"Cowboys in the Badlands,"
Thomas Eakins, also achieved the top price at auction for any
American Western painting at $5.4 million.
NEW YORK CITY -- Important American Paintings, Drawings and
Sculpture were offered at Christie's on May 22 with records for
individual artists established for Thomas Eakins and Milton
Avery. The auction featured 92 lots with 71 finding buyers
resulting in a 77 percent sold rate and grossing $17,760,500.
"In today's sale, we saw lively bidding and strong results in
every price range and in every category from the Hudson River
School to American Modernism," said Eric Widing, senior vice
president and head of Christie's American Paintings Department.
"Our sale of Thomas Eakins' 'Cowboys in the Badlands' presented
what is likely the last opportunity for collectors to acquire a
masterpiece by the artist."
The painting, an iconic Western cowboy scene depicting two riders
amidst the colorful and sparse landscape of the Badlands,
measuring 321/4 by 45 inches, sold after active bidding for
$5,383,500, establishing not only a record price for Eakins, but
also achieving the top price at auction for any American Western
painting, according to the auction gallery.
Impressive provenance listed John Hemenway Duncan, New York,
early 1890s, Stephen C. Clark, New York, 1920s, Macbeth Gallery,
New York, and the collection of Francis P. Garvan. The painting
was sold at the Parke-Bernet Galleries in 1970, where it was
acquired by the consignor.
The catalog noted of the painting, "The last great landscape
created by Thomas Eakins, 'Cowboys in the Badlands' is a
magnificent summation from a career of one of America's premier
realist artists. Eakins demonstrated a new modern approach to the
depiction of landscape, portraiture, and genre paintings that
have become important representations in American Art."
Similarly, the record price for Milton Avery's "Bathers by River"
established a new level of value for his work and underscores his
central importance to American Modernism. Estimated at
$300/500,000, the painting sold for a record price paid at
auction of $735,500.
"Bathers by River," Milton Avery, reached $735,500, also a
record for that artist.
Other top lots included a Childe Hassam, "Rooftop Garden, Paris,"
1888, selling to David Nisinson for $623,500 against a
$300/500,000 estimate, and Sanford Robinson Gifford's, "The Mouth
of the Shrewsbury River," 1867, bringing $545,100, also from
Nisinson.
"Ojibwe Encampment" by Eastman Johnson was purchased by The
Caldwell Gallery for $589,900, Thomas Moran's "Castle Rock, Green
River, Wyoming," 1907, brought $433,100 from a private US client
and Winslow Homer's, "Small Sloop" also went privately at
$433,100.
A Newell Convers Wyeth Popular Magazine cover illustration
entitled "The Frontiersman" brought $421,900, Georgia O'Keeffe's
"Antelope Head with Pedernal" sold to the Gilcrease Museum for
$410,700 and Frederic Remington's, "The Mountain Man" exceeded
estimates at $388,300.
"The overall success of the sale further demonstrates that
today's buyers respond strongly to good property when it is
offered at fair and reasonable estimates," said Widing.