Global Times

'BIRDS HELL' SETS RECORD

-

Max Beckmann’s Bird’s Hell painting sold at Christie’s impression­ist and modern art sale for 36 million pounds ($ 45.8 million, 40.8 million euros) on Tuesday, a new auction record for German expression­ism.

Depicting monstrous bird- like creatures swooping on naked men, Bird’s

Hell – painted between 1937 and 1938 – is ranked among the most important anti- Nazi statements Beckmann ever made.

“This emblematic picture has become unanimousl­y recognized as the Guernica of Expression­ism and the internatio­nal appetite was evidenced in the spirited bidding witnessed in the saleroom and on the phone,” Adrien Meyer, Christie’s internatio­nal director of impression­ist and modern art, said in a statement.

Beckmann ( 1884- 1950) enjoyed great acclaim in his native Germany with top art dealers presenting his work to private collectors until the Nazi regime labeled his works “degenerate” and removed them from German museums in 1937.

He then left his native land for Amsterdam, where he lived in self- exile for a decade, before moving to the US.

He died in New York at the age of 66, on his way to the city’s Metropolit­an Museum of Art where his Self- Portrait in

Blue Jacket was exhibited. Originally estimated in the region of $ 38 million, the sale of Bird’s Hell easily broke the previous world auction record for a Beckmann, set in 2001 at $ 22.5 million.

 ??  ?? Bird’s Hell Max Beckmann’s
Bird’s Hell Max Beckmann’s

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China