Houston Chronicle Sunday

$150M art collection from oil heiress could ease market crunch

- By James Tarmy

This spring, Sotheby’s New York will auction off about $150 million worth of art and jewels from the estate of the late oil heiress Anne Marion, who died last year.

Consisting of multiple blue-chip artworks that remained in Marion’s collection for decades, the sale comes at a time when, thanks to trepidatio­n over online-only transactio­ns, top-tier artworks are in short supply at auction.

Marion, who inherited a Texas oil fortune built on a Texas ranching fortune, was president of Burnett Oil Company, Burnett Ranches, and the Burnett Foundation in

Fort Worth.

A major philanthro­pist, she founded the private Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe in 1997 with

$10 million in seed money. She also spearheade­d the $65 million expansion of the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, and served for a period of time as a trustee of the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Through her charitable donations, Marion gave away more than $600 million.

Lifelong collector

All the while, Marion was acquiring art for herself.

“She was a lifelong, passionate collector,” says

Michael Macaulay, a senior vice president and senior internatio­nal specialist for contempora­ry art at Sotheby’s. The works coming to auction, he continues, “were mostly acquired in the 1980s and some in the 1990s.”

Roughly 200 lots from Marion’s collection will be included multiple sales, Macaulay said.

Eighteen of the top artworks will be featured in a standalone evening sale; the rest, including a standalone jewelry sale featuring a pair of emerald and diamond ear clips that carry a $150,000 high estimate, will be spread across 2021.

Marion is survived by her husband John Marion, the former chairman and chief auctioneer of Sotheby’s North America, whom she married in 1988.

The top lot of the entire sale is a work by the Abstract Expression­ist painter Clyfford Still, PH-125 (1948-No. 1) from 1948. Estimated between $25 million and $35 million, the work is a rare instance of the artist’s output coming to market: Approximat­ely 95 percent of everything he ever created resides in the Clyfford Still

Museum in Denver.

There’s also a Richard Diebenkorn, Ocean Park No. 40 from 1971, estimated between $20 million and $30 million, which Macaulay says Marion acquired in the early 1980s.

Supply ‘pretty thin’

An abstract painting by Gerhard Richter from 1992 “is a bit of an outlier,” Macaulay says, insofar as Marion purchased in 2012 at Sotheby’s fairly late in her life. “It’s representa­tive of her lifelong passion for collecting,” he said, “in that she never stopped.”

Marion bought the work for $16.9 million; it’s estimated between $14 million and $18 million, an estimate that reflects a softening of Richter’s market.

Similarly, Sotheby’s will be selling a Warhol Double Elvis from 1963, which carries an estimate of $20 million to $30 million. The Warhol market has been depressed for more than half a decade, Macaulay acknowledg­es, but cautions against reading into overall numbers too much.

“Yes, there’s been an absence of many big prices (for Warhol) for a number of years,” he said.

“But that’s not exclusivel­y representa­tive of demand, it’s also ‘Well, where is the supply for outstandin­g, top-tier early 1960s icons of pop art?’ And it’s pretty thin.”

 ??  ?? Anne Marion founded the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum.
Anne Marion founded the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum.

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