Picasso is back in fashion. The artist's "Les Femmes d'Alger (Version 'O')" set a new $179-million all-time auction record at Christie's in New York on Monday evening, part of a $706-million sale that mixed impressionist and contemporary works. The results suggest art sales - and central banks' quantitative easing - are in fine fettle.
Christie's also set a new sculpture auction record for Giacometti's "Pointing Man". The sale was deliberately full of high-quality lots, but even so the auction house is making arch-rival Sotheby's look leaden-footed - and that's even before the regular Christie's sales in the impressionist and contemporary categories.
Sotheby's, a target of activist investors including Dan Loeb's Third Point, sold $368 million of impressionist and modern art last week. Unlike contemporary art, where Christie's has been dominant of late, Sotheby's had looked strong in impressionists - but may now feel slightly upstaged. Christie's is holding a separate sale in the category on Thursday, though the auction that included the Picasso may have absorbed the best lots.
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In the case of the record-setting Picasso, there's also a demonstrable financial return - at least historically. In November 1997, it sold at Christie's for $31.9 million. Run the numbers, and that's about a 10 per cent annualised return over nearly 18 years. That helps explain why more new price records, for individual artists if not overall, are likely even within days.