Hirst's London art sale defies economic blues
Relevant offers
Multi-millionaire artist Damien Hirst wildly exceeded expectations with a record-breaking sale of 218 items for $300 million, underscoring the resilience of the high-end art market.
A further two items were sold privately on Monday and three remained unsold after the unprecedented sale that bypassed the traditional dealer network and instead went direct to the auction rooms of Sotheby's in London.
"It is iconic; inherently British," said one bidder at the Sotheby's auction who asked to remain anonymous.
"His work challenges people, and visually it is stunning."
Despite a global economic downturn, the auction put paid to fears Hirst's mammoth clear-out sale could flood the art market and hit prices.
After taking £70.55 million pounds on Monday night, a morning and an afternoon sale on Tuesday brought in a further £41 million.
Auction houses have been appealing to "recession-proof" buyers in the Middle East and Russia, where record oil prices have boosted already massive fortunes, along with the super-rich in emerging economies such as India.
By auctioning his work, Hirst can expect a far greater share of the money raised.
The two-day sale set a record for an auction dedicated to one artist. Sotheby's said it was 10 times the previous record set in 1993 for 88 works by Picasso.
The low-end estimate for the two-day sale by the artist, who is believed to be a dollar billionaire and is best known for his diced and pickled quadrupeds and, most recently, a $100 million diamond-encrusted skull, was 65 million pounds.
Hirst's The Dream, a horse designed to look like a unicorn preserved in a tank of formaldehyde, sold for 2.05 million pounds, and follows on from the £10.35 million paid for The Golden Calf on Monday.
Whilst the amount of money changing hands was nowhere near the levels of Monday's auction of 54 new works, many items sold for well above their high-end guide price, and only a handful were left on the shelf.
Reincarnated sold for £1.4 million, double its estimate, and Moments of Madness, went for nearly three times its guide price. But the crowds at Sotheby's auction house saw nothing strange about the sums being bid.
"Damien is so prolific, and the hype around him breeds more hype," said another bidder who also declined to be identified.
"I think almost the fact that he can produce this work so fast, and on such a scale makes them valuable."
Others were drawn to the London auction house to observe the spectacle, more than to buy.
"Have they got the appeal of an old master, a Cezanne, say?" said one art enthusiast. "I don't see it, but his work is just a different way of looking at art. The price that they're going for interests me more than the art."
But the thirst for Hirst, 43, from Bristol in south west England, was not to everyone's taste.
"The art world has gone stark raving bonkers. It is akin to a fever, a plague people have caught. It won't last forever," Charles Thomson, co-founder of the anti-modern art Stuckist movement, told Reuters.
Proving the international draw of his works, five of the top nine items in Monday's auction went to European private collectors. The others preferred to remain anonymous.
- Reuters
Sponsored links
TV show host's jibes 'helped Rimes'
Elton John fears for 'stigmatised' son
Grammys could be full of surprises
Police recapture Madonna stalker
Grammy spotlight shines on Adele
Naomi Watts to play Princess Diana
Del Rey 'doesn't deserve haters'
O'Connor tempted to bare too much
Shops evacuated in Christchurch mall
World Press Photo of the Year chosen
Earthquakes shake north and south of NZ
NZ police access Facebook evidence
Police recapture Madonna stalker
Promoter dismisses bike helmet harm study
Will bill make food safer or be a form of control?
Quakes blow Wellington's benchmark
EU courts Kiwis for science grants
ERA awards restructured employee $21,000
Apple factory hacked amid global activist stunt
Earthquakes shake north and south of NZ
Quakes blow Wellington's benchmark
Author, 12, gives proceeds to cancer research
Baby murder-accused sobs, sniffles in court
Plucky mother intent on recovery
NZ police access Facebook evidence
A burning issue: When coffins get too big
Dead man in mine apparently collapsed
Helmet law halves cyclist numbers
Top selling games in New Zealand
Review: Catherine for Xbox 360


