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Records for Leutze + Pippin Propel Sotheby’s $44.1 Million American Art Auction

SOTHEBY’S AMERICAN ART AUCTION TOTALS $44.1 MILLION

Two Comedians Edward Hopper’s Final Painting, Leads the Auction with $12.5 Million

Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze’s Monumental Ode to the American West Achieves $4.8 Million More than Double the Previous World Auction Record for the Artist

Horace Pippin’s Autobiographical Holy Mountain, I Brings $3.3 Million More than 8 Times the Previous World Auction Record for the Artist, Set by the Same Work at Sotheby’s in 1987

ADDITIONAL AUCTION RECORDS ACHIEVED FOR: Joseph Christian Leyendecker l Theodore Wores Thomas Moran Work on Paper

Sotheby’s November Sales of American Art Reach $76.6 Million

NEW YORK, 19 November 2018 – Sotheby’s marquee week of fine art auctions in New York concluded on Friday afternoon with our dedicated auction of American Art totaling $44.1 million – the highest total for a various-owner auction of American Art at Sotheby’s since we sold Georgia O’Keeffe’s iconic Jimson Weed/White Flower No. 1 in 2014. Over the course of the week’s flagship auctions in New York, Sotheby’s sales of American Art have raised $76.6 million.

Kayla Carlsen, Head of Sotheby’s American Art Department, New York, commented: “Friday’s results showed continued strength across the full scope of the American Art category, from auction record prices for 19th–century works by Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze and Thomas Moran, to Modern and Contemporary masterworks by Georgia O’Keeffe and Edward Hopper. We were thrilled to see such success among a diverse and wide-ranging group of museum quality works drive one of our highest results in recent seasons.”

The auction was led by Edward Hopper’s autobiographical masterwork Two Comedians, which sold for $12.5 million. Formerly in the collection of Frank and Barbara Sinatra, the 1966 work represents the culmination of Hopper’s career, depicting the artist and his wife on stage taking a final bow before turning to walk into the unknown. Jo holds the artist’s hand, symbolizing their close bond and significant role she played in his life and career.

The strong selection of Western art on offer by iconic names including Thomas Moran, William Robinson Leigh and Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze performed well throughout Friday’s sale. The group was topped by Leutze's impressively-scaled Western Emigrant Train Bound for California Across the Plains, Alarmed by Approach of Hostile Indians, which fetched $4.8 million – well in excess of its $3.5 million high estimate, and more than double the previous world auction record for the artist. The work was sold to benefit the Dover Free Public Library in Dover, New Jersey, where it has resided since it was gifted to the institution in 1943. Though Leutze was born in Germany in 1816 and spent most of his life living and working there, his paintings of the significant figures and historical events of 18th and 19th century America rank as the most celebrated images of his oeuvre – including his iconic image of Washington Crossing the Delaware in the collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

Works by Moran were led by Big Springs in Yellowstone Park, sold above estimate for $1.9 million. Showcasing his mastery of the medium, the watercolor was commissioned as part of the United States Congress’s geological survey of the Yellowstone Territories led by Dr. Ferdinand V. Hayden in the 1870s.

Following Wednesday night’s sale of Georgia O’Keeffe’s A Street and Calla Lilies on Red, Friday’s American Art auction featured the artist’s Cottonwood Tree in Spring, which sold for $3.9 million – well above its $2.5 million high estimate. Painted in 1943, the work serves as a testament to the deep inspiration O’Keeffe found in the American Southwest. Each on offer from the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe, New Mexico and sold to benefit its Acquisitions Fund, the three paintings sold last week by O’Keeffe together achieved $23.3 million.

Horace Pippin’s Holy Mountain, I achieved $3.3 million, more than eight times the artist’s previous auction record of $385,000 which was set by the very same painting in a Sotheby’s New York auction in 1987. Following the artist’s honorable discharge from the United States army in WWII, the pastoral work presents an autobiographical scene, with a harmonious foreground contrasted by soldiers marching through the ominous forested background. Reflecting on his personal experiences in WWII and the cultural climate of the period, the work is dated to June 6, 1944, corresponding with D-Day, and further reinforcing the ideological dichotomy between war and peace.








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  • Lot 15 Property from a Distinguished Private Collection Edward Hopper Two Comedians signed EDWARD HOPPER (lower left) oil on canvas 29 by 40 inches (73.7 by 101.6 cm) Painted in 1966. Estimate $12/18 million Sold For $12,492,200
    Lot 15 Property from a Distinguished Private Collection Edward Hopper Two Comedians signed EDWARD HOPPER (lower left) oil on canvas 29 by 40 inches (73.7 by 101.6 cm) Painted in 1966. Estimate $12/18 million Sold For $12,492,200
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus
  • Lot 44 Property from The Dover Free Public Library Emmanuel Gottlieb Leutze Indians Attacking a Wagon Train Signed E Leutze and inscribed Dusdf p.p.c. indistinctly (lower right) Oil on canvas 40 by 67 1⁄2 inches (101.6 by 171.5 cm) Painted in 1863 Estimate $2.5/3.5 million Sold for $4,815,000 *RECORD FOR THE ARTIST AT AUCTION*
    Lot 44 Property from The Dover Free Public Library Emmanuel Gottlieb Leutze Indians Attacking a Wagon Train Signed E Leutze and inscribed Dusdf p.p.c. indistinctly (lower right) Oil on canvas 40 by 67 1⁄2 inches (101.6 by 171.5 cm) Painted in 1863 Estimate $2.5/3.5 million Sold for $4,815,000 *RECORD FOR THE ARTIST AT AUCTION*
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus
  • Lot 19 Norman Rockwell Tired Salesgirl on Christmas Eve signed Norman/Rockwell (lower left) oil on canvas 30 3/8 by 28 1/4 inches (77.2 by 71.8 cm) Painted in 1947. Sold for $4,335,000
    Lot 19 Norman Rockwell Tired Salesgirl on Christmas Eve signed Norman/Rockwell (lower left) oil on canvas 30 3/8 by 28 1/4 inches (77.2 by 71.8 cm) Painted in 1947. Sold for $4,335,000
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus
  • Lot 10 Property from the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum Sold to Benefit the Acquisitions Fund Georgia O’Keeffe Cottonwood Tree in Spring 1943 Oil on canvas 30 by 36 inches Estimate $1.5/2.5 million Sold for $3,855,000 © 2018 The Georgia O'Keeffe Museum / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
    Lot 10 Property from the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum Sold to Benefit the Acquisitions Fund Georgia O’Keeffe Cottonwood Tree in Spring 1943 Oil on canvas 30 by 36 inches Estimate $1.5/2.5 million Sold for $3,855,000 © 2018 The Georgia O'Keeffe Museum / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus
  • Lot 28 Horace Pippin Holy Mountain, I signed H. Pippin. and dated June 6./1944. (lower right) oil on canvas 30 1/2 by 36 inches (77.5 by 91.4 cm) Estimate $1/1.5 million Sold for $3,255,000 *RECORD FOR THE ARTIST AT AUCTION*
    Lot 28 Horace Pippin Holy Mountain, I signed H. Pippin. and dated June 6./1944. (lower right) oil on canvas 30 1/2 by 36 inches (77.5 by 91.4 cm) Estimate $1/1.5 million Sold for $3,255,000 *RECORD FOR THE ARTIST AT AUCTION*
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus
  • Lot 67 Thomas Moran Big Springs in Yellowstone Park Signed T. MORAN. and dated 1872. (lower right) Watercolor and gouache on paper 9 1⁄2 inches by 19 1⁄2 inches (24.1 by 49.5 cm) Estimate $1/1.5 million Sold for $1,935,000 *RECORD FOR A WORK ON PAPER BY THE ARTIST*
    Lot 67 Thomas Moran Big Springs in Yellowstone Park Signed T. MORAN. and dated 1872. (lower right) Watercolor and gouache on paper 9 1⁄2 inches by 19 1⁄2 inches (24.1 by 49.5 cm) Estimate $1/1.5 million Sold for $1,935,000 *RECORD FOR A WORK ON PAPER BY THE ARTIST*
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus
  • Lot 49 Works of Art Sold to Benefit the Berkshire Museum Thomas Moran The Last Arrow Signed Thomas Moran and dated 1867/OP-25 (lower right) Oil on canvas 52 by 79 inches (132.1 by 200.7 cm) Estimate $1.2/1.8 million Sold for $1,335,000
    Lot 49 Works of Art Sold to Benefit the Berkshire Museum Thomas Moran The Last Arrow Signed Thomas Moran and dated 1867/OP-25 (lower right) Oil on canvas 52 by 79 inches (132.1 by 200.7 cm) Estimate $1.2/1.8 million Sold for $1,335,000
    Sotheby’s Auktionshaus