Modigliani's largest nude to go under hammer, seen at $150 million

Painted in 1917, shortly before the artist's death at the age of 35, the painting of the woman, believed to be a professional model.

Update: 2018-04-26 09:12 GMT
Italian painter and sculptor Amedeo Clemente Modigliani's 'Nu couch© (sur le c´t© gauche)' painting is displayed after its unveiling at the Sothebys auction house showroom in Hong Kong on April 24, 2018.(Photo: AFP)

HONG KONG: A painting of a reclining nude by Italian artist Amedeo Modigliani is set to go under the hammer in New York on May 14 with a record sale estimate of $150 million, auction house Sotheby’s announced on Tuesday.

“Nu couché (sur le côté gauche)”, or Reclining Nude (on the left side) shows the entire figure of a woman lying on white sheets, looking casually behind her back and fixing her gaze directly at the viewer.

Painted in 1917, shortly before the artist’s death at the age of 35, the painting of the woman, believed to be a professional model, is the largest in his body of work and described as his “most ambitious.”

“Modigliani creates a new kind of nude for the modern era,” said Simon Shaw, the global co-head of Sotheby’s Impressionist and Modern Art Department.

“Typically there’s been a distance between the viewer of a nude and the way that the nude is represented. Here Modigliani puts them on a level. If you look at her gaze, the way she is meeting yours, she is very erotic, but she’s very confident, she’s very self-possessed in her sexuality, and that’s something incredibly new.”

In choosing to make the global announcement in Hong Kong, the auction house hopes to tap into what Shaw calls “an increasing demand” from Asian collectors, including those from mainland China, Singapore and Indonesia.

It was a Chinese billionaire, Liu Yiqian, who forked out an eye-watering $170 million for another of Modigliani’s bold series of 22 reclining nudes, which upon their debut exhibition in 1917 prompted the police to shut down the show.

The painting of a nude lying on top of a blue pillow was about $9 million short of shattering the then-record for the most expensive artwork sold at an auction, falling behind Pablo Picasso’s “Les femmes d’Alger (Version ‘O’)”.

The current record-holder for most expensive artwork sold at an auction is Leonardo da Vinci’s “Salvator Mundi”, which was sold over three times its estimate at $450.3 million at a Christie’s New York auction last November.

The rediscovered portrait of Christ holding an orb now belongs to the Abu Dhabi’s Department of Culture and Tourism, and the government said it would display the Leonardo at its Louvre Abu Dhabi museum.

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