Has the artwork market bounced off the underside? Artwork market professionals and collectors had been anxiously watching the outcomes of the night gross sales held throughout Frieze week, and hoping to see a restoration after two years of declining figures.
The image was combined, with a couple of extremely fascinating works performing splendidly, however extra run-of-the-mill tons failing or going effectively below the already lowered pre-sale expectations. And there was a notable correction of costs for some artists whose values have tumbled over the previous three or 4 years. However total, the sale outcomes introduced some solace to the uneasy observers.
Photos fail to convey how Doig makes the paint appear to be snow
Christie’s opened the ball with its twentieth/Twenty first-century night sale on 15 October in a packed room, fielding a 61-lot session estimated at £87m-£129m, earlier than charges. It proclaimed it was happy with the outcomes, which at £106.9m fell squarely inside expectations and had been 30% increased than these achieved within the barely smaller equal sale final 12 months.
Its headline lot was Peter Doig’s Ski Jacket (1994), which soared over its £6m-£8m estimate to make a shocking £14.2m after an epic—and excruciatingly gradual—14-minute battle between the Hong Kong-based Eric Chang of Christie’s Asia and the ultimate purchaser within the room, the previous Christie’s chairman Francis Outred, now an artwork vendor.
The Doig got here from the famed Danish collector Ole Faarup (1934-2025), who had purchased voraciously from artists within the early a part of their careers, notably Warhol and Basquiat; eight of his acquisitions had been within the night sale, together with 4 works by Doig. Extra of 140 tons from his assortment will seem in additional gross sales; the proceeds are going to a basis to assist younger artists.
Ski Jacket did higher than the next lot, Doig’s Nation Rock (1998-99), exhibiting a rainbow-painted tunnel glimpsed from a passing automobile. Certainly one of a collection, it carried the upper goal of £7m-£10m however hammered for £7.6m (£9.2m with charges). “Photos fail to convey the impasto of Doig, how he makes the paint appear to be snow; folks simply love the plasticity of Ski Jacket,” mentioned Katherine Arnold, head of post-war and modern artwork at Christie’s.
Adrien Meyer commanded the primary half of Christie’s twentieth/Twenty first-century night sale
Courtesy Christie’s
Different successes got here for Paula Rego, Suzanne Valadon, Annie Morris and Esben Weile Kjær, who all achieved new public sale highs. A Rego triptych, Dancing Ostriches from Walt Disney’s Fantasia (1995), exhibiting boldly drawn dancers in numerous poses, made £3.5m; Valadon’s fleshy examine Deux Nus (1923) achieved £1m (est. £600,000-£900,000); Morris’s Bronze Stack 9, Copper Blue (2015), a vibrant totem of patinated metals, made £482,600 (est. £100,000-£150,000) whereas Kjær’s stained-glass work Aske and Johan the other way up kissing in Energy Play at Kunstforeningen GL STRAND (2020) made a within-estimate £25,400.
Nonetheless, what grew to become very clear, regardless of these data, had been the brand new, very a lot diminished value ranges of a number of the works. In lots of instances the auctioneer—Adrien Meyer, for the primary half of the sale—began off at costs effectively below the low estimate, even half in some instances. For instance, the quilt lot, an vital however admittedly tough Self-portrait Fragment (round 1956) by Lucian Freud, began at simply £4.2m earlier than hammering at £6.2m (£7.6m with charges)—below presale expectations of £8m-£12m. A Hirst drugs cupboard began at £300,000 and solely achieved £508,000 with charges (est: £600,000-£900,000 with out charges). Had the agency persuaded distributors to scale back their hopes within the run-up to the night? The public sale specialists had been conserving schtum.
One image, Nicolas Get together’s Tree Trunks (2015), was withdrawn (“We selected to take action,” mentioned Arnold) and 5 had been purchased in, together with Yoshitomo Nara’s Haze Days (1998)—estimated at £6.5m-£8.5m. The Nara work had appeared available on the market in 2023 in Sotheby’s “Now” night sale, with a low estimate of $18m, however was withdrawn earlier than the public sale started. Even on the lowered estimate it did not discover a purchaser.
Over half the sale—31 tons—carried ensures, seven of them home, the remaining being third occasion.
The identical rollercoaster experience occurred at Sotheby’s night sale on 16 October with pre-sale targets of £32.6m-£48.3m with out charges, for 27 tons. Once more with a packed viewers, the sale raised £47.6m, in direction of the excessive finish of expectations, and achieved a punchy £13.1m for Francis Bacon’s Portrait of a Dwarf (1975; est. £6m-£9m). This work was lower in two by the artist and the opposite half, exhibiting caged lovers, was given to the author Michael Peppiatt. It was the topic of a protracted—17-minute—bidding conflict pitching at the very least 4 Sotheby’s specialists on the phone in opposition to Emma Ward of Ward Moretti, who was lastly outbid.

At Sotheby’s modern night sale, Francis Bacon’s Portrait of a Dwarf (1975)—which the artist lower in two–offered for £13.11m, effectively above its £6m-£9m estimate
Courtesy Sotheby’s
(Lucy) Bull market
Additionally performing effectively was Lucy Bull’s massive, red-hued summary 9:59 (2021), which trounced its £300,000-£500,000 presale estimate to make £1.3m. There have been 13 works bearing irrevocable bids and the one one with a home assure, Hurvin Anderson’s austere Marlene’s Huge Sister (2006), was purchased in. However some works—for instance, Matthew Wong’s brightly colored, semi-abstract The Go to (2017)—went effectively below estimate, on this case for £720,000 regardless of a goal of £1.5m-£2m. Of the top-ten tons, seven carried third-party ensures however solely three—the Bacon, an Yves Klein and a Georg Baselitz—went over estimate.
“We’re essentially the most seen a part of the market, and it offers us the chance to find out what values are right this moment,” mentioned Arnold of Christie’s: “And in some instances which means a correction in costs.”