A never-before-seen masterpiece by Mark Rothko and one of Andy Warhol’s last self-portraits are among the dozens of works to be auctioned this spring as part of the sale of one of the greatest collections of modern contemporary art ever assembled.
The Macklowe collection, which was amassed by the real estate magnate Harry Macklowe and Linda Burg, an honorary trustee of New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, is being sold to help settle the billionaire couple’s acrimonious divorce.
Last November, more than $676m (£503m) was paid for the first half of the collection, in the most valuable single-auction ever staged and the most valuable action held by Sotheby’s, one of the world’s leading art houses.
On Friday, Sotheby’s revealed a further 30 works, which will be offered at auction in New York in May. Highlights were unveiled in London by Will Gompertz, director of arts of the Barbican, and Eleanor Nairne, a curator at the Barbican.
Among these were Rothko’s Untitled from 1960, a rich oxblood-coloured and meditative piece from a critical moment in the artist’s career, which is expected to fetch $35m-$50m. The work demonstrates Rothko’s deepening palate, as he moved away from the bright colours he used in the mid-1950s to more emotive ones.
One of Warhol’s final works, a monumental self-portrait painted as he contemplated his own legacy and status, is expected to fetch $15m-$20m. Vanitas: Skulls and Self Portraits by Andy Warhol is part of the artist’s “fright wig” series of work from 1986.
Warhol’s use of camouflage depicts his performative relationship with identity and his sense of playfulness. The artist died just nine months after making the work.
Gerhard Richter’s Seestück (Seascape), a large-scale painting from 1975,
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