A monumental canvas by Robert Colescott (1925-2009) that not too long ago toured the US because the centrepiece of the artist’s retrospective, offered for a hammer value of $2.8m ($3.5m with charges) at Bonhams in New York on Friday (8 September). The end result, although beneath the public sale home’s estimate of $3m to $5m (which doesn’t account for charges), made it among the many artist’s most respected works to promote at public sale.
Bidding on 1919 (1980) lasted for simply over two minutes earlier than the portray went to Alia Dahl, a managing director at New York- and Los Angeles-based gallery Jeffrey Deitch. Dahl gained the portray on behalf of a number one American non-public assortment, in accordance with Bonhams.
“This magnificent work will be part of one of the strong collections within the nation, with a variety of institutional-level works,” Dahl stated in a press release. “The collector is past thrilled.”
The particular single-lot public sale was held to coincide with The Armory Present, New York’s largest artwork truthful. The portray, 1919 (1980), is a vibrant, large-scale canvas portraying a map of the continental United States flanked by figures representing Colescott’s mother and father. In line with Bonhams, the artist used the portray to weave collectively the historical past of race within the US and his personal expertise as a light-skinned Black American man who might cross as white. The portray served as a focus of the Modern Arts Middle Cincinnati’s 2019 retrospective Artwork and Race Issues: The Profession of Robert Colescott, which later travelled to Portland, Sarasota, Chicago after which the New Museum in New York in 2022.
Earlier this yr, Bonhams offered Colescott’s Miss Liberty (1980) for $3.7m ($4.5m with charges) throughout a February sale in Los Angeles that coincided with Frieze Los Angeles. The client was the Artwork Bridges Basis, the non-profit established by billionaire Walmart heiress Alice Walton, who additionally based the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Artwork in Bentonville, Arkansas.
Colescott’s public sale file stands at $15.3m (together with charges) for his George Washington Carver Crossing the Delaware (1975), bought at Sotheby’s in 2021 by the Lucas Museum of Narrative Artwork. That establishment is now scheduled to open in Los Angeles in 2025.