En agosto de 2023, Masterworks salió de una oferta anterior de Pumpkin, Masterworks 038, obteniendo una tasa de rendimiento neta anualizada del 13,4% para los inversores en la oferta principal.
OFRECIENDO CIRCULAR 01 YAYOI KUSAMA, PUMPKIN La obra de arte es un ejemplo característico a pequeña escala de la icónica serie Pumpkin de Yayoi Kusama, un motivo que apareció por primera vez en su obra en 1946 cuando exhibió Kabocha (Calabaza) en una exposición itinerante en Japón. Kusama reintrodujo las calabazas en su trabajo en la década de 1980 y continuó incorporándolas en pinturas, dibujos, grabados e instalaciones públicas a gran escala. El interés de Kusama por las calabazas se remonta a su infancia en el Japón de antes de la guerra, donde su familia era propietaria de un vivero que cultivaba calabazas kabocha.
Ella explica su atracción por las calabazas en su autobiografía y escribe: “Me encantó su forma encantadora y atractiva. Lo que más me atrajo fue la generosa sencillez de la calabaza. Eso y su sólido equilibrio espiritual”. Las obras de arte de la serie Pumpkin varían en escala, y algunos ejemplos miden desde menos de diez pulgadas de alto y ancho hasta más de cincuenta pulgadas de alto y ancho. La obra de arte es una pintura horizontal a pequeña escala de una gran calabaza con manchas amarillas y negras colocada en el centro sobre un fondo de red negro y amarillo.
La calabaza es rechoncha y bulbosa, rasgos característicos de la calabaza kabocha. Las calabazas de Yayoi Kusama se han convertido en algunos de los ejemplos más deseables comercialmente dentro de su práctica. Al 20 de junio de 2023, las pinturas de Pumpkin representan cuatro de los diez precios récord más altos alcanzados por el artista en una subasta, y están encabezadas por “Pumpkin (LPASG)” (2013), que se vendió por 62.540.000 HKD (8.026.633 dólares) el 1 de diciembre de 2021 en Christie’s. , Hong Kong, “Pumpkin” (1995), que se vendió por 56.110.000 HKD (7.147.909 dólares) el 30 de marzo de 2023 en Phillips, Hong Kong, y “Pumpkin (Twpot)” (2010), que se vendió por 54.460.000 dólares de HK (6.937.550 dólares). el 1 de abril de 2019 en Sotheby’s, Hong Kong. Las calabazas horizontales de escala y color similar a la obra de arte también han tenido buenos resultados en las subastas en los últimos años, con récords de subasta liderados por “Pumpkin” (1990), que se vendió por 999.000 dólares en Sotheby’s en Nueva York, el 15 de noviembre de 2018. “Pumpkin ”(1997), que se vendió por 889.812 dólares en Sotheby’s en Hong Kong, el 6 de abril de 2023, y “Pumpkin” (1989), que se vendió por 651.300 dólares en SBI Art Auction Co, Ltd en Tokio, el 28 de mayo de 2022.
El tema, el tamaño y la ejecución de la obra de arte la convierten en una obra comercial y deseable de Yayoi Kusama. Yayoi Kusama ha recibido numerosos honores y premios por sus contribuciones a la historia del arte, incluida la Ordre des Arts et des Lettres de Francia en 2003 y la Orden del Sol Naciente de Japón y el Praemium Imperiale en 2006. Ha sido objeto de varios estudios a gran escala. exposiciones y retrospectivas, incluida una retrospectiva en 2011 a 2012, que viajó al Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía de Madrid, el Centro Georges Pompidou de París, la Tate Modern de Londres y el Whitney Museum of American Art de Nueva York; una encuesta sobre Infinity Mirrors, que viajó al Museo y Jardín de Esculturas Hirshhorn en Washington, D.C., el Museo de Arte de Seattle, The Broad en Los Ángeles, la Galería de Arte de Ontario en Toronto, el Museo de Arte de Cleveland en Ohio y el High Museo de Arte de Atlanta; y una retrospectiva en Gropius Bau de Berlín en 2021, que viajó al Museo de Arte de Tel Aviv en 2022.
La obra del artista también está incluida en prestigiosas colecciones públicas de todo el mundo, como el Museo de Arte Moderno de Nueva York, el Broad Museum de Los Ángeles, el Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden de Washington, D.C., la Tate Modern de Londres y el museo homónimo del artista en Tokio, entre muchos más. Además de su éxito institucional, Kusama ha colaborado con marcas de lujo, incluidas Louis Vuitton y Veuve Clicquot, que han contribuido aún más a su reconocimiento más amplio. El artista está representado por la Galería David Zwirner, la Galería Gagosian y la Galería Victoria Miro.
Expected to Realise in the Region of £65 Million / $80 Million
“Dame mit Fächer (Lady with a Fan) is the last portrait Gustav Klimt created before his untimely death, when still in his artistic prime and producing some of his most accomplished and experimental works. Many of those works, certainly the portraits for which he is best known, were commissions. This, though, is something completely different – a technical tour de force, full of boundary-pushing experimentation, as well as a heartfelt ode to absolute beauty.”
HELENA NEWMAN, SOTHEBY’S CHAIRMAN, EUROPE, AND WORLDWIDE HEAD OF IMPRESSIONIST AND MODERN ART
LONDON, 14 JUNE 2023 – Today, Sotheby’s reveals a work that is not only the star of the summer auction season in London, but also one of the finest and most valuable works of art ever to be offered in Europe.
Still standing on an easel in Gustav Klimt’s studio at the time of the artist’s unexpected and untimely death in February 1918, Dame mit Fächer (Lady with a Fan) – a beautiful, rich and alluring portrait of an unnamed woman – brings together all the technical prowess and creative exuberance that define Klimt’s greatest work.
The last portrait Klimt painted, Dame mit Fächer is also among his finest works, created when he was still in his artistic prime, and at a moment when the ‘formality’ of his earlier commissioned work gives way to a new expressivity – an ever-deeper, ever-more joyful immersion in pattern, colour and form, which – while clearly influenced by his contemporaries Van Gogh, Matisse and Gauguin – became something entirely different in his hands.
Similarly, while the slightly earlier works of Klimt’s famous ‘golden period’ – led by the iconic portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer I of 1907 – see their sitter presented icon-like, amid a tapestry of golden shapes, here the sitter almost dissolves into the background, the soft patterning of the woman’s skin repeated in the pale-yellow background.
Klimt first started work on Lady with a Fan in 1917, by which time he was among the most celebrated portraitists in Europe: commissions came thick and fast, for which he was able to command prices far higher than any of his contemporaries. But this was a rare work painted entirely in the pursuit of his own interests. Full of freedom and spontaneity, it reflects Klimt’s joy in painting it and in celebrating beauty in its purest form. It also reveals his innovative approach. Traditionally, portraits were – and still are – painted in the eponymous ‘portrait (or vertical) form’. Here, Klimt returns to the square format that he used for his avantgarde landscapes earlier in the century, giving this painting a uniquely ‘modern’ edge.
Klimt also here gives full expression to his complete fascination with Chinese and Japanese art and culture. Luscious, silken kimonos and Chinese robes are known to have been his dresswear of choice, and his home abounded with beautiful objects from the East. Egon Schiele, a regular visitor, describes it like this: ‘the sitting room, [was] furnished with a square table in the middle and a large number of Japanese prints covering the walls… and from there into another room whose wall was entirely covered by a huge wardrobe, which held his marvelous collection of Chinese and Japanese robes.’
In Dame mit Fächer, Klimt draws principally on Chinese motifs: the phoenix (symbol of immortality and rebirth, good fortune and fidelity) and lotus blossoms (symbols of love, happy marriage and/or purity). Meanwhile, his flattening of the background and juxtaposition of patterns reflects his deep interest in Japanese woodblock prints.
“The beauty and sensuality of the portrait lies in the detail: the flecks of blue and pink which enliven the sitter’s skin, the feathery lines of her eyelashes and the pursed lips that give her face character. Klimt here gave himself full freedom to capture on canvas a devastatingly beautiful woman. Her provocatively bared shoulder, poise and quiet self-assurance combine to stunning effect.”
THOMAS BOYD BOWMAN, HEAD OF IMPRES SIONIST AND MODERN ART EVENING SALES, SOTHEBY’S LONDON
The painting was acquired shortly after Klimt’s death by Viennese industrialist Erwin Böhler. The Böhler family, including Erwin’s brother Heinrich and his cousin Hans, were close friends and patrons of both Klimt and Egon Schiele. They vacationed with Gustav Klimt on the Attersee, a lake near Salzburg that was the inspiration for many of the artist’s most important landscapes and can be seen in photographs together. In 1916 Erwin purchased the Litzelberg – a small island in the lake immortalised in Klimt’s paintings. An important supporter of the arts, Erwin Böhler commissioned leading architect Josef Hoffmann to decorate the rooms of his apartment in the Palais Dumba in Vienna where the painting hung in the Music Room alongside Klimt’s landscapes Waldabhang in Unterach am Attersee and Presshaus am Attersee which were also part of his collection. The work eventually passed to Heinrich and then, upon his death in 1940, to Heinrich’s wife Mabel.
By 1967 it was in the collection of Rudolf Leopold, who is known to have purchased a large group of Schiele drawings from Mabel Böhler in 1952 and may also have acquired this work from her. Dame mit Fächer was last offered for sale nearly thirty years ago in 1994, when it was acquired by the family of the present owner. Most recently it was the subject of an important exhibition at the Belvedere in Vienna where it was reunited with and shown alongside Klimt’s other great, late masterpieces.
The exhibition of the painting in Sotheby’s New Bond Street galleries later this month will mark a major moment for Klimt lovers in London, with three major portraits by the artist on view simultaneously in the capital for the first time ever. (The other portraits, Hermine Gallia of 1904 and Adele Bloch Bauer II of 1912, are currently on view in the National Gallery’s much-acclaimed show, ‘After Impressionism’.)
One of only a small number of portraits by Klimt still in private hands, Lady with a Fan will be offered in Sotheby’s marquee Modern & Contemporary Evening Auction in London on 27 June with an estimate in the region of £65 million ($80 million).
The appearance of this major work at auction marks an important moment for the market: not only is the painting the most valuable ever to have been offered at auction in Europe, it also now joins the ranks of the most valuable portraits – of any era – ever to have come to auction.
Klimt himself also sits in the select pantheon of artists to have achieved over $100m at auction – his Birch Forest having sold as part of the Paul G. Allen Collection last year for $104.6m. While that was a landscape, only one portrait by Klimt of this calibre has ever appeared at auction before: Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer II, from 1912, which made $87.9m in 2006.
Dame mit Fächer also joins a strong sequence of spectacular works to have starred in Sotheby’s Marquee Seasons in London: most recently René Magritte’s L’empire des lumières (sold for £59.4m / $79.8m, March 2022) and Wassily Kandinsky’s Murnau mit Kirche II (sold for £37.2m / $44.9m, March 2023).
The star offering in London this June, Dame mit Fächer will feature large in what is set to be a very special season of auctions, exhibitions and events at Sotheby’s this summer, much of which will be focussed around the subject of portraiture – timed to celebrate the much-anticipated reopening of the National Portrait Gallery in London.
Accordingly, Sotheby’s marquee Modern & Contemporary Evening Auction on 27 June will include a strong grouping of portraits – by leading artists such as Alberto Giacometti, Edvard Munch, Leonor Fini, Elizabeth Peyton and Kerry James Marshall – all to be presented in a special sequence (‘Face To Face’) dedicated to this long but totally timeless and multi-faceted tradition.
That too will be complemented by a special exhibition of masterpieces from Chatsworth House in Derbyshire, one of Britain’s finest stately homes, featuring works by Rembrandt, Sir Joshua Reynolds, Lucian Freud and Michael Craig-Martin, many of them never seen in the UK outside of Chatsworth before.
Portraits from Chatsworth – A Loan Exhibition will be on public view from 30 May to 4 July. Meanwhile, Klimt’s Dame mit Fächer, and other highlights from Sotheby’s suite of flagship June sales will be on view to the public from 20 to 27 June. Both exhibitions are free and open to all.
Notes to Editors
Highest prices ever achieved at auction in Europe:
£65m / $104.3m – Alberto Giacometti, Walking Man I (Sotheby’s London, February 2010) – record for any work of art sold at auction in Europe
£40.9m / $80.4m – Claude Monet, Le basin aux nymphéas – (Christie’s London, June 2008) – record for any painting sold at auction in Europe
£59.4m / $79.8m – René Magritte, L’empire des lumières (Sotheby’s London, March 2022)
£49.5m / $76.7m – Rubens, The Massacre of the Innocents (Sotheby’s London, July 2002)
https://www.myluxepoint.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/descarga-1.jpg689684Jackson Thompsonhttps://www.myluxepoint.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/logo2v-1.pngJackson Thompson2023-07-29 17:45:502023-07-29 17:48:52Gustav Klimt’s Final Masterpiece, Dame mit Fächer (Lady with a Fan), Comes to Auction at Sotheby’s in London this June
INSIDE THE ORANGE BOX: A LIFETIME OF COLLECTING, PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT EUROPEAN COLLECTOR
AMSTERDAM – On 28 June, Christie’s Amsterdam closed the online sale of an exceptional single-owner collection of Hermès handbags, lifestyle accessories, scarves, homeware, jewellery, watches and scarves with Inside the Orange Box: A Lifetime of Collecting, Property from an Important European Collector: Part III, achieving a total of €1,927,044 / £1,659,814 / $2,111,283. This follows parts I and parts II of the auction in June and October 2022 in Milan, bringing the combined total for this extraordinary three-part collection to €5,935,230 / £5,146,132 / $6,237,136, a new record for any single-owner handbag collection at auction.
Inside the Orange Box: A Lifetime of Collecting, Property from an Important European Collector: Part III featured over 350 lots by the iconic brand Hermès and spanned over three decades of Hermès creativity. The sale attracted global participation with registrants from 54 countries. The sale was 100% sold by lot and 54% of new registrants to the sale were millennials. Leading the white glove sale was a rare, matte white Himalaya Niloticus Crocodile Birkin 35 which sold for €94,500 / £81,395 / $102,151, surpassing its pre-sale low estimate of €60,000. An additional leading highlight was a Custom Petit H Denim & Black Evercalf Leather Shadow Birkin 40 which sold for €50,400 / £43,411 / $54,481. A Petit H Jaune D’Or Clemence Leather, Black Crocodile & Black Fox Fur Kelly 28 by Hermès achieved €35,280/ £30,388 / $38,136.
Further notable results include a Hermès Matte Blue Paon Alligator Birkin 35 which realised €47,880 / £41,240 / $51,757 alongside a Hermès matte Sanguine alligator Birkin 30which achieved €44,100 / £37,984 / $47,671.
A selection of accessories and lifestyle items additionally achieved strong results: a limited edition 18k White Gold & Mother-of-Pearl Dial Marche du Zambèze Automatic Wrist Watch byHermès sold for €13,860 / £11,938 / $14,982 exceeding its estimate of €2,000-3,000. A group of six silver pill boxes in the shape of Hermès handbags sold for €10,710 / £9,225 / $11,577.
Lucile Andreani, Head of Handbags, Christie’s EMEA: “We are thrilled with the results of this exciting three-part single owner collection with a total of €5,935,230 / £5,146,132 / $6,237,136. The first Christie’s handbags auction in Amsterdam, Inside the Orange Box is the largest single owner collection of Hermès handbags and accessories to ever appear at auction, and we are delighted with the phenomenal results of these three online sales, setting a new record for any private handbag collection sold at auction. The Handbags and Accessories department continues to attract millennials, with over half of our new registrants representing the millennial generation.”
Sale Highlights
About Christie’s
Founded in 1766, Christie’s is a world-leading art and luxury business. Renowned and trusted for its expert live and online auctions, as well as its bespoke private sales, Christie’s offers a full portfolio of global services to its clients, including art appraisal, art financing, international real estate and education. Christie’s has a physical presence in 46 countries, throughout the Americas, Europe, Middle East, and Asia Pacific, with flagship international sales hubs in New York, London, Hong Kong, Paris and Geneva. It also is the only international auction house authorized to hold sales in mainland China (Shanghai).
Christie’s Private Sales offers a seamless service for buying and selling art, jewellery and watches outside of the auction calendar, working exclusively with Christie’s specialists at a client’s individual pace.
Recent innovations at Christie’s include the groundbreaking sale of the first NFT for a digital work of art ever offered at a major auction house (Beeple’s Everydays, March 2021), with the unprecedented acceptance of cryptocurrency as a means of payment. As an industry leader in digital innovation, Christie’s also continues to pioneer new technologies that are redefining the business of art, including use of hologram technology to tour life-size 3D objects around the world, and the creation of viewing and bidding experiences that integrate augmented reality, global livestreaming, buy-now channels, and hybrid sales formats.
Christie’s is dedicated to advancing responsible culture throughout its business and communities worldwide, including achieving sustainability by reducing our carbon emissions by 50% and pledging to be net zero by 2030, and actively using its platform in the art world to amplify under-represented voices and support positive change.
Browse, bid, discover, and join us for the best of art and luxury at: www.christies.com or by downloading Christie’s apps. The COVID-related re-opening status of our global locations is available here.
https://www.myluxepoint.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/matte_cactus_amp_malachite_alligator_birkin.jpg10001000Carloshttps://www.myluxepoint.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/logo2v-1.pngCarlos2023-07-08 12:34:372023-07-08 12:34:52CHRISTIE’S ESTABLISHES A RECORD FOR A SINGLE OWNER HERMÉS COLLECTION WITH THREE-PART SALEACHIEVING A COMBINED TOTAL OF:€5,935,230 /£5,146,132 / $6,237,136
Christie’s Inside the Orange Box: part III of a dazzling Hermès collection
More than 300 Hermès lots — ‘synonymous with grace across generations’ — from Birkins and Kellys to bracelets, watches and accessories, are being offered online until 28 June
No bag is as coveted at auction as the Hermès Birkin. ‘For handbag collectors, they are the ultimate status symbol,’ says vintage fashion expert Pénélope Blanckaert. ‘They are more than fashion accessories — they are art.’
It takes a single expert craftsman up to 40 hours to produce a Birkin bag. The stitch on which the brand’s reputation is based — the saddle — cannot be replicated by a machine; it takes two needles simultaneously passing through the same seam to produce a Birkin correctly. If done properly, the saddle stitch will never unravel — whether on a saddle or a Birkin.
‘Hermès is a maison that celebrates craftsmanship and material, especially leather, as a part of its history and heritage,’ explains Blanckaert. ‘“It” bags are created every season, but Birkins are trend-resistant — they will never go out of fashion.’
Besides its durability, part of the Birkin’s allure is its timeless, all-purpose design. The bag was famously born out of a chance meeting between actress Jane Birkin and Jean-Louis Dumas, then creative director of Hermès, on a flight from Paris to London. And since its inception in 1983, the leather carry-all with flap closure has been a must-have for fashion stylists and A-list celebrities, whether they’re shopping for groceries or posing on the red carpet. Jennifer Lopez has even used hers as a gym bag.
‘Hermès is synonymous with elegance across generations,’ says Blanckaert. ‘The Birkin or Kelly that used to belong to your mother or grandmother still looks stylish today — as long as it’s in good condition.’
Those made with jewels and precious materials, such as ostrich and crocodile, tend to achieve the highest prices at auction. ‘Light pinks, yellows and blues also do well,’ adds Blanckaert, ‘as do the strong colours, such as Rouge Hermès, and special-order bags with bespoke colour pairings and the highly desirable horseshoe stamp.’
In recent years, the secondary market for Hermès has matured, expanding from a niche collecting category into an important luxury sector that draws buyers from all over the world. Christie’s, for instance, now sees participation from more than 50 countries in its Handbags & Accessories sales, with single-owner auctions taking place this year in Amsterdam for the first time.
‘It is the fastest-growing sector of the fashion industry, because collectors are now more concerned with sustainability and acquiring long-term investment pieces,’ says Blanckaert. ‘Buying at auction also offers collectors the chance to acquire discontinued pieces — and to bypass Hermès’s notorious waiting lists.’
Which, of course, drives auction prices up. In 2021, a Hermès Himalaya Diamond Kelly 28 became the most valuable handbag ever sold at auction when it achieved HK$4 million (US$515,416) at Christie’s in Hong Kong.
‘This encyclopaedic catalogue represents a lifetime of collecting by a passionate connoisseur of all things Hermès,’ says Blanckaert. ‘It is such a joyful collection, full of colour, poetry and fantasy.’
As well as featuring the most desirable styles from the past few decades, the collection also includes playful designs and objects that reveal a lesser-known side of the French maison.
‘People may be surprised by what they see,’ says Blanckaert. ‘This collector had a real sense of humour. She took risks by acquiring unique editions and pieces not instantly recognisable as Hermès.’
These include a whimsical selection of Sacs à Malices (which translates as ‘bags of tricks’), first introduced in the 1980s, and a range of quirky pieces from Petit H, the upcycling line created in 2010 by Pascale Mussard, which comprises unique or limited-edition objects, designs and shapes made from existing Hermès materials.
As for Petit H, Blanckaert was drawn to a set of nine tools and an unusual fringed white Clémence leather bag with black polka dots from 2010. ‘You wouldn’t necessarily think this was by Hermès,’ she says, ‘which shows the collector’s confidence and sensitivity towards all aspects of Hermès’s creativity.’
‘Hermès was the first luxury brand to invest in the circular economy, so Petit H was very avant-garde at the time,’ says Blanckaert. ‘Petit H designs are bolder and less typically Hermès in style and structure.’
In addition to the handbags offered for sale in Part III, there is a diverse range of Hermès accessories, including bracelets, watches, notebooks, belts, silk scarves and Grigri Rodeo charms (below), which have been coveted by collectors since their launch.
HANDBAGS ONLINE: THE NEW YORK EDIT TOTALS $4,114,782 NINE LOTS SOLD IN EXCESS OF $100,000 EACH
NEW YORK – Christie’s is thrilled to announce the outstanding results of Handbags Online: The New York Edit, totalling $4,114,782, the highest value realized for a handbag sale in the Americas. The auction was 94% sold by lot and 140% by low estimate, nine lots sold for more than 100,000, an all-time high for an online auction.
Hermès Barenia Leather Perspective Cavalière Kellywood with Palladium Hardware From the Collection of Rebag Price Realized: $176, 400
“The success of our latest auction speaks to the enduring status of exceptionally well-crafted handbags as both extremely valuable assets and ultra-desirable personal luxuries. Our record-breaking result is fresh proof that these collectible handbags are worthwhile assets to invest in, and that our overall market, which continues to see expansive growth, is strong. In a time when so many fashion forecasters have stressed the growing trend of quiet luxury, our bidders have demonstrated a renewed appetite for luxury with a capital L. From diamond-encrusted Birkins to colorful leather Marquetry to eye-catching white Alligator skin, our collectors sought out handbags as exuberant as they were exquisite, in iconic styles whose values have stood the test of time.” -Paige Rubin, Head of Sale, Handbags, Americas
The sale featured a selection of handbags curated by Rebag, including the top lot of the sale—an Hermès Barenia Leather Perspective Cavalière Kellywood With Palladium Hardware, which realized $176,400. This sale marked the model’s first appearance in the American auction market and a world-record price for this model at auction. The sale also featured both of the newest and rarest examples of Hermès Faubourg Birkins: A Neige Faubourg Birkin 20 and a Minuit Faubourg Birkin 20, both of which realized $151,200. Another favourite of serious collectors and a highlight of the sale was a stunning and rare Matte White Niloticus Crocodile Himalaya Birkin 30 with Palladium Hardware, which realized $151,200.
Many lots sold for well over their low estimates, including a Limited Edition Toile & Black Swift Leather Cargo Hac Birkin 40 With Palladium Hardware, which realized $40,320, and a Couture Maroquinerie White Niloticus Crocodile Himalaya Lady Dior Bag With Silver & Crystal Hardware, which realized $21,420. Both sold for more than 400% of their low estimates.
About Christie’s
Founded in 1766, Christie’s is a world-leading art and luxury business. Renowned and trusted for its expert live and online auctions, as well as its bespoke private sales, Christie’s offers a full portfolio of global services to its clients, including art appraisal, art financing, international real estate and education. Christie’s has a physical presence in 46 countries, throughout the Americas, Europe, Middle East, and Asia Pacific, with flagship international sales hubs in New York, London, Hong Kong, Paris and Geneva. It also is the only international auction house authorized to hold sales in mainland China (Shanghai).
Christie’s Private Sales offers a seamless service for buying and selling art, jewellery and watches outside of the auction calendar, working exclusively with Christie’s specialists at a client’s individual pace.
Recent innovations at Christie’s include the groundbreaking sale of the first NFT for a digital work of art ever offered at a major auction house (Beeple’s Everydays, March 2021), with the unprecedented acceptance of cryptocurrency as a means of payment. As an industry leader in digital innovation, Christie’s also continues to pioneer new technologies that are redefining the business of art, including use of hologram technology to tour life-size 3D objects around the world, and the creation of viewing and bidding experiences that integrate augmented reality, global livestreaming, buy-now channels, and hybrid sales formats.
Christie’s is dedicated to advancing responsible culture throughout its business and communities worldwide, including achieving sustainability by reducing our carbon emissions by 50% and pledging to be net zero by 2030, and actively using its platform in the art world to amplify under-represented voices and support positive change.
Browse, bid, discover, and join us for the best of art and luxury at: www.christies.com or by downloading Christie’s apps. The COVID-related re-opening status of our global locations is available here.
https://www.myluxepoint.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/CHRISTIES-SETS-RECORD-WITH-THE-HIGHEST-TOTAL-FOR-A-HANDBAGS-SALE-IN-AMERICAS.jpg8941334Jackson Thompsonhttps://www.myluxepoint.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/logo2v-1.pngJackson Thompson2023-06-14 18:21:002023-06-18 19:19:15CHRISTIE’S SETS RECORD WITH THE HIGHEST TOTAL FOR A HANDBAGS SALE IN AMERICAS
Palacio de Mirabel | Mirabel, Spai A secluded and private retreat in the Spanish hills Stunning baroque and Moorish architecture and design A historic palace that dates to the fourteenth century 584± hectares of land including mature forest
In cooperation with Marie Jose Aribit of Sotheby’s International Realty Seville, Palacio de Mirabel is set to auction in June.
NEW YORK, NEW YORK, UNITED STATES, — Set against the backdrop of the mountains and surrounded by meticulous landscaping and mature trees, Palacio de Mirabel awaits. ever before publicly listed for sale, the estate is set to auction with a pre-sale estimate of €4 million to €8 million. next month via Sotheby’s Concierge Auctions in cooperation with Marie Jose Aribit of Sotheby’s International Realty Seville. Bidding is scheduled to open 8 June and culminate live on 14 June at Sotheby’s New York. Bidding will also be available via Sotheby’s Concierge Auctions’ online marketplace, conciergeauctions.com, allowing buyers to bid digitally from anywhere in the world.
The Las Villuercas region of Extremadura is a well-known getaway destination frequented by HNW individuals, including CEOs, politicians, and more. Situated 6 kilometers from Guadalupe, it holds significance as a noteworthy village in Spain. The region offers privacy and natural beauty, making it an ideal retreat for those seeking seclusion. This estate holds historical value. The Palacio Granja de Mirabel encompasses 1,500 acres of diverse flora, including chestnut, oak, and strawberry trees, among others. The forests are home to various wildlife species, including world-class deer, wild boar and roe deer The mansion and two on-site chapels were constructed between the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. Over time, this palace has served as the residence for religious orders, Catholic monarchs, and modern millionaires. Queen Isabella of Spain once referred to it as “her paradise” after spending time there. The palace has even attained the status of a National Monument. The walled property showcases Moorish gardens with fountains, a chapel adorned with Flemish frescos, and a baroque altarpiece from Rubens´atelier. Additionally, a secondary chapel houses the most notable Gothic paintings in the region. Ornate carvings and beautiful, red-tiled roofs enhance the exterior of the building. The 1,934-square-meter mansion sits on 584 hectares of land. The XIV-century Mudejar facade stands as an exceptional example of the era. This distinct estate is a certified national treasure and among the most significant ‘Mudejar’ palaces in private ownership.
Guadalupe, a historically significant town in medieval Spain, held a pivotal role as a resting place for armies and kings amidst their battles. Recognizing its strategic value, the monks from the monastery built Mirabel, a residence intended for the personal use of Queen Elizabeth. Historical records indicate that Queen Elizabeth stayed at Mirabel on multiple occasions, with at least 12 documented visits, including an extended stay of over six months. Guadalupe witnessed two notable events: the triumphant return of the “conquista de Granada” and the warm reception of Christopher Columbus after his second voyage to America in 1496. While Columbus had previously visited Guadalupe twice before his discovery of the New World in April 1486 and April 1487, there is no documented evidence of his stay at Mirabel following his first journey, unlike his documented visit after his second voyage. In the early 20th century, the esteemed presence of Alfonso XIII, the last Spanish king, also graced Mirabel.
Cáceres serves as the capital of the Extremadura region in Spain. Located near the Sierra de la Mosca hills, this city holds historical significance as a part of the renowned pilgrim’s route, the Camino de Santiago. The old town, known as Parte Antiqua, represents a medieval walled town characterized by a blend of Roman, Moorish, Northern Gothic, and Italian Renaissance architecture. It comes as no surprise that the city has earned the distinction of being a UNESCO World Heritage City. Take a leisurely stroll through its charming streets and immerse yourself in its architecture and history. Indulge in the local cuisine, which includes pastries, cheese, olive oil, and more. Savor a glass of the local red wine while enjoying the Mediterranean climate. This semi-secluded town provides a private experience amidst the backdrop of the Spanish countryside.
Palacio de Mirabel is available for showings Daily 1-4PM by appointment, in person or virtually. As part of Concierge Auctions’ Key for Key® giving program in partnership with Giveback Homes, the closing will result in the funding towards a new home built for a family in need.
Agents will be compensated according to the terms and conditions of the Listing Agreement. See Auction Terms and Conditions for full details. For more information, including property details, diligence documents, and more, visit ConciergeAuctions.com or call +1.212.202.2940. About Concierge Auctions
Concierge Auctions is the world’s largest luxury real estate auction marketplace, with a state-of-the-art digital marketing, property preview, and bidding platform. The firm matches sellers of one-of-a-kind homes with some of the most capable property connoisseurs on the planet. Sellers gain unmatched reach, speed, and certainty. Buyers receive curated opportunities. Agents earn their commission in 30 days. Acquired by Sotheby’s, the world’s premier destination for fine art and luxury goods, and Anywhere Real Estate, Inc (NYSE: HOUS), the largest full-service residential real estate services company in the United States, Concierge Auctions continues to operate independently, partnering with real estate agents affiliated with many of the industry’s leading brokerages to host luxury auctions for clients. For Sotheby’s International Realty listings and companies, Concierge Auctions provides Sotheby’s brand exclusivity as Sotheby’s Concierge Auctions. Since inception in 2008, the firm has generated billions of dollars in sales, broken world records for the highest-priced homes ever sold at auction and conducted auctions in 46 U.S. states and 35 countries. The firm owns one of the most comprehensive and intelligent databases of high-net-worth real estate buyers and sellers in the industry, and it has committed to build more than 300 homes through its Key For Key® giving program in partnership with Giveback Homes™, which funds new homes for families in need from every property the company sells. For more information, visit ConciergeAuctions.com.
This September, as part of the ‘Freddie Mercury: A World of His Own’ Evening sale, Sotheby’s is honoured to introduce to the market one of the most important artifacts in pop culture- a 15 page folio of handwritten draft lyrics for ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’, in composer Freddie Mercury’s hand. To mark this thrilling moment, Arsalan Mohammad looks back at the genesis, birth and afterlife of this extraordinary piece of music, that changed everything for Mercury, Queen and pop music forever.
Live Aid, London, July 13th, 1985. At 6.41pm on a sweltering London evening, Queen bound onstage. Freddie Mercury leaps across the vast promontory, energetically greeting the cheering crowd, before settling down at the piano, striking a few tentative notes and beginning to sing.
‘Mama… Just killed a man…’
There is a colossal roar of recognition, before the 72,000 people in the crowd start singing along, in massed, wavering harmony. It’s a safe bet that a great many of the estimated two billion viewers worldwide are singing along too. And as the song unfurls, Freddie goes on to give it his all in a 21-minute performance that will go on to be universally acclaimed the undisputed highlight of the biggest-ever gig in rock history, reminding the world why together, the alchemy of ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’, Queen and Freddie Mercury were unbeatable.
Could there have been any other song to meet this moment, that could instantly unite millions, in seconds? That July day showed again the ineffable power of ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ to entrance and uplift billions of viewers, on a day full of appeals to the heart. And it succeeded, magnificently. ‘Queen were absolutely the best band of the day,’ organiser Bob Geldof said later. ‘They played the best, had the best sound. It was the perfect stage for Freddie: the whole world!’
‘Bohemian Rhapsody’, Queen’s sixth single, was first released in October 1975, trailing their transformational A Night at The Opera album. Like Queen’s Live Aid appearance, the single was a dramatic, high-stakes gamble, undertaken by a band with something to prove, needing to reaffirm their phenomenal talent to themselves and the world.
No one had released a pop single like this before. Especially not a financially struggling young British rock group, three albums into their career, desperately in need of a make-or-break smash hit to fully vindicate their potential to conquer the global pop market.
‘We felt it probably captured more or less all the types of moods that we were doing. So, we thought: OK, this is what we want to present to the public – let’s see what they do with it.’
‘We felt it probably captured more or less all the types of moods that we were doing,’ Mercury told Phonograph Record magazine in 1976. ‘So, we thought: OK, this is what we want to present to the public – let’s see what they do with it.’
But Queen had always been different. Roger Taylor, John Deacon, and Brian May, graduates in science and engineering, were gifted, practical, and reliable. Their mercurial front-man, meanwhile, steeped in art, music, fashion, and theatre was blessed with an electrifying, onstage charisma. From Queen’s earliest days, he possessed the stage, thrilling audiences with swaggering showmanship and of course, that startling, octave-vaulting voice. But there was more to Freddie Mercury than just being an exceptional performer. A self-taught vocalist, with the exceptional ability to sing across three octaves, he had also learned to hone his exceptional talents for musicianship, composition, and writing. By 1975, after years of touring and recording, he knew he was ready for the big time. The question was, was the big time ready for Freddie?
Despite the success of 1974’s Sheer Heart Attack album and its single ‘Killer Queen’ becoming an international hit, to say nothing of extensive global touring, Queen were severely frustrated by their lack of funds. Having persuaded Elton John’s manager John Reid to take them on and drive them, as he had Elton, to international stardom, their new manager agreed to review their finances, issuing his new charges a simple instruction: ‘Go into the studio and make the best record you can!’
‘Bohemian Rhapsody’, written entirely by Mercury, was the result. Woven from various fragments of lyrics and tunes he had been tinkering with for years, by the time Freddie came to draft the set of lyrics on the 15 pages included in Sotheby’s Freddie Mercury:A World of His Own Evening auction, the structure was in place and ready to be presented to the band, during sessions for the A Night at the Opera album. The final version would last six minutes and encompass multi-tracked choral music, operatic motifs, heavy rock, and piano balladry.
The track was gradually sculpted over three weeks of dedicated sessions across four studios, pushing the band’s skill and musicianship to the max, testing the limits of recording technology and costing EMI more than any previous pop single to produce. ‘The track had been evolving for a while,’ said Brian May. ‘We knew it was something very special. It was Freddie’s dream.’ As a final touch, ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ invented the modern pop video, an extraordinary thing fluttering between high camp drama, electrifying in-concert footage, and state of the art video effects.
And ultimately, it redefined the parameters of pop, in a way not seen since the heyday of The Beatles. Fittingly, it would score a Beatles-like run at the top of the UK charts – nine weeks – making it the band’s first UK chart-topper and affirming their passage into global pop mega-stardom, confirming Freddie’s status as one of the greatest songwriters of his time. Peers such as Brian Wilson, Aerosmith’s Joe Perry and Abba’s Bjorn Ulvaeus were stunned – the latter admitting to being ‘green’ with envy when he first heard the single. ‘It was the biggest single of the century’ he said, some years later.
‘That was really when the Queen volcano erupted, when it suddenly just went bang!’ reflected Mercury, a couple of years after its release. ‘That single sold over a million and a quarter copies in Britain alone, which is outrageous. Imagine all those grandmothers grooving to it!’
The grooving grandmothers were just the start. Record label EMI was initially reluctant to issue an uncategorisable, six-minute, chorus-free track as a single, fearing radio DJs wouldn’t play it. This was immediately disproved when, in an act of bloody-minded determination, Queen’s management slipped the band’s friend, BBC radio DJ Kenny Everett, a test pressing of the single, with the firm instruction not to play it. ‘Of course I won’t!’ winked Everett, before promptly teasing his audience with excerpts from the song over the course of a weekend. Such was the resulting public clamour to hear more, EMI capitulated and the single was issued, on Hallowe’en, 1975. Two years later in 1977, the British Phonographic Industry declared it ‘The Best Single of The Last 25 Years’.
‘That single sold over a million and a quarter copies in Britain alone, which is outrageous. Imagine all those grandmothers grooving to it!’’
– FREDDIE MERCURY
By 2018, according to the Official UK Charts, ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ had sold over 2.5 million copies in Britain, and over six million worldwide. And by December 2018, when the Freddie Mercury biopic named after the track boosted the band’s profile yet again, the song was recognised as the world’s most-streamed track from the 20th century, surpassing 1.6 billion streams globally, across all major streaming services. It remains the biggest-selling British single of all time, excluding charity records.
It’s been inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, topped countless critics and fans polls, and Freddie’s vocal performance was elected by readers of Rolling Stone magazine as the best in rock history. It’s topped the charts at Christmas twice (upon its 1975 release and again, following Freddie’s death in 1991) and inspired some of the most memorable moments in pop culture over the past few decades (remember Wayne’s World?) In short, ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ is not just a pop song. It is a legend.
‘I remember exactly where I was when I first heard “Bohemian Rhapsody”,’ says Sir Tim Rice, lyricist of some of the most popular musicals of the past half century. ‘I was driving through East Grinstead in the winter of ’75. I thought the record was extraordinary. I couldn’t believe it was a single; it was so long, three or four numbers in one. It was operatic and theatrical as much as it was pop and rock. Even today, it’s one of those recordings where you still hear new things in it, or have a new take on it, every time it’s played.’
By 1976, Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber were writing and recording a new musical, Evita, to follow their worldwide success with Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat and Jesus Christ Superstar. ‘We were working in the rock operatic theatrical field, and certainly felt that “Bohemian Rhapsody” was more than just a great pop record, a six-minute musical – and its massive commercial acceptance was encouraging.’
‘I loved the way it ends – “nothing really matters much to me, anyway the wind blows“. It’s a brave thing to say in a song; it’s easier to express something really positive but here is Freddie at the climax of a pretty self-lacerating song, revealing innermost feelings, saying, when all is said and done, nothing actually matters, I don’t really matter. John Lennon also did that superbly in “Strawberry Fields Forever”, which could have been a bit of an influence on Freddie.’
Both the band, and their producer Roy Thomas Baker, cited the Beatles’ ‘Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band’ as a pivotal influence. Brian May called the 1967 LP their ‘bible’, during the sessions for the eclectic A Night at The Opera album. And Beatle-y fingerprints are all over ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ – not just in the unique compositional structure, ambiguous lyrics and precision-engineered harmonies, but also in the extraordinary lengths Queen and Baker went to in the studio, in realising Freddie’s vision.
‘It was as operatic and theatrical as much as it was pop and rock. It’s one of those records, where you still hear new things in it, or a new take on it, every time you hear it.’
– SIR TIM RICE
‘Freddie had mapped it all out,’ Brian May recently told musician Rick Beato in a YouTube interview. ‘He came into the studio with little pieces of paper on which he’d worked out every line in the song. He played it in pieces to us, initially in sections, and then we’d try it out. We would learn it, sing it, make sure it’s all in tune and then we doubled [overdubbed] it, singing it over again, so it starts to sound nice and fat. It came together pretty quickly’.
Indeed, so fat were the massed banks of harmonies, built up by dozens of layers of Freddie, Brian, and Roger’s voices – it’s estimated ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ had 180 overdubs – the two-inch analogue master tape started to actually disintegrate during sessions. And, as producer George Martin found with The Beatles, Baker found Queen’s demands for ever-more outlandish sounds and studio wizardry spurring him on to greater degrees of improvisation and resourcefulness, such as placing amplifier speakers inside concrete tubes, to give John Deacon’s bass an extra robust ‘honk’. In 1995, Baker recalled the song’s evolution in an interview with Sight & Sound magazine.
‘The first half, or ballad section, was done with piano, drums, and bass – the normal routine. Then, the end rock section was recorded as a separate song, in the way that we would normally record a loud rock number of that period. It was obviously very unusual, and we originally planned to have just a couple of “Galileos”. But things often have a habit of evolving differently once you’re inside the studio, and it did get longer and bigger…’
Energised by the creative potential of the band and studio, Freddie let rip with what has become his most famous set of lyrics. The story, in prosaic terms, opens with the young protagonist lamenting his impending death, a punishment for having ‘killed a man’. In a manner reminiscent of The Beatles’ ‘A Day in The Life’, having once established the scene, the vocal merges into a vertiginous instrumental bridge, May’s snake-like guitar tone soloing skywards, before tumbling into a clipped, staccato piano motif and an arch tenor, enunciating briskly.
‘I see a little silhouette-o of a man/Scaramouche, Scaramouche, will you do the fandango!’
Queen and Roy Thomas Baker approach this section, instantly recognisable, with such a vivid palette of ideas and influences that Freddie’s allusive narrative moves swiftly through fear, disorientation, anger and exultation with pitch-perfect stylistic detail. It is a brilliant mimicry of operatic forms, with massed voices contrasting with aria-like solos, evoking fundamental themes that underpin many of the world’s greatest operas; the human condition, crime, punishment, tragedy and transformation. Or then again, maybe, not. The band themselves were far from keen to elaborate on what it all actually meant.
‘It’s very self-explanatory,’ commented Roger Taylor of the ‘operatic’ section, in a BBC documentary. ‘There’s just a bit of nonsense in the middle.’ Mercury himself referred to the song as ‘mock opera’. More prosaically, Brian May simply shrugged when asked for an interpretation, ‘I don’t think we will ever know’.
Professor of English Literature, Matthew Beaumont at University College London, finds plenty of mystery in the lyrics of ‘Bohemian Rhapsody,’ but keeps a sensible distance from attempting a definitive interpretation of the text.
‘It is very mysterious,’ he says. ‘It’s challenging, partly because it is so enigmatic and because of all these shifts. But the quality of the writing, both the music and the lyrics, is so extraordinary that it always carries the audience with it. One of the things it does is to invite you to try to construct a narrative, it’s constantly tempting you. But there are just too many different voices, and it’s too multi-layered, to fit into a simple narrative template.’
When pushed, Beaumont does see some resonance in Freddie’s lyric with the legend of Faust, in which a protagonist makes a pact with the devil, promising creativity in exchange for one’s soul. ‘So [perhaps] the song itself is the product of the pact that had been made with the devil.’ He also sees direct influences from opera, with the line ‘I see a little silhouetto’ recalling ‘Mozart at his campest’, with characters such as The Magic Flute’s Papageno.
‘It’s challenging, partly because it is so enigmatic and because of all these shifts. But the quality of the writing, both the music and the lyrics, is so extraordinary that it always carries the audience with it’
– PROFESSOR MATTHEW BEAUMONT, UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON
‘I think insofar as we can lock down the form at all, it’s quite helpful to think of this in terms of a dramatic monologue rather than a rhapsody, because there’s a fictional persona who seems to be speaking. Not least in the passages such as ‘Bismillah, we will not let you go’ et cetera. It’s as if he’s speaking in tongues, almost.’
This reading certainly chimes with a great many interpretations of the ‘operatic’ section which can be heard as a conflict between the condemned protagonist and the forces of darkness, crowded in on all sides by shrill, devilish interlocutors, ultimately won by the hero dragging himself back from the brink of death. But, as Freddie himself put it, ‘we viewed it quite tongue-in-cheek’. Whatever was in his mind when he crafted these dense, allusive, brilliant lyrics, we will never know for sure. But the humour found in opera, especially when dealing with dark themes, greatly appealed to Mercury’s impish wit, allowing him to create an ambiguity that invited any reading the audience might wish to make.
‘One thinks of Puccini’s La Bohème because of the title obviously,’ says Beaumont. ‘And there’s a bit of La Bohème in the final verse, in that more reflective pathetic – in the technical sense of the term – line ‘nothing really matters’. There is a melancholy and sadness there.’
The song’s downbeat, resigned finale, rounded out with a regal swish of a tam tam gong, also beguiles Tim Rice. ‘And at the end he’s saying well actually, I don’t want to be a bore about it, but it doesn’t matter to me. But it does really. All these ironies are there, which makes them theatrical. Like – you can read a completely opposing string of thought underneath the main lyric or you can take it at face value.’
Twelve years after the release of ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’, and the string of global smash hits that came in its wake (enough to ensure their 1981 Greatest Hits album became one of the best-selling albums of all time) Freddie was approaching the final crescendo of his career. His second solo album, Barcelona, was an opportunity for him to revisit the magical world of opera again, this time as a mature pop icon, known worldwide for his sky-scraping voice and flamboyant persona. And on Barcelona he finally gained acceptance as a truly operatic star. A collaboration on the title track, commissioned for the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, with his idol, the eminent soprano Montserrat Caballe, was ‘a dream come true’ for Freddie. Such was their rapport – there are many tales of the pair enjoying late night impromptu concerts around the piano at Garden Lodge, after raucous dinner parties – they embarked on recording the entire album together. For Freddie, it was a vindication of his ambition to be recognised and accepted as a rock singer who could more than hold his own alongside one of the greats of opera.
‘I was a bit bewildered why Freddie even wanted me, because he writes such brilliant lyrics’
– SIR TIM RICE
At one point during the Barcelona sessions, Mercury declared himself ‘lyric-ed out, darling,’ and insisted on Britain’s most celebrated musical lyricist joining him to help on a couple of tracks.
‘I was a bit bewildered why Freddie even wanted me, because he writes such brilliant lyrics,’ Sir Tim Rice recalls. ‘So, I went around to his house a few times and we wrote the songs in one or two sessions, with him around the piano, just him and me. And he was such a friendly fellow. I think he just wanted a fresh approach to a couple of songs, and so I wrote deliberately theatrical lyrics which were stories, four or five minute stories, a bit like “Bohemian Rhapsody”.’
Working with Mercury on his final masterpiece, inspired by ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’, Rice was convinced that had Mercury not tragically died, he would have soared higher, again invoking the spirit of that magical song, and making music that would transcend categorisation to touch everyone, delving deep into the human experience in an entertaining, symbolic and relatable way.
‘I’m sure that, had we had the opportunity, it would’ve been great to have written a grand opera with him, really,’ he concludes. ‘Grand Opera. That’s what I think he could have done.’
https://www.myluxepoint.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/descarga-6.jpg9001336Jackson Thompsonhttps://www.myluxepoint.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/logo2v-1.pngJackson Thompson2023-06-03 17:42:082023-06-03 17:43:20Bohemian Rhapsody: How Freddie Mercury Created the Greatest Pop Song of the 20th Century
Stunning estate in Marbella’s Golden Mile Sprawling gardens with mature trees overlooking the sea Private estate minutes from exclusive Marbella resorts Spacious main house and separate guest house with two pools
In cooperation with Marie Jose Aribit of Sotheby’s International Realty Seville, Prime Golden Mile is set to auction in June.
NEW YORK, NEW YORK, UNITED STATES, May 30, 2023/EINPresswire.com/ — Just minutes from top-tier hotels, beach clubs, and restaurants in Marbella lies Prime Golden Mile. Never before publicly listed for sale, the estate is set to auction with a pre-sale estimate of €8.5 million–€12.5 million. The auction will be conducted next month via Sotheby’s Concierge Auctions in cooperation with Marie Jose Aribit of Sotheby’s International Realty Seville. Bidding is scheduled to open 7 June and culminate live on 14 June at Sotheby’s New York as part of Concierge Auctions’ Exceptional Global Properties sale series. Bidding will also be available via Sotheby’s Concierge Auctions’ online marketplace, conciergeauctions.com, allowing buyers to bid digitally from anywhere in the world.
The estate is located in the Golden Mile, just minutes from renowned hotels, beach clubs, and restaurants in Marbella, such as the Puente Romano Hotel and Beach and Nobu Hotel. The surrounding area offers tranquility and seclusion, making it an ideal private retreat. Upon entering, the estate greets you with park-like gardens adorned with palm, cedar, and olive trees. The property provides views of the neighboring Mediterranean gardens and the Pueblo of Las Lomas. With a spacious main house and separate guest house, the estate is well-suited as a family compound or boutique hotel. The property features an inviting entrance, fountains, and a vaulted patio with a retractable glass roof, embodying the essence of the Mediterranean. Marble floors and columned corridors welcome natural light throughout. The estate comprises a main mansion and a guest house, each accompanied by a private swimming pool. A botanical garden area with a peaceful pond and cascading water feature adds to the ambiance. From this vantage point, views encompass the tropical vegetation of neighboring properties, a white Andalusian “Pueblo,” and the sea beyond. The main house offers seven suites, including a primary apartment with a private terrace and sea views. The infinity pool and spa, tiled with a beautiful bronze mosaic, are surrounded by a teak deck. The guest house features four suites, a spacious double living room, a private pool, and three terraces suitable for outdoor dining on pleasant days.
Marbella, a resort town on Spain’s south coast, attracts royalty and social elites with its Mediterranean setting and Sierra Blanca Mountains backdrop. The Costa del Sol stretch offers nightclubs, coastal estates, yachts, and golf courses. Explore Casco Antiguo, the historic walled old town, and appreciate its Gothic and Renaissance architecture. Situated in Marbella’s Golden Mile, this location is near the esteemed Palace of the King of Saudi Arabia, renowned Marbella Club Hotel, and Puente Romano hotel. Marbella’s Golden Mile is voted among Europe’s top three desirable destinations with a delightful year-round climate and an elegant lifestyle.
The property’s additional features include three gazebos for outdoor entertaining, five reception rooms in the main house, a staff apartment, a four-car garage, and a pond with a cascading waterfall, all surrounded by botanical gardens. The property is conveniently located approximately 1 hour away from Malaga Old Town, three hours from Seville, one hour from Gibraltar, 30 minutes from Malaga-Costa del Sol Airport, and one hour from Gibraltar International Airport.
Prime Golden Mile is available for showings by appointment, in person or virtually. As part of Concierge Auctions’ Key for Key® giving program in partnership with Giveback Homes, the closing will result in the funding towards a new home built for a family in need.
Agents will be compensated according to the terms and conditions of the Listing Agreement. See Auction Terms and Conditions for full details. For more information, including property details, diligence documents, and more, visit ConciergeAuctions.com or call +1.212.202.2940. About Concierge Auctions
Concierge Auctions is the world’s largest luxury real estate auction marketplace, with a state-of-the-art digital marketing, property preview, and bidding platform. The firm matches sellers of one-of-a-kind homes with some of the most capable property connoisseurs on the planet. Sellers gain unmatched reach, speed, and certainty. Buyers receive curated opportunities. Agents earn their commission in 30 days. Acquired by Sotheby’s, the world’s premier destination for fine art and luxury goods, and Anywhere Real Estate, Inc (NYSE: HOUS), the largest full-service residential real estate services company in the United States, Concierge Auctions continues to operate independently, partnering with real estate agents affiliated with many of the industry’s leading brokerages to host luxury auctions for clients. For Sotheby’s International Realty listings and companies, Concierge Auctions provides Sotheby’s brand exclusivity as Sotheby’s Concierge Auctions. Since inception in 2008, the firm has generated billions of dollars in sales, broken world records for the highest-priced homes ever sold at auction and conducted auctions in 46 U.S. states and 35 countries. The firm owns one of the most comprehensive and intelligent databases of high-net-worth real estate buyers and sellers in the industry, and it has committed to build more than 300 homes through its Key For Key® giving program in partnership with Giveback Homes™, which funds new homes for families in need from every property the company sells. For more information, visit ConciergeAuctions.com.
Emily Roberts Concierge Auctions +1 212-202-2940 email us here
https://www.myluxepoint.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/prime-golden-mile-marbella-1.jpg6671000Jackson Thompsonhttps://www.myluxepoint.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/logo2v-1.pngJackson Thompson2023-05-31 18:05:312023-05-31 18:06:23Never Before Publicly Listed for Sale, Prime Golden Mile in Marbella, Spain to Auction via Sotheby’s Concierge Auctions
One of Hollywood’s most iconic couples, Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman decamped to Westport, CT. Now, 300 objects from their legendary partnership – watches, film memorabilia, photographs and more – offer a rare window into their personal and professional lives.
In a town known for torrid affairs, frequent heartbreak and dramatic divorces, the 50-year marriage of Joanne Woodward and Paul Newman stands as Hollywood legend. Partners in work, in love and in life until his death in 2008, their romance was famously renowned for its depth, sincerity – and intensity. The duo even had a bed in their Beverly Hills home appropriately called the “Fuck Hut” – one of many items included in A Life & Legacy: The Joanne Woodward & Paul Newman Collection, a collection of more than 300 objects from the couple’s lives selling across three auctions this June.
Their passion remained well-known in the town where they made their careers, even once they settled down in Connecticut during their later years; actor Ansel Elgort once told Town and Country how his driver recounted chauffeuring Newman and Woodward around as they made out in the back seat.
LAUNCH SLIDESHOW
Of course, there was plenty of Hollywood drama at the start of their relationship. When they met in 1953 as understudies in the Broadway play Picnic, Newman was married with three children, while Woodward was dating the likes of Gore Vidal and Marlon Brando. Still, the attraction between them bubbled as they built their friendship. In 1957, the pair co-starred in the film The Long, Hot Summer; by the time it landed in theaters in 1958, they were married.
“Joanne gave birth to a sexual creature. I’m simply a creature of her invention,” Newman wrote in his posthumously published memoir, based in part on interviews he conducted with friend and screenwriter Stewart Stern. (The transcripts were believed lost until they were discovered in a cabinet in the couple’s house; they were published in 2022, in accordance with a line in Newman’s will that allowed his children to put out his biography.)
“There was a glue that held us together then, and through the rest of our life together. And that glue was this: anything seemed possible. The good, the bad, and the wonderful.”
– PAUL NEWMAN QUOTED IN “THE EXTRAORDINARY LIFE OF AN ORDINARY MAN”
Woodward earned an Academy Award for Best Actress the same year they were wed, and as the couple reached their 30s, their career arcs intersected and Newman’s star rose meteorically. They had three daughters – Nell, Melissa and Clea – between 1959 and 1965, a span of time in which she appeared in seven films, including an adaptation of William Faulkner’s novel The Sound and the Fury, and he in thirteen, including ones like The Hustler and Hud that would launch him into immortality.
Their collaborations never abated. Woodward starred in Newman’s directorial debut, 1968’s Rachel, Rachel – and earned an Oscar nomination for it. The couple continued to work together professionally for six straight decades. They shared plenty else, of course, such as a passion for civil rights and a zeal for liberal politics – letters and mementos from Presidents Clinton and Carter are plentiful among their collection, and, wryly, a framed copy of Nixon’s enemies list with Newman’s name on it.
One part of their life they didn’t share an enthusiasm for, however: auto racing. Newman was bitten hard by the racing bug in his 40s – ironically, while working on a film about a race car driver in which Woodward played his frustrated wife – and went on to drive for decades, competing in the 24 Hours of Le Mans and many other races, even racking up his fair share of podiums. One hundred artifacts from his racing career are offered in RM Sotheby’s auction High Speed: Paul Newman’s Racing Legacy. Woodward, for her part, made her feelings clear with the gift of a Rolex inscribed with the words “Drive Very Slowly.” That Rolex – a ref. 116519, included in the Important Watches auction on 9 June – was one of several Daytonas owned by Newman that cemented his legacy in horology and established the model as one of the most coveted watches of all time.
IMPORTANT WATCHES FEATURES TWO ROLEX DAYTONAS OWNED BY NEWMAN (REF. 116519, LEFT, AND REF. 16520, RIGHT, BOTH ESTIMATED $500,000–1,000,000) ALONG WITH THE RACING SUIT HE WORE DURING HIS LAST RACE WIN (ESTIMATE: $5,000–10,000). IT ALSO INCLUDES WOODWARD’S BLUE-DIAL PATEK PHILIPPE (ESTIMATE: $2,000–4,000).
Their philanthropy was legendary; The Economist wrote in his obituary that Newman was “the most generous individual, relative to his income, in the 20th Century history of the United States.” As Newman said in his memoir: “The easiest thing I can do, frankly, is to give away money.”
And while their 50-year marriage was long a topic of public scrutiny – in a 1998 interview with Larry King, Newman attributed their longevity to a mix of “lust and respect and patience and determination” – it’s impossible to deny the purity of love and spirit that held them together through it all.
“What is finally left is, if you can make somebody laugh,” Woodward once told Today. “And he sure does keep me laughing.”
Banner: Paul Newman photographs Joanne Woodward in their Greenwich Village apartment, circa 1961. (Photo by A Louis Goldman / Photo Researchers History / Getty Images)
https://www.myluxepoint.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/descarga-1.webp8001200Jackson Thompsonhttps://www.myluxepoint.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/logo2v-1.pngJackson Thompson2023-05-29 09:22:002023-05-30 09:28:00“The Good, the Bad and the Wonderful”: Joanne Woodward & Paul Newman’s Legendary Romance
Scuderia Ferrari Works car driven at the 1955 24 Hours of Le Mans and 1955 Mille Miglia
Rival to the era’s most successful performers; witness to two of the most seismic moments in motorsport history
Raced by Ferrari Works drivers Maurice Trintignant, Harry Schell, and Piero Taruffi
One of only four surviving Ferrari 121 LMs built
Complete nut-and-bolt restoration to 1955 Le Mans specification carried out by Ferrari Classiche between 2018 and 2023
Ferrari Classiche certified; confirmed to retain its full matching numbers drivetrain
Addendum: Please note this lot has entered the EU on a temporary import bond, which must be cancelled either by exporting the lot outside of the EU on an approved Bill of Lading with supporting customs documentation or by paying the applicable VAT and import duties to have the lot remain in the EU.
Please also note this car will be taken to Ferrari Maranello following the sale. The successful buyer will need to organise onward transport from Maranello accordingly.
Veuillez noter que ce lot a été introduit dans l’UE avec un cautionnement d’importation temporaire, qui devra être soldé par réexportation hors de l’UE avec un connaissement (bon de chargement) accompagné de ses documents douaniers, ou par paiement de la TVA et des droits de douane applicables s’il doit demeurer dans l’UE.
Veuillez noter que cette voiture sera transportée après la vente chez Ferrari, à Maranello. L’adjudicataire devra par conséquent organiser le transport de la voiture depuis Maranello.
By 1955, Mercedes-Benz’s 300 SLR Presented a challenge that could not be met by Ferrari’s V-12 racers, nor the nimble four-cylinder 750 Monza, prompting Il Commendatore to commission Aurelio Lampredi to create a more powerful straight-six powerplant. The advanced 3,747-cc engine found a home in the 118 LM—a sportscar designed to take on the Three-Pointed Star at the 1955 Mille Miglia. Chassis 0546 LM was one of four Works cars built for the event, taking to the start line in Brescia wearing #728, with Ferrari Works driver Piero Taruffi at the wheel.
The Scuderia’s 118 LMs were the cars most feared by history makers Stirling Moss and Denis Jenkinson, but none more so than chassis 0546 LM and ‘the most dangerous rival of them all, that master tactician, Taruffi’, recalled “Jenks” in the June 1955 issue of Motor Sport. Setting off five minutes after the famous Silver Arrow, the Italian set a blistering pace, leading the 300 SLR for much of the race and smashing all records on the charge to Pescara. Devastatingly for Taruffi, his Ferrari suffered an oil pump failure after five hours of flat-out racing, forcing him to retire halfway to the finish.
Following disappointment at the Mille Miglia, chassis 0546 LM returned to Maranello, where it was converted to full 121 LM specification. Enlarged to 4,412 cc and fitted with three side-draught Weber carburettors, the uprated straight-six now produced a tyre-shredding 360 brake horsepower.
The Ferrari’s greatest test came at Le Mans, where the Scuderia fielded a trio of 121 LMs. Chassis 0546 LM was driven by French ace Maurice Trintignant and American Harry Schell, but it was Eugenio Castellotti in its sister car, chassis 0532 LM, who fired the first warning shots in practice; the Italian clocked the fastest lap, tearing through the Mulsanne speed trap at a dizzying 291 km/h. “Castellotti just left us both standing,” recalled Mike Hawthorn, “laying incredible long tracks of molten rubber on the road as he roared away.”
Ferrari’s battle with Jaguar and Mercedes saw the lap record smashed no fewer than 10 times, but the 121 LMs were not able to endure the pace for a full 24 hours. After 52 laps, Castellotti pulled up in defeat, followed a few hours later by Phil Hill and Umberto Maglioli. That left chassis 0546 LM—along with reigning champion Maurice Trintignant—to defend Ferrari’s honour. They did so with aplomb, taking the fight to eventual winner Hawthorn until the 10th hour, when the Lampredi powerplant could take no more; spent, both car and driver were forced to retire after 107 laps.
The heroic effort at Le Mans marked the end of chassis 0546 LM’s Works career, and it was sold at the close of the season. It would go on to race with success in North America, before its second lease of life ended tragically in April 1956 when on lap 33 of the Del Monte Trophy race at Pebble Beach, Ernie McAfee missed a downshift at turn six, causing him to lose control of his car into the corner, which ended with the 121 LM hitting a pine tree on the driver’s side, killing him on impact. Later restored, the Ferrari appeared at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance in 1974, 1975, and 1976. Since leaving the factory, this 121 LM has had just four private owners over the ensuing almost 70 years.
In 2018, chassis 0546 LM was sent to Maranello, where it was the subject of a no-expense-spared five-year restoration that was completed in 2023. The car’s Scaglietti coachwork was painstakingly returned to its correct 1955 Le Mans configuration, including reinstatement of period features such as the central fuel filler, brake cooling ducts, and reprofiled doors. The mechanical components were overhauled—including a gearbox rebuild—while the chassis was straightened and repaired; the chassis stamp, which was lost during the previous restoration, was reinstated. Chassis 0546 LM was further awarded Ferrari Classiche certification, and is accompanied by its “Red Book” detailing its matching-numbers chassis, engine, and gearbox.
A witness to motorsport’s most profound and indelible moments and veteran of the 1955 24 Hours of Le Mans and 1955 Mille Miglia, this truly remarkable and ferociously quick sportscar is a rare survivor from one of the most glittering periods of Ferrari history.