Hong Kong auction houses see spring sales figures down on previous years

Phillips, in its second year at its West Kowloon headquarters, was boosted by a major consignment – a Jean-Michel Basquiat painting – and pulled in HK$296 million from its modern and contemporary sales, a 22 per cent increase over the previous season but still a significant drop from last spring’s HK$473.3 million.

Native Carrying Some Guns, Bibles, Amorites on Safari (1982) by Jean-Michel Basquiat sold for HK$83 million at Phillips’ modern and contemporary art evening sale on May 31. Photo: Phillips

The Basquiat work, from 1982 and called Native Carrying Some Guns, Bibles, Amorites on Safari, was the third painting by the late American artist Phillips has sold this spring – the other two, like this one new to the market having previously belonged to the Italian anthropologist Francesco Pellizzi, sold for US$40.2 million (US$46.5 million with fees) and US$6.5 million (US$7.8 million with fees) in New York last month.

At Phillips’ Modern & Contemporary Art Evening Sale on May 31, the Basquiat painting sold for a hammer price of HK$83 million (HK$98.7 million with fees), which was lower than the presale estimate, net of fees, of HK$90 million to HK$100 million. Still, it was the most valuable lot sold at auction so far this year in Hong Kong.

“What we’ve seen in the last year is that there have been a lot less people participating in the market,” said Jonathan Crockett, Phillips’ chairman of Asia and auctioneer at the sale.

“In a stronger economy, you’d most likely be looking at there being one or two more bidders in the market, perhaps. We had three people put their hands up on Friday night.

“All it would take was two [more] people to drive the price sky high. Without that speculative participation, you’re kind of missing out on a little bit of that happening,” he added.

Jonathan Crockett, chairman of Phillips Asia, selling Jean-Michel Basquiat’s Native Carrying Some Guns, Bibles, Amorites on Safari (1982). Photo: Phillips

“It’s definitely not a disappointment. It would have been nice if it would have been three figures as opposed to two figures in terms of millions, but that’s just the way it is at the moment,” Crockett said.

He said the high sell-through rate of over 90 per cent for both the evening and day sales was encouraging, even if 37 per cent of works in the evening sale sold for below estimates.

These included Wimbledon 1 (2011) by American artist Jonas Wood, which went for HK$1.6 million against an estimate of HK$2 million to HK$4 million, and T1989-U28 (1989) by French-German painter Hans Hartung, which sold for a hammer price of HK$1.4 million against the low presale estimate of HK$2 million.

Yayoi Kusama’s Pumpkin (2000) sold for HK$11 million before fees – its presale estimate was HK$13 million to HK$20 million – while a Zao Wou-Ki painting, titled 30.09.97 (1997), failed to sell. A Gerhard Richter work, Abstraktes Bild (947-5) (2016) was withdrawn, while the Banksy work The Leopard and Lamb (2016) fetched HK$30 million before fees, above its high estimate of HK$28 million.

Strong demand for 20th century works in the Christie’s sales confirmed a recent trend of collectors showing more enthusiasm for older works than for the ultra contemporary art that dominated at sales held during the pandemic.

Yayoi Kusama’s Pumpkin (2000) sold for HK$11 million, less than its presale estimate. Photo: Phillips

Highlights included Sanyu’s Vase de fleurs (1931), which sold for above its presale estimate of HK$18 million to HK$28 million, fetching HK$30 million before fees.

A René Magritte oil painting of a rose, titled L’invitation au voyage (1944), sold for a hammer price of HK$35 million, within the range of its HK$28 million to HK$38 million estimate.

Una sera (2004) by Italian artist Salvo, who has been gaining more prominence in the auction market of late, sold for HK$2.6 million before fees, well above its high estimate of HK$1.5 million.

However, Andy Warhol’s Flowers (1965), which went under the hammer for HK$55 million, sold below its presale estimate of HK$62.8 million to HK$92.8 million.

A work by the late artist Matthew Wong, Shangri-La (2017, left), was withdrawn before Christie’s 21st century evening sale. Photo: Christie’s

A work by the late artist Matthew Wong, Shangri-La (2017), was withdrawn before the sale, as was the Kaws work TOGETHER (2017).

Two works by Nicholas Party and Wayne Thiebaud’s Little Deli (2001) failed to sell, but a work by Belgian artist Ben Sledsens sold for triple its high estimate of HK$400,000, fetching HK$1.3 million before fees.

Nearly half of the lots went unsold in Bonhams’ May 25 sale of modern and contemporary art, which achieved a low sell-through rate of 55 per cent.

In April, Sotheby’s, which is set to open a 24,000 sq ft (2,230 square metre) space at Landmark Chater in Central in July 2024, also saw a high number of lots withdrawn and conservative pricing in its spring art auctions.
Wimbledon 1 (2011) by American artist Jonas Wood went under the hammer for HK$1.6 million against a HK$2 million to HK$4 million estimate. Photo: Phillips

Christie’s has also had to contend with an additional problem recently: a cyberattack which brought down its website temporarily just before its May auctions in New York; its Hong Kong sales were unaffected.

A ransomware group, RansomHub, claimed responsibility on May 27 and threatened to release the personal data of at least 500,000 of Christie’s private clients onto the dark web.

One client of the auction house has launched a class-action lawsuit against Christie’s for failing to protect clients’ personal data, despite the company telling affected customers on May 30 that the hackers acquired no financial or transaction data.

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