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US$35m Warhol Coke bottle lifts Sotheby's auction

A BLACK-and-white Coke bottle on canvas by Andy Warhol sold for US$35.36 million yesterday at Sotheby's robust contemporary and post-war art auction.
The sale of 54 works, an impressive 91 percent of which found buyers, totaled US$222.4 million including commissions, beating the high pre-sale estimate of US$214 million.
Five artists set auction records as collectors continued vying for works in the post-war art sector, an increasingly sought after sector of the art world.
"In this new market, it was a huge success," said Tobias Meyer, Sotheby's <BID.N> worldwide head of contemporary art, who also served as auctioneer.
It was the fourth successful sale in two weeks for Sotheby's, Christie's and Phillips de Pury & Co.
After a precipitous decline following the 2008 financial crisis, the art market has made a solid recovery in 2010, driven in part by a huge infusion of new collectors abroad with fortunes newly forged in oil, gas and gold.
Led by Warhol's "Coca-Cola (4) (Large Coca-Cola)," which far surpassed the high estimate of US$25 million, the sale was more evidence of the growing appetite for post-war works.
The market for such works, along with contemporary art, has in recent years challenged and sometimes eclipsed the demand for earlier Impressionist and "modern" auction categories.
"What's happening is that people have been moving into this market from the Impressionist market. ... It's become one market," said Meyer.
Prices commanded by top Warhols had put the pop artist in the same league as Matisse and Picasso, he added.
On Monday, Warhol's "Men in Her Life," a multi-image depiction of favored subject Elizabeth Taylor, soared to US$63.4 million at Phillips.
"It's a global, 20th-century iconic market," Meyer said.
Other highlights included a pair of works by Gerhard Richter that fetched US$13.23 million and US$11.3 million, and Francis Bacon's "Figure in Movement," which sold for US$14 million. Each more than doubled the low estimate.
In all, six works sold for more than US$10 million, including an untitled Rothko which went for US$22.5 million.
The auctions conclude on Wednesday with Christie's contemporary and post-war sale, which is expected to be the season's biggest.



 

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