LONDON — Three sketches by Goya, presumed lost for 130 years, sold today for about $8 million.
Christie’s says the sketches first went up for sale in Paris in 1877 and were presumed lost, until a private Swiss collector contacted the auction house about them.
The sketch titled “Bajar Rinendo” or “They Go Down Quarrelling” – which depicts four women fighting as they fall through the air – sold in London for about $4.6 million.
The other two sketches depict a constable stitched inside a dead horse and a wide-eyed man praying in front of a cross.
All the prices include the buyer’s premium.
The sketches come from the private notebooks of Goya, who worked in the Spanish courtly tradition but is also known for the fantastic, dark and often disturbing works he painted later in his career. During the last three decades of his life, the Spanish artist used the notebooks to draw people in various moods and situations. Goya died in 1828.
Previous art auctions by Christie’s and Sotheby’s auction houses have shown the art market remains strong despite the global economic downturn.
A Monet water lily painting sold for more than $78 million in June, setting a record for the most expensive work of art ever sold by Christie’s in Europe. Sotheby’s sold a portrait by Francis Bacon for $26.9 million during its contemporary art week. Both works sold for well over their estimated values.
GOYA SKETCHES SELL FOR 48 MILLION AT CHRISTIE’S
July 10 2008
Category :Flashnews 
Anish Kapoor
Christie's
Yves Klein
Vittorio Sgarbi
Guggenheim Museum
Damien Hirst
Lucian Freud
Claude Monet
Lucio Fontana
Moma
Sotheby's
Brescia
Mark Rothko
London
Willem de Kooning
Gerhard Richter
Madrid
New York
Vincent Van Gogh
Richard Prince
Metropolitan Museum
Piero Manzoni
Finarte
India
Banksy
Bonhams
Takashi Murakami
Jeff Koons
Andy Warhol
Christie’s
Sotheby’s
Milano
Pablo Picasso
Still
Francis Bacon
 
 









1 comment yet ↓
1 Gig de Pio Sr // Jul 18, 2008 at 00:14
i WISH THERE ARE PICTURES OF THE PAINTINGS AUCTIONED.
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