Christie’s weeklong sales of Old Master paintings, drawings,  European furniture and sculpture, led by the collection of  Antonio Champalimaud, totaled $138.3 million. A total of 21 works  of art sold for more than $1 million, as the more classic  categories demonstrated their continued appeal to both new and  established collectors.   The Champalimaud collection achieved a final total of  $68,452,825, the second highest total for a single-owner  collection ever sold in Europe, after the Rothschild sale also  sold by Christie’s in 1999. The sale was led by “The Bucintoro at  the Molo Venice, on Ascension Day” by Canaletto, which sold for a  record $20,086,024. Proceeds from the two-day auction have been  donated to a medical foundation set up by Champalimaud for the  Portuguese nation. Further highlights from the Champalimaud collection includeda pair of views by Canaletto of Venice – “The Piazzetta lookingWest” and “The Piazza San Marco, looking West,” which realized$3,162,600, and two pendant canvases by Francesco Guardi, “TheIsland of San Cristoforo, Murano,” sold for $3,162,600, and “TheGrand Canal, Venice, with the Church of the Scalzi and the Lista diSpagna,” which realized $2,965,816.   The works of art in the Champalimaud collection included a  magnificent pair of Kangxi models of leopards that roared away  $4,146,520, a world record price for any Chinese export porcelain  at auction, and a Louis XVI ormolu-mounted ebony and Japanese  lacquer commode à encoignures by Claude-Charles Saunier with  inset Sicilian jasper top that sold for $4,146,520, becoming the  15th highest price ever paid for a piece of French furniture and  establishing a record for a lacquer commode sold at auction.   London dealer Michael Cohen of Cohen & Cohen was successful  bidder on the Kangxi leopards. Cohen said he believes the pair of  magnificently snarling leopards were very likely imperial pieces  made for the Emperor Kangxi, and therefore not export porcelain.  He said representations of any leopards are extremely rare and  these are the only known pair.   Further records were established as a pair of Louis XVI  ormolu-mounted ebony, Japanese lacquer and japanned tole étagère  by Martin Carlin made a record for a pair of etageres sold at  auction when they realized $2,965,816; the pair of parcel-gilt  polychrome marble, alabaster, gesso, paste and lead standing male  and female Royal blackamoors, established a record for pair of  blackamoors at $1,489,936, and a set of four Louis XVI ormolu  five-light candelabra hold the record for candelabra at  $1,785,112. Italian bronzes swept the board on July 6 in the importantEuropean furniture, sculpture and carpets sale. A bronze groupattributed to Antonio Susini, cast from a model by Giambologna,sold for $4,134,720, setting a world record price for Susini. Abronze group of “Nessus Abducting Deianira,” circa 1580-1600, isattributed to Antonio Susini, Giambologna’s chief workshopassistant. Antonio Susini, known for his top rate casting skillsand superlative finishes, made this bronze very early in hiscareer. Further highlights included a recently rediscovered andunpublished Medici bronze group by the distinguished EighteenthCentury Florentine sculptor Giuseppe Piamontini, which realized$2,172,480, a world record price for the artist. A bronze group ofGrand Prince Ferdinando de’ Medici on Horseback, circa 1695, thepiece is considered one of the most important artistic commissionsof the late Medici era.   A rediscovered Fifteenth Century renaissance masterpiece of a  bronze model of cupid, circa 1480-90, made $2,368,704. It had  been used as a paperweight for the past 30 years.   In the week’s sales of important Old Master pictures, drawings  and paintings from the Champalimaud collection, a rediscovered  drawing by Andrea del Sarto, the last great Florentine artist of  the High Renaissance, sold for $11,395,008, a world record price  for the artist. “Head of St Joseph,” a study for a picture now in  the Pitti Palace, Florence, became the third most expensive Old  Master drawing ever sold at auction. A photograph from the 1920s  had alerted scholars to the existence of this work, but its  whereabouts have been a mystery. The work reappeared after more  than 50 years in a private Swiss collection. Christie’s sale of Old Master pictures realized $36,006,494.The auction was led by a recently restituted work by FrancescoGuardi, considered to be one of the finest pictures by the artistoffered in recent years. The superb Venetian view painted byFrancesco Guardi (Venice, 1712-1793), titled “The Grand Canal,Venice, with the Palazzo Bembo” was bought by the Getty Museum for$7,605,488.   Also included in the sale was a still life by Jan van Huysum  (Amsterdam, 1682-1749). Fruit, flowers and insects on a marble  ledge, a pillar to the left, a wood behind, is a remarkable work  in exceptional condition and realized $6,534,880.   Jan van der Cappelle, arguably the greatest Dutch marine painter  of the Seventeenth Century, was represented in the sale by “A  kaag and smak in a calm,” with fisherman pulling in their catch  from a rowboat in the foreground, a Dutch frigate and other boats  beyond. The work sold for $6,242,896, a world record price for  the artist at auction.   A portrait of Napoleon Bonaparte, painted in 1803 by Antoine-Jean  Gros (1771-1835) is one of five full-length portraits  commissioned by Napoleon between March 1802 and September 1803,  only two of which have survived. It sold for $2,349,776, a world  record price for the artist.   Prices reported include buyer’s premium.   For information, www.Christies.com.          
 
    



 
						