be the ‘blockbuster’ launch of the footy season in Melbourne, but for the art world, Deutscher and Hackett’s 24 April auction is shaping up to be a ‘blockbuster’ of another kind.  In a case of very auspicious timing, Deutscher and Hackett have announced the consignment of two very early Von Guérard views of Police Paddock – better known today as the site of the MCG.

The packed 5 hour Bonham's sale of the Elizabeth and Colin Laverty Collection of Contemporary Australian Art was steered by auctioneer James Hendy with good cheer and rather little fanfare to a highly successful clearance of more than 100% by value and 87% by lot, reaping just under $5.1M.
By Jane Raffan on 25-Mar-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Bonham’s Laverty Sale: Farewell without Fanfare and a Haul of New Records

The Foundation Hall at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, was packed by a crowd of around 300 who came to pay homage and participate in the sale of 266 lots from the Elizabeth and Colin Laverty Collection Contemporary Australian Art. The ambience was expectant, but reserved, and was marked throughout by bustle from the back bar, where the espresso machine was in constant employ throughout the 5 hour long event. After a delayed start, and apart from exuberant applause for a few stand-out record breaking sales early on, James Hendy steered the sale with good cheer and rather little fanfare to a highly successful clearance of more than 100% by value and 87% by lot, reaping just under $5.1M.

Coinciding with events unfolding in Canberra on the day of the auction, the lot which probably spurred the most interest of any of the night, was a portrait of Prime Minister Robert Menzies by William Dobell from 1949, with the final bidder (voter) electing to pay a $22,000 hammer price on estimates of $15,000-20,000
By David Hulme & Brigitte Banziger on 23-Mar-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Bidder (Voter) elects to pay $ 22,000 for portrait of Robert Menzies on day of Labor woes

With a certain degree of coincidence to events unfolding in the capital on the day of the auction, the lot which probably spurred the most interest of any of the night, was a portrait of Prime Minister Robert Menzies by William Dobell (lot 110) from 1949, the year Menzies began his second term of office. On a day of high farce from the Labor Party, interest in this former liberal leader surged with the final bidder (voter) electing to pay a $22,000 hammer price on estimates of $15,000-20,000.

21-Mar-2013

Tretchikoff's Chinese Girl fetches nearly £1m at auction

Original of one of the most reproduced pictures in the world sells for twice its estimate and a record sum for a work by the artist. The original Chinese Girl, a painting that has become one of the most recognisable and reproduced pictures in the world, sold for twice its estimate when a buyer paid nearly £1m at an auction on Wednesday. The work was sold at Bonhams in London where a new auction record was set for the artist, the late Vladimir Tretchikoff, a Russian émigré who settled in South Africa and regarded his work with utmost seriousness.

By Meaghan Wilson-Anastasios on 15-Mar-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Sotheby’s in the City

It’s no accident that Sotheby’s Australia has found itself a temporary new home at the Paris-end of Collins Street with such recherché neighbours as Gucci, Vuitton and Prada. The company’s Melbourne saleroom sits comfortably amongst the myriad luxury international brands that pepper the top end of town.

By Meaghan Wilson-Anastasios on 15-Mar-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Big Shoes to Fill

In the world of sports memorabilia and philatelic auctions, Charles Leski is a towering presence. But it is a niche marketplace. Conducting business in this specialised field does not require foot-traffic and a prominent street frontage; the company’s headquarters in the Melbourne suburb of Hawthorn East seemed to fit the bill nicely.

By Meaghan Wilson-Anastasios on 13-Mar-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Fairweather on the Horizon for Deutscher and Hackett

The consignment of four works of art by the hand of one of Australia’s greatest painters doesn’t attract media attention as a matter of course. An exception to the rule is when that artist is Ian Fairweather.

By Meaghan Wilson-Anastasios on 13-Mar-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Bonhams shows it's serious about the Australian market

Any suspicion that Bonhams Australia was keeping the doors open to spite Tim Goodman after his much-publicised switch of allegiance to the Sotheby’s brand in 2009 has been put firmly to rest by the company’s latest moves.

The first art work acquired by the new director of the Art Gallery of NSW, Michael Brand is the Albert Durer engraving <i>Melencolia I.</i> purchased in New York at auction in late January, and most probably the specimen sold for $US530,000 at Christies New York on January 29.
By Terry Ingram on 07-Mar-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Gallery happy with Melancholy

Despite its title, the first art work acquired by the new director of the Art Gallery of NSW (AGNSW), Michael Brand, should be a particular source of satisfaction to the beleaguered institution.

The gallery has bought the Albert Durer engraving  Melencolia I.  giving  it a leg up in an area of collecting for which the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) in particularly celebrated.

By Meaghan Wilson-Anastasios on 06-Mar-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Bonhams bags the sale of the century.

In what is likely to be the ‘Sale of the Century’, auction house Bonhams has landed the most sought-after Australian art market prize in recent memory.

TV pioneer and king-maker, Reg Grundy AC OBE, and his wife, Joy Chambers-Grundy, are dispersing ninety works of art from their important collection of Australian art. With an estimated price range between $15.5 million and $20.8 million, the Grundy Collection has the potential to eclipse the Harold E. Mertz Collection sold at Christie’s in 2000 for a total of $15.9 million and the Sotheby’s dispersal of the Fosters Collection of Australian Art for $13.3 million in 2005. These figures are all the more remarkable given that the Mertz and Fosters auctions were conducted during the booming market of the early and mid-noughties, and include buyer’s premium.

05-Mar-2013

Twenty paintings by desert artist Emily Kame Kngwarreye to be offered for sale

The Aboriginal art market will be tested further this month when 20 paintings by acclaimed desert artist Emily Kame Kngwarreye are offered for sale by Deutscher and Hackett. The works were collected by the Holt family, owners of Delmore Downs, a cattle station near Utopia, north of Alice Springs, where the artist widely referred to as Emily spent much of her time.

 

25-Feb-2013

Ralph Hotere dies, age 81

Artist Ralph Hotere, who has died aged 81, was a “warrior artist” whose provocative work portrayed some of the country’s most divisive historical events. Hotere was a painter, sculptor and collaborative artist and was regarded as one of New Zealand 's most important contemporary artists.

A large (69 by 102 cm) watercolour of the Yorkshire seaside resort, Scarborough Town and Castle. Morning Boys Catching Crabs, has become the property of the AGSA Australia after a loan agreement which placed it in the gallery lasting for several decades.
By Terry Ingram on 23-Feb-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

A tidal taste turner

A little-reported art deal may help rid the Australian art market of a curious aberration in taste it has laboured under for nearly half a century.  Thanks in part to a painting acquisition by the Art Gallery of South Australia (AGSA), J.M.W Turner may become even more dearly cherished in Australia than J.A Turner.

22-Feb-2013

State of the art

With Sydney's commercial galleries struggling to get people through the door due to the rise of online trading, attitudes to selling in the art world are being forced to change.
 

20-Feb-2013

Brush with riches short-lived as prices tumble

It could be a sign of more puritanical times, the continuing hangover of the GFC or perhaps the fickle tastes of the art world. But the average sale price of paintings by David Bromley, who specialises in nudes slashed with stripes of colour, has dropped by more than 50 per cent since 2007. The average price of a Bromley artwork was $4565 in 2012, less than half the $9990 his paintings fetched in 2007, according to figures compiled by the Australian Art Sales Digest.

11-Feb-2013

Esteemed art collector dies at 75

Sydney doctor Colin Laverty, the founder of Laverty Pathology who, together with his wife Elizabeth, built one of the best collections of Aboriginal art in private hands, has died in Sydney, aged 75. Laverty’s death comes after a period living with cancer, before which he and Elizabeth decided to sell, for the first time, a substantial slice of the art collection they had spent 30 years building.

07-Feb-2013

One of the world’s oldest art dealers to close

Agnews, one of the world’s oldest art dealers, is to close. The 195-year-old London gallery will cease trading on April 30, after a final outing at the European Fine Art Fair in Maastricht. Chairman Julian Agnew is from the sixth generation to work for the family firm, which has long been in decline. In 2008 the chairman sold its historic Bond Street premises, purpose-built by his great-great grandfather in 1877, for a reported £25m, and moved to a smaller space in nearby Albemarle Street.

Tretchikoff's
By Terry Ingram on 29-Jan-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

A very Everage offering

Australia's once best loved painting is coming up for sale in an auction of South African art.

Hopefully Dame Edna will open her purse to buy it for the nation, for it was she who identified the work as such and the work is not so highly regarded by the aesthetes.

29-Jan-2013

As Art Values Rise, So Do Concerns About Market’s Oversight

When some of the world’s richest people gather for the glittering New York auction season this spring, they will spend hundreds of millions of dollars in an art market that allows opaque transactions and has few outside monitors. At major auctions the first bids announced for a piece are typically fictional — numbers pulled from the air by the auctioneer to jump-start bidding

22-Jan-2013

Australian art tours before sale

Select pieces of a notable Australian indigenous art collection are to go on show in London and New York ahead of their sale in Sydney. The contemporary Laverty collection, collated by lauded Australian doctor Colin Laverty and his wife, Elizabeth, is expected to fetch up to $A5.5 million when it goes under the hammer on March 24 at the harbour city's Museum of Contemporary Ar

 

A modestly sized (22 x 13 cm) mannerist drawing on paper which Lugosi Auctioneers confidently catalogued as 16th century had an inscription associating it with the 2nd Earl of Spencer's collection. The buyer certainly thought he was on to something as the drawing of a crowned man with other figures made $9,500 plus BP.
By Terry Ingram on 18-Jan-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

New sleepers at backpacker lodge

One of Sydney's most popular and best sited B & B's, a National Trust listed property,  yielded up its treasures when a local saleroom fossicker of 40 years sold up its contents to spend half of every year in the south of France.

In one of the first house sales of the year, held by Lugosi Auctioneers on site at the 1890 terrace on January 13, the sleepers with backpacks have long since gone and three of a different kind of sleepers emerged.

17-Jan-2013

A huge ask - larger than life artworks are hanging out for a new home

Sydney's best-kept art secrets are looking for a foster home - but only those with plenty of wall space need apply. Twenty-one massive paintings and sculptures by leading 20th century artists including Brett Whiteley, John Olsen and Lloyd Rees will be dismantled when the Sydney Convention and Exhibition Centre closes in December for demolition, prompting a nationwide search for buildings big enough to house them.

By Terry Ingram on 15-Jan-2013 Exclusive to the AASD

Sotheby's Australia bins Bay East

Bay East Auctions, which began its life in a building previously occupied by the Woollahra Council's garbage collection unit, has closed its doors. Ending an almost uninterrupted charmed life of close to 20 years, its latest owner, Sotheby's Australia, has decided that Bay East does not fit in with its operations. Bay East has been closed so that the owners of Sotheby's Australia can concentrate more vigorously on development of the Sotheby's name, writes Terry Ingram.

 

02-Jan-2013

Fake Tahitian prince's art up for sale

The eclectic and expensive tastes of "fake Tahitian prince" Joel Morehu-Barlow will be put to the test when a trove of his belongings goes under the hammer this year. More than 1500 items - including a painting by Jeffrey Smart, a Whitney Houston tour book and Louis Vuitton surfboard - belonging to the socialite accused of stealing more than $16 million from Queensland Health will be sold in two separate auctions.

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