Showing posts with label lega. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lega. Show all posts

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Strong Results at Sotheby's and Christie's

The results of the spring tribal art auctions at the New York salesrooms of Sotheby's and Christie's were sound testimony to the continuing vitality of the ethnographic art market.

The Christie's sale on May 10, which featured objects from the collection of the late Ernst Beyeler, saw the sale of a fine Santa Cruz Islands platter for $314,500; an impressive Bidjogo mask from Guinea Bissau for $266, 500; and an Australian Aboriginal shield, estimated at a mere $3,000–5,000, for $116, 500.

The large sale at Sotheby's on May 11 saw even more impressive hammer prices.  Three objects––a fantastic Bamana zigzag figure, a serene Buyu male figure, and an imposing Luluwa mask once in the collection of Dr. Werner Muensterberger––each sold for approximately $2.5 million.  An excellent Kota reliquary figure commanded just over $1 million, while a Bamana seated female figure and a Dogon female figure ended at $782,500 and $542,500, respectively.  Two major surprises came in the form of an Azande bone figure that exceeded its estimate almost tenfold at $512,500 and an unusual Lega mask, once owned by Henri Matisse, that began at an estimated $5,000–7,000 and eventually garnered a closing price of $362,500.

Platter in the form of a fish  -  Santa Cruz Islands, Solomon Islands
Mask  -  Bidjogo, Guinea Bissau
Shield  -  Australian Aboriginal
Zigzag figure  -  Bamana, Mali
Male figure  -  Buyu, D. R. Congo
Helmet mask  -  Luluwa, D. R. Congo
Reliquary figure  -  Kota, Gabon
Seated female figure  -  Bamana, Mali
Female figure  -  Dogon, Mali
Bone figure  -  Azande, D. R. Congo
Mask (with possible additions by Henri Matisse)  -  Lega, D. R. Congo





Information and images courtesy of Sotheby's and Christie's

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Tribal Art Auction - Dorotheum, April 2

Vienna auction house Dorotheum will present a sale of fine tribal antiquities on April 2. Primarily highlighting masks and statuary from West and Central Africa, the lots will also include a range of Indonesian and Pacific works, as well as a handful of Eskimo stone sculptures.

View the official website.

Mask  -  Boa, D R Congo  -  Late nineteenth/early twentieth century
Feather currency roll  -  Santa Cruz Is., Solomon Islands
Head depicting a nobleman  -  Benin, Nigeria  -  Eighteenth or nineteenth century
Avian grave markers  -  Sakalava, Madagascar  -  Nineteenth or early twentieth century
Kifwebe mask  -  Songye, D R Congo
Bwami society mask  -  Lega, D R Congo
Cihongo mask  -  Chokwe, Southeastern Congo  -  Early twentieth century

Information and images courtesy of Dorotheum

Monday, December 12, 2011

Winter Sale at Sotheby's

Sotheby's Paris will present its winter tribal art auction on Wednesday, December 14. Featuring a wide array of outstanding works from Africa and Oceania, the sale should generate its most intense bidding around a number of gorgeous and uncommon objects from West and Central Africa. Among the auction's most anticipated offerings will be a pair of fascinating Yoruba/Nago figural groups; an impressive anthropomorphic Dan spoon; a Bangwa power figure with numerous charge niches; a compelling and unusual Lega ivory statuette; and a beautifully rendered Luluwa bust.






View the online catalogue at the official Sotheby's website.

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Skinner Auction Results - September 23, 2007



Skinner held an American Indian and Ethnographic auction in Boston this morning. Bidding was strong and many items exceeded their estimates.

The star of the auction was a Plains beaded war shirt pictured above(lot 166) estimated at $150,000-$200,000 which fetched $303,000 (includes buyer's premium).

Among the African items, some notable prices were:

Lot 64 - Fang figure $22,325 (est. $5,000-$7,000) pictured above
Lot 69 - a Lega male figure $22,325 (est. $5,000-$7,000).

Daniel
JacarandaTribal.com