Portrait of Angel Fernandez de Soto” – also known as The Absinthe Drinker by Pablo Picasso, at Christie’s auction house in London March 17, 2010.
Christie’s has put a record price tag on an important Picasso painting from his celebrated Blue Period that will be offered for sale in London in June.
“Portrait of Angel Fernandez de Soto (The Absinthe Drinker),” dated 1903, is expected to fetch 30-40 million pounds ($45-60 million), the highest pre-sale estimate for any work of art offered at auction in Europe.
The June 23 auction follows a February sale at rival Sotheby’s where a Giacometti sculpture went under the hammer for $104.3 million, just beating the previous record for another Picasso that sold for $104.2 million in New York in 2004.
Wednesday’s announcement of the June sale underlines growing confidence in the art market after a sharp contraction during the financial crisis.
The Picasso, featuring a seated man with a glass of absinthe and a pipe, the smoke curling upwards, is being offered by composer Andrew Lloyd Webber, and the proceeds will go to his foundation which promotes arts and culture in Britain.
The same work was originally offered for auction at Christie’s in November 2006, but it was withdrawn at the 11th hour after an individual challenged its true ownership and said it was effectively stolen from his family by the Nazis.
“This challenge has since been resolved by agreement and the claimants have withdrawn all claims to the painting, leaving the Foundation free to sell the work,” Christie’s said in a statement.
“HUGE” INTEREST
Jussi Pylkkanen, president of Christie’s Europe, Russia and the Middle East, said the painting could end up in a major museum or private collection, and anticipated that interest from collectors would be “huge.”
“This is one of the most important works of art to be offered at auction in decades,” he said.
Christie’s called it “the very embodiment of Blue Period aesthetic, rendered in bold, loose, swirling brush strokes that recall El Greco and trumpet Picasso’s virtuosity.”
Picasso met Angel, the subject, in 1899 and they twice shared studios in Barcelona.
According to the auctioneer, artist De Soto “was more dedicated to drinking and partying than to art,” and the pastime forced Picasso to move to another studio in order to work. De Soto died in 1938 during the Spanish civil war.
The painting was acquired by the Andrew Lloyd Webber Foundation at auction in New York in 1995 for $29.2 million.
Since then, three works by Picasso have realized over $50 million and, in 2004, “Garcon a la pipe” became the first painting to sell at auction for over $100 million.