Prior Years Archive:
The Manly Art Gallery is finding it owns one of the globally best known paintings, 'Christmas Flowers and Christmas Belles', a 52 by 36 cm oil on canvas borrowed by the National Gallery of Australia for its current Tom Roberts exhibition in Canberra. The painting was one of five paintings stolen in 1976, and then after several years, mysteriously returned then to the gallery.
By Terry Ingram on 17-Dec-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Santa's great gift to Manly delivered in a police van, is now loved and appreciated

The Manly Art Gallery is finding it owns one of the globally best known paintings, which was memorably overlooked by forgetful curators some years ago.

The painting is Christmas Flowers and Christmas Belles, a 52 by 36 cm oil on canvas borrowed by the National Gallery of Australia for its Tom Roberts exhibition in Canberra.

No curator of Australian art should now be unaware of this delightful painting of the poor unemployed selling flowers to ladies in long dresses and parasols in Sydney.

By Terry Ingram on 13-Dec-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

2015 art market review - grind is the word as market edges upwards

The total turnover of the art auction market in Australia ground ahead by a modest 3.2 per cent or $3 million to $109.25 million in 2015 and the ranking of all the major players were unchanged.

This was despite extra exertion by action staff as 567 more lots than in 2014 were catalogued and sold by the major auction houses, publicised in a flood of thicker and often larger catalogues to impress clients.

Sydney will get light rail and the NBN will be rolled out before the market returns to its heady $175.6 million turnover achieved in 2007 at the current rate of increase.

The surprise star of the Menzies Fine Art and Sculpture auction  held on 10 December 2015  in Sydney was Thomas Tyrwhitt Balcombe (1810 – 1861), a little-known colonial artist whose work is extremely rare to market. Menzies offered 7 Balcombe works, and set a new record for the artist. The small untitled watercolour above, depicting Aborigines fishing on a lake sold for $36,000 on estimates of $3,000-$5,000. With 77% sold by volume and 81% sold by value, the auction achieved $7.04 million (IBP).
By David Hulme & Brigitte Banziger on 11-Dec-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Big Bang for Balcombe at Menzies December Auction

The surprise star of the last big auction of 2015 was Thomas Tyrwhitt Balcombe (1810 – 1861), a little-known colonial artist whose work from the 1850s is extremely rare to market. Menzies offered not one or two, but seven of these rarities, two small oil paintings of Aborigines, and 5 mixed media works on paper passed down through the artist’s family.

Heavily contested by several bidders in the room and on the phone, the two oil paintings set new auction records for Balcombe, selling for hammer prices of $70,000 (lot 60) and $80,000 (lot 61) on estimates of $16,000-$24,000 to the Mitchell Library.

The 5 works on paper equally smashed their pre-sale estimates of between $2,000 and $5,000, selling for $13,000 (lot 62), $18,000 (lot 63), $24,000 (lot 64), $36,000 (lot 65) and again $24,000 (lot 66) – not as assumed to another public institution, but to a private collector from Victoria with a passion for mid-19th century Australian art.

Several predominantly South Australian rare and collectable modernists comprise the majority of a boutique selection of early 20th century art that goes under the hammer from 2pm Thursday December 10 at Leonard Joel 333 Malvern Road, South Yarra.
By , on 10-Dec-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Leonard Joel to sell South Australian private collection

Several predominantly South Australian rare and collectable modernists comprise the majority of a boutique selection of early 20th century art that goes under the hammer from 2pm Thursday December 10 at Leonard Joel 333 Malvern Road, South Yarra.

By Richard Brewster on 10-Dec-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Menzies final sale for 2015 lead by modern artists

The usual high profile modern artists – led by John Brack’s Adagio 1967-69 (lot 41) with a $600,000-$800,000 estimate – are guaranteed to pull a large auction crowd at Menzies final sale for the year from 6.30pm Thursday December 10 at 12 Todman Avenue, Kensington in Sydney.

By Jane Raffan on 03-Dec-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Deutscher and Hackett hit the boards for their end-of-year Revue

Held in Sydney’s inner-east at the atmosphere-laden National Art School’s Cell Block Theatre, Deutscher and Hackett’s end-of-year sale – a 200+ lot offering of Important Fine Art and Aboriginal Art – achieved a hammer total of $4,355,402 against expectations of $4,521,000 (total with buyer premium $5,393,591). This represents a very good result for the company, which will see them stay in the top three.

Surely at any of the season’s sales around the country there are plenty of Namatjira’s on offer, but perhaps none as simultaneously light and earthy as the beautiful Glen Helen Homestead, c.1946 (above) selling for $61,000 IBP on the usual estimated range $25,000-$35,000 for an A4-sized Namatjira watercolour. It had no curving ghost gums or purple mountains but captured the essence of the desert station, like a fragment rescued from Australia’s rapidly-vanishing rural history.
By Peter James Smith on 02-Dec-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Namatjira soars at Bonhams.

Bonhams successful recipe for their end-of-season sale involved: Step 1—catalogue fresh works that delight the seasoned auction hound; Step 2—take a spoonful of modest estimates; and Step 3—create the repartee of a genuine bidding war.

Their modest Sydney sale of Fine Australian and Aboriginal Art was simulcast across the internet with the current fashionable intention of attracting digital bids to add to the tradition of the auctioneer’s book. They did indeed attract some internet traffic but most of the excitement was generated by bidding duels between the room and the telephones.

02-Dec-2015

New Zealand's Commerce Commission warns auctioneer McCormack and McKellar over art sale

Auctioneer McCormack and McKellar has been warned by the Commerce Commission after failing to disclose they owned a Tom Esplin painting that they were selling. The watchdog considered the firm did not comply with legal requirements for auctions that came into force in June 2014. It had failed to notify whether the seller of the goods was selling the goods in trade as a supplier; the sale was subject to a reserve price and whether vendor bids were allowed.

30-Nov-2015

Forger says it's 'Not a da Vinci, it's Sally from the Co-op'

A Leonardo da Vinci drawing believed to be worth $230 million is actually a picture of "Sally from the Co-op" in Bolton, one of Britain's most notorious art forgers has claimed. The La Bella Principessa purports to be a portrait of a young woman possibly from the court of Ludovico Sforza, the duke of Milan, in the 1490s. But Shaun Greenhalgh claims he drew the picture in 1978 based on a "bossy" shop assistant he worked with at his local Co-op store in the north west town. He claims he used an old council document dating back more than 400 years as a canvas and specially created pigments to con the art world.

Sotheby's Australia retained its reputation for creating very real live auctions in Sydney at its sale of Important Australian Art on 24 November. The sale, which grossed $8.55 million, which sold 67% by volume and 112% value, was greatly helped by collectors or their agents who came out and bid freely. The two seriously important works, Fred Williams Trees and Hillside, 1964 (above) and Arthur Boyd's Sleeping Bride (1957-58) sold well over estimates at $1.4 million and $1.3 million (hammer) respectively.
By Terry Ingram on 25-Nov-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Boots - and heels - on the ground contribute to Sotheby's renewed advance

Sotheby's Australia retained its reputation for creating the appearance of very real live auctions in Sydney at its sale of Important Australian Art on 24 November.

The sale, which grossed $8.55 million, with 67 per cent sold by volume and 112 per cent sold by value, was greatly helped by collectors or their agents who came out and bid freely.

Paul Sumner welcomed a modest crowd of bidders to his Armadale rooms on November 23, offering 39 lots in Mossgreen Auctions’ final Australian and International Art sale for 2015.  The sale totalled $1.3 million with a clearance rate 56% by number and  72% by value. Amongst the highlights on offer were three Jeffrey Smarts, including Central Station (1) 1961 (above) which went for $292,800 (IBP); Sunday Afternoon, Lancia 1965, for $207,400 (IBP) and Flea Market, Paris 1949-50 which failed to sell.
By Marianne Margin on 24-Nov-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Solid results as Mossgreen winds down for 2015

Last evening, November 23, 2015, an upbeat Paul Sumner welcomed a modest crowd of bidders to his Armadale rooms, offering 39 lots in Mossgreen Auctions’ final Australian and International Art sale for the year.  Including the $1.3 million realised at last night’s auction, Mossgreen has achieved art sales of around $13 million in 2015.  Their great success of the year was The Peter Elliot Collection in August, which alone accounted for $7 million in sales. This caps off a record year for the Melbourne based auction house.

A new respect for provenance was very much in the air at the auction of The Collection of Geoffrey Stilwell, a man whom auctioneer Paul Sumner of Mossgreen described as “Tasmania's Mr Provenance”. The sale realised $422,364 against a pre-auction estimate of $177,760 with some stellar individual results, with top price of  $91,500 (IBP) paid for an oil painting by Florence Williams of a native bird, and showing Mount Wellington, Hobart in the background. It carried an estimate of only $6,000-$10,000.
By Terry Ingram on 24-Nov-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Stilwell collection sells well as Hobart dips its lids to 'Mr. Provenance'

A new respect for provenance was very much in the air as the hammer began to fall on the end of November offerings in Hobart, Sydney and Melbourne last week. The auction of The Collection of Geoffrey Stilwell, a man whom auctioneer Paul Sumner of Mossgreen described as “Tasmania's Mr Provenance” realised $422,364 against a pre-auction estimate of $177,760 with some stellar individual results.

Provenance was also in the air albeit not quite as comfortably at or in preparation for different sales with two lots withdrawn as cataloguers went in search of more of it. In one sale, coincidentally also at Mossgreen,  a contemporary Chinese painting of high profile (it was illustrated as the catalogue cover picture) was pulled out of the offering.

A painting by Girolamo Nerli which held the record for a work by the artist was pulled by Bonhams Australia from its online catalogue of its coming Sydney sale for the same reason.

The Estate of Colin Lanceley offered by Leonard Joel at the artist's studio and home in Sydney's Surrey Hills on November 16 raised $492,000 hammer ($600,240 IBP). There was a deluge of buying on the Internet and from artists' wives and their families and home decorators for decorative items of which the star lots were oyster plates. Even though the two star lots, both works by Lanceley, including A Midsummer Night's Dream above, were unsold, the 390 lot sale was 95 per cent sold by number.
By Terry Ingram on 17-Nov-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Crockery better received than the proprietor's work at Lanceley studio sale

Bids came from far asunder – even from Double Bay – for the bric a brac and tat (mostly used carpets) that made up the bulk of the 398 lot auction of the Estate of Colin Lanceley offered by Leonard Joel at the artist's studio and home in Sydney's Surrey Hills on November 16.

But what was arguably his best painting, A Midsummer Night's Dream, with the provenance of author Peter Carey and Alison Summers, went unsold as did another admirable work, Montserrat 2009-2010 estimated at $40,000 to $50,000.

 

16-Nov-2015

Wellington gentlemen's club opens prized art collection

A 123-year-old Wellington gentlemen's club is opening its vaults to auction art from its prized collection. The Wellesley Club, founded in 1891 and now defunct, is putting 30 artworks from its art collection up for sale, with one of them predicted to sell for up to $80,000. The works will be auctioned by Dunbar Sloane auction house in Wellington next Thursday

In a frenzied furore of fur, My Wife's Lovers, a studio plus sized oil on canvas painting of 42 of the creatures, sold for $US826,000 at a Sotheby's sale of 19th century European art in New York on November 3. The bewitching was equivalent to $US19,666 per pet in the picture as it soared way over the $US300,000 expectation.
By Terry Ingram on 10-Nov-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Cats cream it in a rare display of 'saucery'.

In the New York saleroom the cat appears to have achieved its ultimate artistic apotheosis. Ironic that Australia, its wild life bedevilled by the most feral of creatures, has a big equity in the animal's transformation.

In a frenzied furore of fur, My Wife's Lovers, a studio plus sized oil on canvas painting of 42 of the creatures, sold for $US826,000 at a Sotheby's sale of 19th century European art in New York on November 3.

A New Zealand institution has paid approximately NZ1.5 million for a painting by William Strutt (1825-1915) in a deal that makes his past prices paid by Australians look extremely timid.
By Terry Ingram on 31-Oct-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Kiwis overtake us in support of a shared master

The financial esteem of the artist who first taught Australians to appreciate the pictorial values of our bush rangers and bush fires - as well as the local practice of little girls losing their way in the bush or at rocky outcrops - has blown out enormously.

This however is thanks to our friends across the ditch in New Zealand rather than the country where he made his biggest mark .

A New Zealand institution has paid approximately NZ1.5 million for a painting by William Strutt (1825-1915) in a deal that makes his past prices paid by Australians look extremely timid.

30-Oct-2015

Rare New Zealand artworks up for auction

A remarkable art collection from two leading lights of Auckland's North Shore literati and arts scene is going under the hammer next month. Sydney and Marjorie Musgrove lined the walls of their stylish Art Deco apartment in Devonport with rare artworks from some of New Zealand's greatest artists of the 20th century. Their daughter Judith, an esteemed Maori history scholar, was married to celebrated artist Don Binney.

In the mid-1960s, Binney gave his mother-in-law two oil paintings, including one depicting a Pipiwharauroa, or shining cuckoo. Next month, the piece is being auctioned at Auckland house Cordy's for the first time, and is expected to fetch $40,000 to $60,000.

28-Oct-2015

Webb's auction house to be sold to Mossgreen

Bethunes Investments [NZX: BIL], formerly known as Mowbray Collectables, will sell its Webb's auction house for $800,000 to Australia's Mossgreen, and plans to kick off a new investment programme first signalled at July's annual meeting.

The deal is conditional on the Australian auction house completing due diligence and Bethunes shareholder approval, and is expected to be completed on January 1, the company said in a statement. Bethunes will receive $400,000 upfront, with the balance paid in quarterly instalments over two years, in a deal that's expected to be loss-making.

'Red Elephant' (above)  and 'Interior of a Hindu House' by Indian artist Bhupen Khakhar both sold for $102,000 at Cordy's Auctions in Auckland, while in Christchurch W. T. Macalister sold a painting by British artist Edward Seago for $60,000.
By Briar Williams in Auckland on 27-Oct-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Major International Artworks Achieve Sensational Results at Small Auctions in New Zealand

With the arrival of the Internet, the auction business was revolutionised.

Suddenly anyone with access to a computer was able seek out works of interest around the globe. For those who made a living buying hidden gems for a song and reselling, the game became a lot harder. So in this world, when your auction business has major international pictures for sale and you don’t have a big web presence, how can you make sure that your paintings realise their fair and true value?

A collection of the work by one of the most intrepid travel artists of the 19th century has arrived in Australia and is to become the subject of a major research and publishing project.
Perth media magnate Mr Kerry Stokes has concluded the purchase of the Australian component of the Thomas Baines Collection consisting of oils, watercolours, and documents and relating to the North West Australia Australian expedition which it commissioned in 1856.
By Terry Ingram on 25-Oct-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Pensioners' Baines are Stokes and Aussie gains

A collection of the work by one of the most intrepid travel artists of the 19th century has arrived in Australia and is to become the subject of a major research and publishing project.

Perth media magnate Mr Kerry Stokes has concluded the purchase of the Australian component of the Thomas Baines Collection consisting of oils, watercolours, and documents and relating to the North West Australia Australian expedition which it commissioned in 1856.

A single owner collection of John Gould’s Birds of Australia lithographs will be auctioned from 11am Sunday October 25 by Leonard Joel at 333 Malvern Road, South Yarra.
By , on 23-Oct-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Collection of John Gould lithographs to be sold

A single owner collection of John Gould’s Birds of Australia lithographs will be auctioned from 11am Sunday October 25 by Leonard Joel at 333 Malvern Road, South Yarra.

20-Oct-2015

Alexander Turnbull Library caught out with forged Lindauer portrait

The Alexander Turnbull Library has admitted it paid $75,000 of public money for a forged Lindauer portrait. The national heritage collector, based in Wellington, bought the painting in 2013, despite being warned by an expert before the purchase that is was likely to be a forgery. 

It bought the portrait of Hoani or Hamiora Maioha, signed G. Lindauer, at auction. Gottfried Lindauer (1839-1926) painted hundreds of portraits of leading Maori figures, many of which are in public collections.

In a packed room at Mossgreen Auctions in Armadale, Paul Sumner welcomed many new faces as the auction house offered 225 lots on behalf of Barry and Anne Pang. Of the 212 art lots offered, 167 sold, a creditable 79% - but not a good representation of the overall result.  Of the 21 lots with a lower estimate in excess of $20,000, only five sold, the best price of $340,000 hammer being achieved after subdued bidding, for Nolan’s 'Kelly' 1960 (above) which sold below the lower estimate of $380,000
By Marianne Margin on 19-Oct-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Horse racing, martial arts and the auction room all have one thing in common: some days are bruising.

In a packed room at Mossgreen Auctions in Armadale, on a beautiful spring day that would have been perfection for a race meeting, there was an air of optimism and a gentle buzz of excitement before proceedings got underway. 

Paul Sumner welcomed many new faces to the auction room and the Pang family connections looked excited as Mossgreen offered 225 lots for sale on behalf of Barry and Anne Pang on 18 October 2015. 

By , on 15-Oct-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Successful horse owner to sell art collection through Mossgreen.

Barry and Anne Pang ran a successful martial arts school in Melbourne (established in 1974) long before they became interested in collecting art.

However, by the mid-1990s their passion for the finer things in life was rapidly accelerating and so they established a Toorak-based art appreciation business to help develop a significant art collection.

09-Oct-2015

Sotheby’s clamps Tucker copyright while ignoring Viscopy’s request

Auction house Sotheby’s Australia has been appointed to manage copyright and resale royalties for the estate of Albert Tucker, at the same time as it is challenging the rights of art royalty collecting agency Viscopy in a dispute that arose after it ignored Viscopy’s request to not publish images of John Olsen paintings, writes Michaela Boland in The Australian. (Subscription required).          

The purchase by Kerry Stokes at Christie's New York of a Book of Hours for $US13.6 million in January 2014 appears to be the catalyst for his collection of manuscripts, missals, rare parchments and pieces of decorative art which were produced seven centuries ago. The collection, An Illumination, The Rothschild Prayer Book & other works from the Kerry Stokes Collection c.1280–1685 is on display at the Ian Potter Museum of Art until 15 November.
By Terry Ingram on 08-Oct-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

A truly devoted collector

An exhibition which has opened in Melbourne suggests that Australia has produced at least one tycoon sufficiently focused to add to the national stock of material culture while the Australian dollar was high and the mining boom was rolling on.

With the assistance of Margaret Manion, who has written extensively on illuminated manuscripts, Mr Kerry Stokes has put together a collection of Medieval art drawn from both major and obscure auctions around the world.

01-Oct-2015

Why Kay Lanceley is selling artist husband Colin Lanceley's collection and how Malcolm Turnbull saved him

Strolling around a home filled with paintings and porcelain, prints of 20th-century Masters and flea market finds, Kay Lanceley picks up one of the treasures collected during her life. Many of the artworks in the 19th century Surry Hills warehouse that Lanceley shared with her artist husband for more than two decades will be sold by auction in November. The head of art at Leonard Joel auction house, Sophie Ullin, expects the sale to fetch at least $500,000, but could top $1 million because the collections of artists rarely come to market, writes Andrew Taylor in the Sydney Morning Herald.

The primacy of landscape in the canons of Antipodean taste took a knock at Christie's sale of Australian art in London on September 24 when two portraits, one from each side of the Tasman, contributed $1.42 million towards the equivalent of $2.67 million gross yielded by the 73 lot sale. One of these was a $683,000 contribution from a modestly sized portrait of an early patron of Australian Impressionism, Louis Abrahams painted by Tom Roberts, and estimated to fetch $64,000 to $110,000 hammer.
By Terry Ingram on 26-Sep-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Portraits line UK pockets despite dollar despair Down Under

The primacy of landscape in the canons of Antipodean taste took a knock at Christie's sale of Australian art in London on September 24 when two portraits, one from each side of the Tasman, contributed $1.42 million towards the equivalent of $2.67 million gross yielded by the 73 lot sale.

The decline in the Australian dollar weighed heavily on expectations for the sale but the sterling amount of £1.234 million was still a little shy of the lower estimate of £1.305 and considerably short of the £1.830 million upper.

By Peter James Smith on 25-Sep-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

In Menzies Rites of Spring September auction, fresh works with a restless spirit fired up all levels of the market to find solid ground with a clearance rate of 73% on the night.

At price levels in the middle ground, a spectacular John Perceval of boats moored at Williamstown (lot 39) achieved $460,000 including buyer’s premium, against estimates of $380,000-$450,000. (All realised prices quoted include the buyer’s premium, whereas estimates do not.) At the lower end of the market, those with sharp eyes and a spring in their step cornered a haunting Margaret Olley portrait, Woman from Angoram Sepik River, 1968, (lot 205) for $4,250 and an early ink and wash watercolour Sunday, Newcastle, 1965 (lot 122) for $8,125. In case you ask, yes, these were really Margaret Olleys, she the longtime darling of the saleroom.

Painted in the late 1950s, most of John Perceval's views of Williamstown of this period are now in museums or tightly held in private collections.  So, when a major work, previously listed as ‘whereabouts unknown’ re-emerges after a lifetime in a private collection, it is an important event. 'The Moored Shark Boat' 1959, estimated at $380,000-$450,000 is just such a work, and will be offered by Menzies Art Brands in Melbourne on 24 September 2015.
By , on 22-Sep-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Long absent Perceval fishing boat returns

An Australian larrikin, John Perceval had a different approach to landscape painting than other Australian artists of his era.

Perceval’s heart and soul belonged in Europe and he drew on his passion for the old masters Heironymus Bosch (c1450-1516), Pieter Bruegel (c1525-1569) and Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890) to create views of Williamstown – regarded as genius.

Unlike the sporting kind, this marathon (Aboriginal Art: The Thomas Vroom Collection, Sydney, 6 September) took 5 hours for the field of 246 to finish. The sale included twenty-nine works by Emily Kngwarreye and the artist’s early work Abundant Country, 1991 was the top lot, doubling its low end to make $40,000. The sale total was $1,606,606 million, including buyers premium, with 90.23% sold by lot and 136% sold by value.
By Jane Raffan on 08-Sep-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Bonham’s Vroom Collection marathon sees 90% of starters get over the line

Unlike the sporting kind, this marathon (Aboriginal Art: The Thomas Vroom Collection, Sydney, 6 September) took 5 hours for the field of 246 to finish. Conservative estimates drew a standing-room-only crowd for the first half, including many first-time bidders. The crowd steadily dissipated as it became clear that the promise of a bargain was becoming more unlikely with every hammer fall. In the end, the sale hauled in $1.6 million, including buyer’s premium, representing 136% by value.

In 1927, Sydney was a little like San Francisco in the 1950s if a painting in the Christie's Australian art sale in London on September 24 is anything to go by. The painting, by Aletta Lewis, shows a lot of naked bodies on a Sydney roof top.
By Terry Ingram on 07-Sep-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Shades of Hades in Christie's London sale

In 1927, Sydney was a little like San Francisco in the 1950s if a painting in the Christie's Australian art sale in London on September 24 is anything to go by. The painting, by Aletta Lewis, shows a lot of naked bodies on a Sydney roof top.

Instead of marking the emergence of a progressive society devoted to free love, however, or even the first appearance of backpackers to Kings Cross, the painting called Hot Night, showed that Australia was 20 years behind the times.

This happened when the painting and other works of its kind by the same artist and her accolytes were bitterly condemned by the art establishment of the day.

By Terry Ingram on 01-Sep-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Green proves the new yellow as a man in red leads the charge (The Elliott Collection Day 3)

There is no recession in China, if the results of the buying for the last major section of the auction by Mossgreen of the collection of the late Dr Peter Elliott is anything to go by, writes Terry Ingram. On the Internet, phones and in the room, overseas Chinese and members of the local Chinese community repeatedly paid over the odds for the work of members of the art and craft of their forebears.

By Terry Ingram on 31-Aug-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Ancestor gods prove a blessing on Elliott Day Two

Carved wooden statues from the Philippines were the star performers in the third session of the dispersal of the collection of the late Dr Peter Elliott in Sydney this week. The statues contributed nearly $200,000 to a further blow out in the total sold on the day of $982,490, bringing the total so far to $5.34 million IBP.

The first session of Mossgreen's sale of the (medical doctor) Peter Elliott's Collection in Sydney on August 31 was 100 per cent sold and grossed $4.36 million including the buyers premium which was comfortably in excess of the estimates and the clearance was 100 per cent. ‘Blue Garden’  by Brett Whiteley (pictured above) was hammered for $300,000 which was the higher of the $200,000 to $300,000 estimate.
By Terry Ingram on 31-Aug-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Cross fertilisation turns Mossgreen into happy valley

The first session of Mossgreen's sale of the (medical doctor) Peter Elliott's Collection in Sydney on August 31 was 100 per cent sold and grossed $4.36 million including the buyers premium which was comfortably in excess of the estimates and the clearance was100 per cent. This was made possible through strong buying from two enthusiasts more closely identified with the second session on September 1 and 2, The second session is Aboriginal and tribal art.

Herbert Badham’s, Pitt Street, Sydney sold for $170,000 hammer price on estimates of $25,000-$35,000 at Deutscher + Hackett on 26 August 2015. A full room, busy phones and active floor bidding meant that 75% of the lots offered were sold on the night, or 68% sold by value, achieving a total of $3,71 million dollars including buyer’s premium.
By David Hulme & Brigitte Banziger on 27-Aug-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Jailbirds fly whilst Badham breaks out at Deutscher + Hackett

A large number of artworks performed well at the Deutscher + Hackett sale of Australian and International works of art held at the Cell Block Theatre at the National Art School which formed part of the Old Darlinghurst Gaol. Theatre there was aplenty. A full room, busy phones and active floor bidding meant that 75% of the lots offered were sold on the night, or 68% sold by value, achieving a total of $3.71 million dollars including buyer’s premium.

Sotheby's Australia sale of Important Australian Art at the Intercontinental Hotel Sydney on August 25 saw Sidney Nolan's ‘The Emu Hunt’, 1949  sell for $1.159 million to lift the result to the impressive total of $5.3 million (IBP), equal to 90.3 per cent by value.
By Terry Ingram on 26-Aug-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Gym display helps produce well balanced result for Sotheby's

Extraordinary scenes greeted art lovers at the auction, Important Australian Art, held by Sotheby's Australia at the Intercontinental Hotel Sydney on August 25. Bidders raised their paddles on several occasions as if they were athletes using exercise machines at a gym or playing high ball pin pong.

The pumping resolve caused old-timers to smile as one of the lots concerned was Flamingos (lot 11) by Sidney Long. The lot doubled its top estimate to make $110,000 which with buyers premium rose to $134,300. The saleroom has not seen the like of this since the The West Wind was sold at Sotheby's in August 2003 for $192,750.

That was before the market and design's moves into minimalism supposedly fully decluttered itself from traditionalism.

The first tranche of  the ‘Todd Barlin Collection’ was sold by Theodore Bruce in Sydney in the old John Williams rooms in Alexandria on 1 August 2015. The top price of $9500 was paid by a Paris buyer for a fine Queensland rainforest shield, early 20th century which had been in the Robert White collection.
By Terry Ingram on 25-Aug-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Money belts unbuckle as buyers shell out

Three extraordinary de-cluttering auctions of great interest to Australian culture vultures have so far left the Art Gallery of NSW as the only suspected local institutional participant.

By Marianne Margin on 06-Aug-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Waiting, waiting, waiting… : The Review of the Resale Royalty Scheme

In 2009 the Resale Royalty Right for Visual Artists Act became law and the associated scheme, The Resale Royalty Scheme (RRS) commenced on 9 June 2010.

A provision of the Resale Act was that a review had to be undertaken within five years. That review was initiated in May 2013, three years after implementation and submissions closed 12 July 2013. We have had a change of government in the interim and the Review is now the responsibility of Attorney General and Minister for the Arts, Senator George Brandis QC.

06-Aug-2015

Tim Goodman’s art auction start-up will be passed in

Creditors are circling online art auction start-up Fine Art Bourse, accusing its founder Tim Goodman of lavish spending and failing to pay his accounts, more than a month out from the company’s debut auction, writes Michaela Boland, in The Australian.

(Subscription required)

New South Wales has been tracking down its movable cultural heritage after years of being beaten to key pieces by Ron Radford. Two substantial examples of colonial art have recently headed back to Sydney from Melbourne, one of which is the important watercolour 'View from the Verandah at Hobartville, Seat of Mrs. W. Cox' by Frederick Garling. The Mitchell Library has emerged as the buyer of the work which sold for $20,000 plus 22 per cent premium at Leonard Joel's painting sale in Melbourne on June 28.
By Terry Ingram on 01-Aug-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Post Radford, cultural heritage heads north again

New South Wales has been tracking down its movable cultural heritage after years of being beaten to key pieces by Ron Radford. Two substantial examples of colonial art have headed back to Sydney from Melbourne after being purchased by art institutions in the Premier State.

The Mitchell Library has emerged as the buyer of the important watercolour View from the Verandah at Hobartville, Seat of Mrs. W. Cox by Frederick Garling which sold for $20,000 plus 22 per cent premium at Leonard Joel's painting sale in Melbourne on June 23.

Mossgreen’s Sunday Art Emporium held in Melbourne on 26 July was the perfect place for alert collectors to seek out gems, and collectors were drawn in by modest estimates.  The house will be well pleased with a clearance of over 70% by lot, totalling $613,228 including buyers premium, with many works far exceeding their upper estimates. The cover lot, Dorothy Braund’s Boy’s Dreaming (above),  a delightfully poised neo-cubist oil on board, sold mid-range at $23000, surpassing previous records for the artist.
By Peter James Smith on 27-Jul-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Successful Sunday for Mossgreen' s Art Emporium sale with 70% of lots finding a new home

Mossgreen’s Sunday Art Emporium was the perfect place for alert collectors to seek out gems. True collectors have a nose for works that will add a touch of pizzaz to their collection—many will chase the trophy acquisition that they believe others will admire—but some seek out artists on their wishlists that add breadth to their collections with a touch of classicism, beauty, irony and intrigue—and all the better, if the price is right. 

The room at Mossgreen’s Sunday Art Emporium was full of collectors in this latter category with wishlists in hand. They were drawn in by modest low estimates, but many prices soared as soon as two or more chased the same piece, often leading to record prices for artists.

Sotheby’s Sydney June 21 Fine Asian, Australian & European Arts & Design auction reached an expected $1.5 million sale price (including buyers premium) with strong prices for contemporary works.  The photography and art collection of leading Australian law firm Minter Ellison established four new artist auction records, including for Rosemary Laing’s 'Groundspeed (Red Piazzo) #2' (above) which sold for $31,720, breaking her previous record of $22,091.
By , on 22-Jul-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Firm results from Sotheby's mixed Sydney sale.

Sotheby’s Sydney June 21 Fine Asian, Australian & European Arts & Design auction reached an expected $1.5 million sale price (including buyers premiums) with strong prices for contemporary works.

A highlight was the collection of leading Australian law firm Minter Ellison that featured an impressive selection of Australian photography and art including works by Adam Cullen, Max Dupain, Bill Henson, Akio Makigawa, Rosemary Laing, Robert MacPherson, Tracey Moffatt and Patricia Piccinini – and established four new artist auction records.

As well as decorative arts and antiques, the art collection from leading Australian law firm Minter Ellison will be a major highlight of Sotheby’s Australia’s Fine Asian, Australian & European Arts & Design auction on Tuesday July 21 at the InterContinental Hotel, Sydney.  The collection comprises an impressive selection of Australian photography and contemporary art by leading artists, including Wisdom of Water 1995 (above) – the genesis of inspiration being bottled drinking water by Akio Makigawa.
By , on 18-Jul-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Sotheby's to sell collection of Sydney law firm

Items from leading Australian law firm Minter Ellison will be a major highlight of Sotheby’s Australia’s Fine Asian, Australian & European Arts & Design auction from 6pm Tuesday July 21 at the InterContinental Hotel, 117 Macquarie Street, Sydney.

The firm is selling its collection because it is moving from its old Aurora Place, Sydney offices to new premises, which are largely open plan with fewer walls.

One of the more significant sculptures is Makigawa’s Wisdom of Water 1995 – the genesis of inspiration being bottled drinking water.

Mossgreen’s 2015 annual sale of Australian Indigenous and Oceanic Art features many early artefacts including an important private collection of rare Australian indigenous shields, many of which date to the early 19th century.
Among the more important is a  Dja Dja Wurrung broad shield, estimated at $80,000 to $120,000, which was picked up by English-born George Kidman who came to Australia during the 1850s gold rush and established a mining claim.
By , on 17-Jul-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Important shields being offered in Mossgreen’s annual sale of Australian Indigenous and Oceanic Art

Mossgreen’s 2015 annual sale of Australian Indigenous and Oceanic Art features many early artefacts including an important private collection of rare Australian indigenous shields, many of which date to the early 19th century.

Among the more important is an Albury broad shield (lot 56), collected in the 1870s by Albury-based John Mitchell, and the Dja Dja Wurrung broad shield (lot 57) picked up by George Kidman between 1852 and 1864.

Old timers have said this many a time of late, but little could seal the end of the Sydney auction world as they knew it, than the deaths last week within days of each other, of two auctioneers very much of the old school.
Henry Badgery, who died in hospital at the age of 81 had been in care for a couple of years since his retirement but was felled by a lung issue, while John Williams (above) died as a result of liver cancer at the age of 69.
By Terry Ingram on 07-Jul-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Hammer falls for final time for two old-time auctioneers

Old timers have said this many a time of late, but little could seal the end of the Sydney auction world as they knew it, than the deaths last week within days of each other, of two auctioneers very much of the old school.

Henry Badgery, who died in hospital at the age of 81 had been in care for a couple of years since his retirement but was felled by a lung issue, while John Segar Williams died as a result of liver cancer at the age of 69.

07-Jul-2015

Iconic Gallipoli painting expected to sell for 500k

One of the most famous Gallipoli paintings will go up for auction next month, the second version of the iconic Simpson and his Donkey painting to go on the market this year.

However, this version of Horace Moore-Jones' watercolour of a New Zealand medic leading a donkey as he ferried a badly wounded Anzac soldier to a medical post on Gallipoli in 1915 is expected to sell for as much as $500,000, compared to the $257,000 which a smaller version fetched at auction earlier this year. 

International Art Centre director Richard Thomson said the latest version to come on the market was probably the first or second of the five or six versions Moore-Jones did of the painting.

By Briar Williams in Auckland on 06-Jul-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

A surprise defection signals a new auction house in Auckland

A ripple of shock and surprise ran through the New Zealand art world about six weeks ago when it was rumoured that a number of staff from the Art Department at Webb’s in Auckland had unexpectedly departed.

Given that there had been a change of management and a new business model implemented in the months earlier, some upheaval could be expected but losing the two senior staff members in the Department was a significant blow.

06-Jul-2015

NZ art collector sues London dealer for $16 million

An Auckland interior designer and fine art collector is suing a London dealer for $16million after he allegedly sold her paintings to a number of New York dealers and failed to hand over the proceeds. Stephanie Overton has taken the legal action against one of Mayfair's most high-profile art dealers, Timothy Sammons. Timothy Sammons, 59, set up his own fine art agency after being head of auctioneer Sotheby's Chinese art department.

Tasmanian professional gambler David Walsh hit the jackpot with his celebrated painting, The Holy Virgin Mary, consigned to Christie's sale in London last week but other works de-accessioned from his collection just struggled home.
By Terry Ingram on 02-Jul-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Madonna proves Tassie gambler's lucky card

Tasmanian professional gambler David Walsh hit the jackpot with his celebrated painting, The Holy Virgin Mary, consigned to Christie's sale in London last week but other works de-accessioned from his collection just struggled home.

02-Jul-2015

Doctor’s 70-year art collection going under the hammer for $6m

When gynaecologist and obstetrician Peter Elliott died last year he left a collection of art and antiques that is set to be the biggest single-owner art sale of the year. 
 
Elliott’s trove of remarkable tribal carvings, Chinese ceramics and paintings by William Robinson, Fred Williams, John Brack and Brett Whiteley will be auctioned in Sydney over three days from August 30, with expectations that it will raise more than $6 million, writes Michaela Boland in The Australian.

New meaning has been given by the London art trade to the word "appreciation" when it comes to Australian art.
A painting which sold for €269,960 including premium at an auction in France in March is on view at a dealer's stand at the Masterpiece fair in London has a price tag of £750,000 writes Terry Ingram in London.
By Terry Ingram on 29-Jun-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

London dealers scent a kill as a Fox is spotted in a foreign field

New meaning has been given by the London art trade to the word "appreciation" when it comes to Australian art.

A painting which sold for €269,960 at an auction in France in March is on view at a dealer's stand at the Masterpiece fair in London has a price tag of £750,000 writes Terry Ingram in London.

All three major international art-works headlining the Menzies Art Brands auction in Melbourne on 25 June found buyers. Lynn Chadwick’s bronze Maquette II 1984 sold for $190,000, $30,000 above its high estimate while Fernand Léger’s China Town 1943 (above) estimated at $1.3-1.6 million was knocked down for $1.8 million, somewhat above its purchase price last month. Warhol’s Head after Picasso 1985 previously auctioned by Menzies in 2008, went for $1.4 million, which was $100,000 above its low estimate.
By John Gregory on 26-Jun-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Recent imports find new homes after Melbourne sale.

International art-works – particularly examples by Fernand Léger, Lynn Chadwick and Andy Warhol – took centre stage at the Menzies auction in Melbourne on Thursday night. The emphasis, which was deliberate, also seemed rather fitting.

After all, it’s been a remarkable few months in the international auction market, climaxing with the new record set in May, for Picasso’s The Women of Algiers (1955), knocked down in New York for US $160 million.

There is no Australian flag up, but Mayfair expatriate Richard Nagy's stand with a Paula Rego painting shows a bit of substance from Down Under at the Basel Art Fair. Galleries with Australian addresses have sent their spies but top tier pricing in the booming trophy market have put the European rainbow's pot of gold beyond their reach for the time being. Hopes this year reside in any buying by a troup of collectors led by the director of the National Gallery of Victoria, Tony Ellwood.
By Terry Ingram on 19-Jun-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Australia drifts to the sidelines at Europe's most prestigious fair.

Australia appears to have lost a little of its clout at the four art fairs of substance in Basel revolving around Art Basel 46.

It is not just that Australian galleries have decided to concentrate on other versions of the same event nearer to home and administered by the same organizations in Hong Kong in particular, writes Terry Ingram in Basel

Bonham’s major fine art sale held in Sydney, 16 June 2015 – Important Australian and International Art including Private Collections Curated by John Cruthers – achieved a hammer total of $3,185,900, with clearances of 110% by value and 85% by lot. The sale’s notable find, John Joseph Wardell Power’s Basket of Fruit, last exhibited publicly in Paris in a wartime charity auction to assist returned POW's, was offered at $40,000-60,000 and sold for $140,000, a significant new record for the artist.
By Jane Raffan on 17-Jun-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Curator-as-point-of-difference pays off for Bonham’s

Bonham’s major fine art sale held in Sydney, 16 June 2015 – Important Australian and International Art including Private Collections Curated by John Cruthers – elevated the notion of curator-as-point-of-difference to the catalogue cover. With a hammer total of $3,185,900, the sale achieved impressive clearances of 110% by value and 85% by lot. Whether this strategy will become enshrined in the market remains to be seen, but the success of last night’s sale in broad terms is a win for Bonham’s and especially Cruthers, who bore all the risk in the gambit.

By Terry Ingram on 17-Jun-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Exhibitions deal dealers into the picture

Some belated recognition is being given for the role of the art dealer

Trounced by auction houses in terms of their event-hype generated profile, art dealers are at last receiving some much needed, if only background recognition, for their contribution to art as art's story unfolds

Like artists, however, they have to be dead to have a fixed place in the general scheme. Exhibitions in overseas art museums have now enhanced the profile of two of the leading lights, writes Terry Ingram from Basel.

The Sotheby’s London inaugural sale of Aboriginal art centred on the Thomas Vroom collection cleared 83% by lot, set record prices for several artists and racked up a hammer total of £832,500 (£1,040,625 including premium), around $Au1.9 million. Jack Karedada’s wandjina, Namarali – the First One made £100,000 (AUD $199.6K), a staggering tenfold increase on pre-sale expectations. Sotheby’s UK is now committed to build on this success with an annual auction “at a more ambitious level”
By Jane Raffan on 11-Jun-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Sotheby’s London set to expand Aboriginal art sales after striking success

Despite “virtually no Australian buyers or interest”, according to specialist in charge Tim Klingender, the Sotheby’s London inaugural sale of Aboriginal art centred on the Thomas Vroom collection cleared 83% by lot, set record prices for several artists and racked up a hammer total of £832,500 (£1,040,625 including premium), around $1.9 million Australian dollars.

In the late 1980s the late Alan Bond enjoyed the unearned profile as the world’s most important art collector, but his interest had more to do with money and being accepted in polite society. He acquired his profile through the purchase of Van Gogh’s Irises for $US53.9 million in 1987. Bond appeared a handful of times in New York based ARTnews' top 200 art collectors list and was one of only a handful of Australians ever to do so.
By Terry Ingram on 11-Jun-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Alan Bond's gift to contemporary art

The late Alan Bond gave art collecting in Australia a bad name and he did it in the 1980s with other people's money. The one time London East Ender enjoyed the unearned profile as the world’s most important art collector in the roaring 1980s but his interest had more to do with money and being accepted in polite society - perhaps even at the court of St James's - than with connoisseurship.

Bond appeared a handful of times in New York based ARTnews' top 200 art collectors list and was one of only a handful of Australians ever to do so.

The stars were not in the ascendant for Mossgreen’s start to the traditional winter season, their total of $1.6 million (IBP) well below the nadir presale low estimate of $3.8 million, dispersing only 67% by lot. Only one painting cleared the $100,000 hurdle—the deeply spiritual purple chasm 'Blue Mountains', 1922, by Penleigh Boyd, cutting past its $50,000 upper estimate in a battle between room bidders and telephones, to settle beyond blue at $110,000 hammer.
By Peter James Smith on 03-Jun-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Fresh to market works fail to fire at Mossgreen winter sale

The stars were not in the ascendant for Mossgreen’s start to the traditional winter season, their total hammer well below the nadir presale low estimate of $3.8 million, leaving only dreams of a zenith pre-sale high of $5.3 million. Total sales on the night, including buyer’s premium, just nudged past $1.6 million, dispersing only 67% by lot.

This percentage is less than that achieved by Australia’s other major salerooms in their first sales of 2015, most dispersing 80%. The Mossgreen bourse was stacked with fresh-to-the market stars of major impact including some remarkable works by Whiteley (lot 17), Storrier (lot 20) and Delafield Cook (lot 18) from the Ian Gowrie-Smith Collection. But the sale seemed to trigger the onset of the harshest Melbourne winter, a winter of buyer discontent, when major buyers seemed absent and those that attended sat on their hands beneath the stars.

By , on 31-May-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Mossgreen going for gold in latest art sale

Mossgreen will hold its highest ever value auction when works in its Fine Australian & International Art sale go under the hammer from 6.30pm Tuesday June 2 at 926-930 High Street, Armadale.

With a mid-estimate of more than $4 million, the auction features works from several important private collections including one of Australia’s greatest entrepreneurs Ian Gowrie-Smith who, as a passionate art collector, has been particularly fascinated by Brett Whiteley.

28-May-2015

JW Power's long-lost work set to energise Bonham's sale

A lost work by Australian modernist John Wardell Power has made its way into Bonhams' Australian and International Art auction in Sydney on June 16.

It is believed to be one of only nine works by Power to have been offered on the secondary market over the past 20 years. This is because Power sold works rarely and was even known to buy works back if he regretted a sale. Few are held privately, writes Jane O'Sullivan in the Australian Financial Review.

26-May-2015

Hugh Sawrey and Hans Heysen paintings draw keen interest at art auction in Adelaide

Art lovers and investors have turned out in force for a special Adelaide auction of Australian and overseas paintings.

More than 200 paintings went under the hammer on Sunday at the auction to mark a half-century of sales at Elder Fine Art.

There were more than a dozen Sir Hans Heysen works on offer in one of the biggest sales since the artist's death, auctioneer Jim Elder said.

22-May-2015

Red tape driving the Aboriginal art market offshore

In a move that surprised many local industry players, Sotheby’s International is holding its first dedicated auction of Aboriginal art in London on 10 June, following previews in New York. The 75 lot sale of mostly early and ethnographic material was drawn together by former Sotheby’s Australia Director of Aboriginal Art, Tim Klingender, with a core from notable Dutch collector Thomas Vroom, and the balance (bar three) stemming from British and European collections.

While this provenance makes a London-based auction logistically sensible, Klingender has confirmed the impetus for the locale came from Vroom, who was 'interested to sell an exceptional group from his collection at a major auction house in Europe.' Sotheby’s didn’t take much convincing, expressing 'strong interest in using these works as the core group for its inaugural sale in this category.'

21-May-2015

Top Feilding art collection up for grabs in Auckland

A Feilding art collection that took15 years to curate and holds an eclectic mix of works from some of New Zealand's top artists will be going under the hammer in Auckland next week.

Barry Pilcher's contemporary collectionn includes paintings, sculpture and photographic works by emerging, mid-career and established New Zealand artists such as, Shane Cotton, Judy Millar, Karl Maugham, Sara Hughes and Heather Straka. A total of 134 pieces ranging in price from several hundred to several thousand dollars will be auctioned at the International Art Centre in Parnell, Auckland.

12-May-2015

Art dealer calls for boycott of Patrick Corrigan’s book

Influential Aboriginal art dealer Beverly Knight has petitioned the nation’s art-gallery bookshops, asking them not to stock a new book of Sally Gabori paintings commissioned by collector and retired freight company founder Patrick Corrigan, writes Michaela Boland in The Australian. 
 
Knight guided the career of the Mornington Island painter from 2006 until her death in February at the age of 91. She sold ­Gabori canvases to Melbourne’s National Gallery of Victoria, the National Gallery in Canberra and the Art Gallery of NSW.
 

'Snack Bar' a medium-sized oil on pulp board became, at $380,000 hammer (or $456,000 IBP), the second most highly priced work by artist Herbert Badham sold by auction, at Deutscher and Hackett's sale of important Australian and International Works of Art its rooms in Melbourne's Prahran on May 6. The auction grossed $4.10 million (IBP) with 79% of the lots sold by number and 80% sold by value.
By Terry Ingram on 09-May-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

'Snack Bar' is the main course at Deutscher and Hackett

While the debate on wealth inequality rages on, the interest in the Social Realist school, which of course is very much against concentrated wealth, has taken a new turn. A lively painting by an artist who was very much a master of the school sold for three times the estimate and stole the show at Deutscher and Hackett's sale of important Australian and International Works of Art its rooms in Melbourne's Prahran on May 6, writes Terry Ingram.

Snack Bar (lot 13) a medium-sized (41 by 50cm) oil on pulp board became at $380,000 hammer (or $456,000 IBP) the second most highly priced work by the artist, Herbert Badham, sold by auction. It was sold ironically in an auction which grossed $4.10 million (compared with lower estimates of $4.3 million) and which suggested in sustained bidding that there are people and institutions out there that do have more money than others - as so happens in an unequal society.

By Jane Raffan on 08-May-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Sotheby's London to Hold its First Dedicated Aboriginal Art Auction with Star Centrepiece Collection

Having dispensed with a department dedicated to Aboriginal art, Sotheby’s Australia has exposed itself to a raid by the company’s London branch. The independently owned and operated firm’s practice of including major works of Aboriginal art in their Australian Fine Art sales was clearly not considered an effective trigger for the “no competition” agreement between the two entities.

Industry sources say Sotheby’s Australia was blindsided. In what appears to be a snub, the London sale has been put together by Tim Klingender, Sotheby’s former Director of Aboriginal Art, who resigned from the Australian entity in 2009 and consulted for international newcomer Bonham’s from late 2010 until the end of 2013.

The London sale is centred on select works from the Thomas Vroom Collection, described by Sotheby’s as “one of Europe's largest, most valuable and significant collections.” Vroom himself made this claim in 2002[1]. At that time he was Director of the Amsterdam arm of Songlines Gallery, which was closing up shop and commented that “educating clients is difficult. They have no references. They don’t know what’s good and why it’s good … The quality is not really improving ... It’s getting too commercial.”

 

Colin McCahon’s work Paul to Hebrews 1980 is one of the more fascinating pieces of art to be auctioned from 7pm Wednesday May 6 by Deutscher and Hackett at 105 Commercial Road, South Yarra.
Comprising written passages from the Bible on three sheets of Steinbach paper using synthetic polymer paint, the painting is one of two biblical texts that dominated the final period of McCahon’s oeuvre (the first being a Letter to the Hebrews in the 1970s).
By , on 03-May-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Deutscher and Hackett to sell McCahon work based on biblical text

Colin McCahon’s work Paul to Hebrews 1980 is one of the more fascinating pieces of art to be auctioned from 7pm Wednesday May 6 by Deutscher and Hackett at 105 Commercial Road, South Yarra.

Comprising written passages from the Bible on three sheets of Steinbach paper using synthetic polymer paint, the painting is one of two biblical texts that dominated the final period of McCahon’s oeuvre (the first being a Letter to the Hebrews in the 1970s). 

Sotheby's Australia personnel were exhuberant as Lord Mark Poltimore lowered the gavel on the final lot in the sale of the Collection of the late David Clarke and other vendors auction at the Intercontinental Hotel in Sydney on April 28.
The sale grossed $11,259,136 with 78.4 per cent of the lots sold and 124 per cent by value. Mr Clarke's most financially rewarding purchase appears to have been Lin Onus's “Frogs on Waterlilies”  which cost $132,000 and made $512,000 to a telephone bidder.
By Terry Ingram on 29-Apr-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Sotheby's weary vagabond sale ends on a champagne note

A mood of exuberance overtook the personnel of Sotheby's Australia as Lord Mark Poltimore lowered the gavel at the 111th and final lot of the sale of the Collection of the late David Clarke and other vendors auction at the Intercontinental Hotel in Sydney on April 28.

The sale grossed $11,259,136 with just over three quarters of the lots (78.4 per cent) sold and 124 per cent by value. It was proclaimed the highest for the company since May 2007. The collection of investment banker, the late Mr David Clarke, grossed $6.1 million of this sum.

28-Apr-2015

Olsen v Sotheby’s dispute puts copyright agency under pressure

The story has become legendary in the art world: in July last year art dealer Tim Olsen and his sister, Dinosaur Designs co-founder Louise Olsen, made their way to the Woollahra, Sydney, showroom of Sotheby’s Australia.

The pair had a tip that a mysterious early painting by their father, John Olsen, was being offered for sale by the auction house. That painting is being auctioned by Sotheby's this evening, writes Michaela Boland in The Australian.

With three major art auctions iminent,  the auction houses have been addressing the question of the provenance of the works they are offering. Terry Ingram selects and comments on three of his favourites in the upcoming sales, including  <i> Weary</i>  by Florence Fuller, a large 92 by 78 cm painting of a young vagabond sleeping in a sitting position, supported by an advertising billboard. The work was sold at an exhibition by the artist in 1891.
By Terry Ingram on 22-Apr-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Hasty, tasty and weary

The autumn art auctions have shown a marked and welcome increase in respect for provenance.

Whether deliberate of accidental, details have been forthcoming about the history of a number of lots which might normally have been missing.

The auction houses appear to be addressing themselves to the big question that everyone is asking since the frozen berry crisis early in the year. The berry buyers appear to have been exposed to hepatitis through eating the berries.

The kangaroo is a pest no more or not at least as far as the saleroom and art circuit are concerned. At sales or viewings in as oddly diverse locations such as Sydney (an auction house); Hong Kong (an art fair) and Surrey (a golf club) fine and decorative art featuring kangaroos has enjoyed keen responses – two silver examples leading the fray writes, Terry Ingram
By Terry Ingram on 14-Apr-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

In the face of a national downturn the 'Roo' refuses to blink.

The Australian dollar may have slipped together with the price of iron ore and national economic prospects. But the quintessential symbol of Australia - the kangaroo is holding tight.

The kangaroo is a pest no more or not at least as far as the saleroom and art circuit are concerned.

At sales or viewings in as oddly diverse locations such as Sydney (an auction house); Hong Kong (an art fair) and Surrey (a golf club) fine and decorative art featuring kangaroos has enjoyed keen responses – two silver examples leading the fray.

14-Apr-2015

Olsens cite catalogue of injuries as Sotheby’s looks to sell

Sotheby’s Australia has ignited an almighty row with one of the ­nation’s leading art dealers by ­including two paintings by his ­father, John Olsen, in its upcoming auction catalogues. One of the works is a jewel in the collection of late Macquarie Bank co-founder David Clarke. The big, greenish board Captain Dobbin is expected to fetch upwards of $300,000. The other painting, The Mother, was the subject of a bitter legal dispute ­between Sotheby’s and the Olsen family settled by the Supreme Court in December, broadly in the auction house’s favour, writes Michaela Boland in The Australian.
 

This gold presentation paperweight was presented to Dame Nellie Melba by the citizens of Geelong after a concert she had given in aid of Kitchener Memorial Hospital in 1922, which raised £7012 from ticket sales. Estimated at $40,000 to $50,000 it made $134,000 at the sale of 162 lots from Coombe Cottage, Dame Nellie's Melbourne home on March 31. It is among several lots sold to the Museum of Victoria so it will not be saying farewell to Melbourne, only to Lilydale, writes Terry Ingram.
By Terry Ingram on 02-Apr-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Another Melba farewell - choice objects move in towards the city

Against frenetic bidding at a Sotheby's Australia auction in Melbourne's Grand Hyatt Hotel on March 31, Museum Victoria outbid private buyers to secure choice lots from a selection of objects that had been collected by the opera singer Dame Nellie Melba, which given the strength of the local and global bidding in the room could have gone to overseas buyers.

With the help of the Australian Government Cultural Heritage Account the museum purchased seven lots.

The National Portrait Gallery in Canberra has stepped in where the National Maritime Museum in London failed to tread. For more than half a million dollars it has purchased a familiar portrait of a famous seaman man who is now a very different Captain Bligh to that of Mutiny on the Bounty fame, writes Terry Ingram.
By Terry Ingram on 31-Mar-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Captain Bligh joins Captain Cook after another long journey Down Under

The National Portrait Gallery in Canberra has stepped in where the National Maritime Museum in London failed to tread. For more than half a million dollars it has purchased a familiar portrait of a famous seaman man who is now a very different Captain Bligh to that of Mutiny on the Bounty fame.

The portrait has a long market history with uncertainties being raised about both the identities of both the painter and the sitter over the years of its exposure. But thanks to funds supplied by a Canberra philanthropic family it has joined the portrait of Captain Cook in the National Portrait Gallery for a price which coincidentally appears to be around the same price paid for its Captain Cook portrait in the early 2000s.

Brett Whiteley’s Untitled (Heron, Rain & Wind) 1973 (lot 75), complete with real nest and egg, from the personal estate of renowned art dealer Eva Breuer, sold for half a million dollars, right in between the $400,000-$600,00 estimate at Menzies auction in Sydney on 27 March. The unconfirmed numbers for the 282 lot sale are a sale total of $8.4 million including buyer’s premium, with 84% sold by volume and 67% by value.
By David Hulme & Brigitte Banziger on 27-Mar-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Brett Whiteley nest egg purchased just in time for Easter at Menzies Sydney Fine Art Sale

It is pretty hard for an artist to dominate a fine art sale containing 282 lots. Nonetheless, Sidney Nolan provided almost 10% of it with a total of 23 lots in the Menzies sale on 26 March in Kensington.

The sale grossed $8.4 million including buyer’s premium (unconfirmed), with 84% sold by volume and 67% by value.

 

Two consignments from Australia appear to have benefitted substantially from the attention created by the sale of one of the world's finest collections of Asian art in New York this month. Both Sotheby's and Christie's sold works shipped across the Pacific through the local franchise and the representative offices respectively of the two companies. Christie's consignment produced a useful $US905,000 IBP for a pair of Zitan armchairs of the later Qing period, three times the top estimate.
By Terry Ingram on 26-Mar-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Chinese thrones crown local consignments to New York's Asia

Two consignments from Australia appear to have benefitted substantially in the market place from the attention created by the sale of one of the world's finest collections of Asian art in New York this month.

Both Sotheby's and Christie's sold works shipped across the Pacific through the local franchise and the representative offices respectively of the two companies..

24-Mar-2015

Olsens withdraw stolen painting claim after John Olsen remembers he gave the artwork as a gift

The adult children of celebrated Australian artist John Olsen have withdrawn their claim that a 1964 painting being sold by Sotheby's was stolen decades ago. Late last year, Gallery owner Tim Olsen and his jewellery designer sister Louise Olsen took the prominent art auction house to the NSW Supreme Court over the painting called The Mother. On the rear of the canvas is an inscription that reads: "For my darling Valerie, John Olsen '64". The plaintiffs said the artist gave the painting to his then-wife Valerie Olsen as a gift following the birth of Louise. Tim and Louise claimed Valerie, who died in 2011, had an "emotional attachment to the painting" and "she would not have parted with possession of the painting under any circumstances".
 

21-Mar-2015

When the Fine Art Market Goes Online

Is 2015 going to be the year in which the art market — or at least a sizeable chunk of it — finally goes digital? Unlike recorded music and books, which are now bought routinely by millions of people from websites, fine art has proved stubbornly resistant to the march of e-commerce. At least so it would seem from the statistics. Online transactions contributed 6 percent of the record 51 billion euros, or about $59 billion, of art sold by auction houses and dealers in 2014, according to a report published on March 11 by the Netherlands-based European Fine Art Foundation.

Australia's mineral trade with China may be faltering but the boom in choice Chinese art exports from is very much alive and well as is the brand through which they were consigned, writes Terry Ingram. Sotheby's New York has sold sold for a seven figure sum, a set of four enamel panels consigned through the “unrelated” Sotheby's Australia.
By Terry Ingram on 20-Mar-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Immortal panels at $US1.81 million shows the enduring power of brand Sotheby's

Australia's mineral trade with China may be faltering but the boom in choice Chinese art exports from is very much alive and well as is the brand through which they were consigned.

Sotheby's New York has sold sold for a seven figure sum, a set of four enamel panels consigned through the “unrelated” Sotheby's Australia.

The sale for $US1.8 million in New York of a set of four famille rose enamel panels consigned by a member of the property branch of the Paspali - Paroulakis pearl family suggests that for choice finds at least, the market in high class Chinoiserie is still on the boil.

13-Mar-2015

Record price for McIntyre's painting of East Cape family

A painting by renowned New Zealand artist Peter McIntyre has fetched a record price at auction in Wellington. Maori Family, East Cape sold for $129,000 to a private bidder at auctioneers Dunbar Sloane on Wednesday. The work depicts a family gathering pipi on a beach. Dunbar Sloane director of art Helena Walker said it was considered one of McIntyre's best pieces.

Three recent antique, decorative arts and philatelic auctions showed that interest in the most unlikely categories can produce satisfactory returns if estimates are adjusted to show that the goods are genuinely for sale. An opulent setting can also help. With bidders now accustomed to the delay occasioned by online bidding, auctioneers have the chance to slow the proceedings for this third player, the phalanx of unseen bidders on the Internet writes Terry Ingram
By Terry Ingram on 12-Mar-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Opulence links clock and old envelope sales with lots and lots of Louis

Three recent antique, decorative arts and philatelic auctions showed that interest in the most unlikely categories can produce satisfactory returns if estimates are adjusted to show that the goods are genuinely for sale. An opulent setting can also help. With bidders now accustomed to the delay occasioned by online bidding, auctioneers additonally have the chance to slow the proceedings for this third player, the phalanx of unseen bidders on the Internet.

The Sydney quay-side museum setting for the Deutscher and Hackett sale of the Laverty Collection’s Beyond Sacred, Australian Aboriginal Art, attracted buyers competing for the 166 lots in a laid-back if not gruelling 4 hour event that saw the sale rack-up a total of $3.4 million (incl. BP) and break many artist records. Naata Nungurrayi secured the top price with an importantly provenanced work, Rockhole and Soakage Water Site of Marrapinti reaching $180,000, equalling the artist’s saleroom record.
By Jane Raffan on 10-Mar-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Laverty Collection Beyond Sacred – a benchmark sale by Deutscher and Hackett launches the Aboriginal art calendar for 2015.

On what was a glorious late summer Sunday afternoon, the Sydney quay-side museum setting for the Deutscher and Hackett sale of the Laverty Collection’s Beyond Sacred, Australian Aboriginal Art, offered cachet, catering and fresh air. And it attracted collectors and other buyers providing for that ilk in droves, most of whom stayed glued to their spots competing for the 166 lots in a laid-back if not gruelling 4 hour event that saw the sale rack-up a total of $3.4 million (incl. BP) and break many artist records.

09-Mar-2015

At Auctions, Who Benefits Most From Art-Market Boom?

Auctioning art is one of capitalism’s older professions, and recent sales have shown that it’s a robust one, with the ultra-rich prepared to pay ever-higher prices for trophies that enhance their status. But are auctions a profitable way to make a living?

New figures released last week confirm that the top end of the art market is booming, and yet, as has been widely noted, it is individual sellers, rather than the auction houses, who are benefiting most from these dazzling sales.

The Christie’s auction house is privately owned by the French billionaire François Pinault and does not include information on profits or losses in its financial data. Sotheby’s, however, is publicly listed — the only international auction house that is — and thus declares profits in its Securities and Exchange Commission filings in the United States.

04-Mar-2015

Australians buy up big on contemporary British art

The Australian art market has been dubbed small, unique and underrated on the world stage. However, it has just emerged thata pocket of 50 or so Australian collectors last year spent more than $8 million on modern British art and are now responsible for 10 per cent of Christie's modern British art turnover in London. Christie's London-based senior director of Modern British and Irish Art, Andre Zlattinger, (formerly of Sotheby's London), is in Melbourne and Sydney this week to touch base with Australian collectors of  modern British art who buy and sell in this top-end international market. He said Australian auction houses need to "internationalise" their star performers - such as Brett Whiteley, Grace Cossington-Smith, Sidney Nolan and Arthur Boyd - and take them to London, New York, Paris and Berlin, where they could be recognised on the international stage.
 

26-Feb-2015

Caravaggio in court: Sotheby's wins case after '£10m' painting sold for £42,000

A man who attempted to sue Sotheby’s over a painting declared a “£10million Caravaggio” after he sold it has lost his High Court battle, leaving him facing millions of pounds-worth of costs.  Lancelot William Thwaytes, a chartered surveyor, had sold the painting, entitled The Cardsharps and catalogued as by a follower of Caravaggio, for £42,000 through Sotheby’s in 2006. The following year, renowned collector Sir Denis Mahon, the new owner, publicly claimed it was a genuine work by the artist, valuing it at £10m.

The Caressa Crouch and Carl Gonsalves Collection of Australiana sold for $1.07 million or more than three times expectations at Mossgreen's rooms in Melbourne on February 22. Highest price was for an important early colonial cedar sideboard sold to a phone bidder for $122,000 including buyers premium against estimates of $20,000 to $30,000. A whalebone chair (above) realised $34,160, more than three times the estimate of $10,000 to $15,000 but less than the $84,000 paid for it at Bonhams & Goodman in 2008.
By Terry Ingram on 24-Feb-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Whale of a sale creates a big splash in the Australiana market.

The Caressa Crouch and Carl Gonsalves Collection of Australiana sold for $1.07 million or more than three times expectations at Mossgreen's rooms in Melbourne on February 22. The result was helped by strategically low estimates designed to sell, writes Terry Ingram.

A painting offered as from the circle of the 18th century English portrait painter Francis Cotes at a Lawson's house sale in Sydney's Vaucluse on February 15 sold for $42,500 or around three times its estimate. The hammer price was $34,000 against estimates of $10,000 to $15,000, writes Terry Ingram.
By Terry Ingram on 22-Feb-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

Deep pockets for Cotes

A painting offered as from the circle of the 18th century English portrait painter Francis Cotes at a Lawson's house sale in Sydney's Vaucluse on February 15 sold for $42,500 or around three times its estimate. The hammer price was $34,000 against estimates of $10,000 to $15,000.

22-Feb-2015

Peter Lik’s Recipe for Success: Sell Prints. Print Money.

Peter Lik is in awe of himself. When he describes his career as a fine-art photographer, he speaks with the satisfaction of a guy who has performed miracles, at the pace of a bystander who just caught a glimpse of Superman. The words tumble forth in self-exalting, run-on sentences, most of them laced with profanity, all of them in the sunny, chummy accent of his native Australia. “I’m the world’s most famous photographer, most sought-after photographer, most awarded photographer,” he said one recent afternoon, sipping a can of Red Bull in a conference room at Peter Lik USA, a 100,000-square-foot headquarters in Las Vegas devoted solely to the production and sale of Peter Lik photography. “So I said” — and what Mr. Lik said next is an unprintable version of “the heck with it,” and then — “I want to make something special, special, special, special.”

30-Jan-2015

Top houses tread carefully amid art row

Leading art auctioneers have distanced themselves from the controversial “pop up” company Arthouse Auctions, accused of trading in forged or misattributed Aboriginal artworks. Specialists from Bonhams, Deutscher and Hackett and Mossgreen said their consignment policies required all artworks to enter the market via an indigenous community art centre or the artist’s primary dealer. The question of who the primary dealer is, however, can be ­debatable, and this is where reputations and established relationships are paramount. These houses offer money-back guarantees.
 

30-Jan-2015

Police in four states, ACCC field Arthouse claims

Police in four states, the Australian Competition & Consumer Commission and the Indigenous Art Code have all heard allegations that Arthouse Auctions offered fake or “very likely misattributed” work for sale against the names of top painters. The “pop up” and online sales, company reaped at least $2.3 million last year and appears to target small collectors and mum-and-dad investors. It has been accused of offering suspect works for sale by at least 10 high-profile artists.

 

27-Jan-2015

More artists added to list of suspect Aboriginal art sales

A “pop-up” and online auction house ­accused of handling forged works by two of Australia’s top Aboriginal artists has also ­offered allegedly fake or “very likely misattributed” paintings for sale against the names of at least eight other artists. The company, Arthouse Auctions, last year reaped more than $2.3 million from 28 sales, ­according to “verified” auction records. In November, Arthouse withdrew two allegedly forged paintings attributed to Barbara Moore after police attended an auction in Brisbane. Over the weekend, the company removed another canvas — attributed to Tommy Watson — from a sale held yesterday, after being questioned by The Australian.
 

26-Jan-2015

Millions made from selling fakes

A pop-up online auction firm has traded million dollar art works, selling paintings purported to be created by high-profile Aboriginal artists even after receiving notification that they were probably forgeries.

Just last weekend the firm, Arthouse Auctions, withdrew a painting expected to be sold today under the name of one of Australia’s most renowned Indigenous painters, Tommy Watson. The move came after the firm had been informed by The Australian that the work was alleged to be a forgery.
 

By Adrian Newstead on 13-Jan-2015 Exclusive to the AASD

2014 - Indigenous Art in Review: a glass half empty or, half full?

2014 may not have been the most brilliant year for Indigenous art but, as we reach the middle of the second decade of the 21st century, more people are collecting art now than ever before - and this is certainly so of Australian Aboriginal art.

03-Jan-2015

APY artists see red as pop-up auctions peddle fake works

Works by one of Australia’s best Aboriginal painters have allegedly been forged and offered for sale in a travelling “pop-up” auction that the artist and other APY Lands painters say is akin to “stealing our culture”.  At least 15 canvasses, purport­edly by 2012 Telstra National ­Aboriginal and Torres Strait ­Islander Art Award winner ­Bar­bara Moore, have been forged, with two turning up at an Arthouse Auctions sale in Brisbane.
 

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