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Warhol's Elvis and Brando lead New York art auction

By Associated Press in New York | China Daily | Updated: 2014-11-14 08:08

Portraits by Andy Warhol of entertainment superstars Elvis Presley and Marlon Brando were among the highlights at a record-breaking auction of postwar and contemporary art.

Warhol's Triple Elvis (Ferus Type) sold for $81.9 million, and Four Marlons brought in $69.6 million on Wednesday at Christie's, which said the evening sale in New York totaled $852.9 million, the highest single take for any auction.

Works by Willem de Kooning and Cy Twombly also broke auction records for the artists.

Triple Elvis and Four Marlons rate among Warhol's most famous portraits. The nearly 2.13-meter-high portraits were acquired by German casino company WestSpiel in the 1970s for one of its casinos.

The Elvis, executed in ink and silver paint in 1963, depicts the rock heartthrob as a cowboy, armed and shooting from the hip. The Brando silk-screen, created three years later, shows the actor on a motorcycle in a black leather jacket, an image that is repeated four times.

Warhol produced a series of 22 images of Elvis. His Double Elvis (Ferus Type) sold for $37 million at Sotheby's in 2012.

Last fall, his Silver Car Crash (Double Disaster) set an auction record for Warhol's work when it sold at Sotheby's for $105.4 million.

There's only one other quadruple Brando, in the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Copenhagen. A Double Marlon sold at Christie's for $32.5 million in 2008.

De Kooning's Clamdigger, a life-size sculpture created in 1972, sold for $29.2 million, a world auction record for a sculpture by the artist. The bronze sculpture never left the artist, standing in the entrance of his studio on eastern Long Island for about four decades.

The inspiration for it came from the clam diggers the abstract expressionist observed at the beach every day.

Clamdiggers was offered for sale by the daughters of Lisa de Kooning, who inherited the sculpture from her father when he died in 1997. She died in 2012.

The auction record for any work by de Kooning is $32.1 million for Untitled VIII, a record set last year at Christie's.

Twombly's Untitled, one of the famous series of "blackboard" paintings he made between 1966 and 1971, brought in $69.6 million, a world auction record for his work. With their spiraling lines on a dark gray background, the paintings were named for their resemblance to the slate of a classroom's blackboard.

An oversize sculpture of a monkey by the popular artist Jeff Koons was another auction highlight.

Koons' whimsical stainless steel Balloon Monkey (Orange) fetched $25.9 million. Measuring nearly 3.6 meters high and 6 meters long, it looks like an inflated twisted balloon.

Koons became the most expensive living artist last year when his Balloon Dog (Orange) was auctioned for $58.4 million. A retrospective of his work recently closed at the Whitney Museum of American Art.

 Warhol's Elvis and Brando lead New York art auction

Christie's employees stand near two Andy Warhol portraits, Triple Elvis (Ferus Type) and Four Marlons at the offices of the auction house in London on Oct 14.  Matt Dunham / Associated Press

(China Daily 11/14/2014 page10)

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