Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Portrait by Botticelli fetches $92M at auction

- By Katya Kazakina

A small painting by Sandro Botticelli fetched $92.2 million at auction at Sotheby’s on Thursday in the art market’s first big test of the new year.

The result, an auction record for the Renaissanc­e painter, was also the highest price paid for an old master work since Leonardo da Vinci’s “Salvator Mundi” sold for $450 million in 2017. It also represente­d a windfall for the foundation of billionair­e Sheldon Solow, who had bought it for about $1.3 million in 1982. The proceeds from the sale of “Portrait of a Young Man Holding a Roundel” may be used to establish a private museum in Manhattan.

“It’s a marvelous painting,” said Marc Porter, chairman of Christie’s in the Americas. “It’s very attractive and seductive and undeniably rare. And the question for the market is whether this pursuit of extremely rare, appealing, commercial works of art will continue to attract a large number of bidders even in the depth of the COVID-19 emergency.”

For now, at least, the answer is affirmativ­e. The bidding at the auction, which was livestream­ed from New York City, lasted just 4½ minutes and drew only two competitor­s. The winning bid was placed by Lilija Sitnika, a London-based staffer who works with Russian clients. Sotheby’s declined to comment on the identity of the buyer. The work was estimated to sell for more than $80 million. (The final price included the hammer fees.)

Sotheby’s spent four months on its marketing campaign, putting the painting on view in Los Angeles, London and Dubai and publishing an almost 100-page catalog, with scholarly essays and technical analysis. Internatio­nal art buyers have taken note. Robert Simon, an old master dealer in New York, said that a wealthy Hong Kong collector contacted him shortly after the Botticelli sale was announced in September.

“I never heard of him,” Simon said. “He wanted to know what I thought of the painting.”

“There are some people of tremendous wealth, and they are looking at paintings in terms of diversifyi­ng their wealth or just because they think it’s a great thing to own.”

“Portrait of a Young Man Holding a Roundel” dates to around 1480. Although the subject’s identity isn’t known, he’s believed to be a member of the powerful Medici family. His long fingers are gripping a round, gold-ground painting of a saint, attributed to the 14th-century Sienese painter Bartolomeo Bulgarini, which is inserted into the

Botticelli canvas, according to Sotheby’s.

The insert and the subject’s youth are unusual for Botticelli, said Keith Christians­en, chair of the European paintings department at the Metropolit­an Museum of Art, where the work had been on loan twice, most recently from 2013 to 2020.

“There are all sorts of speculatio­ns about his identity, but there’s no way to establish who he is,” Christians­en said in an interview. “He is certainly a member of a wellto-do family because those were the only people who had their portraits painted.”

The painting spent decades in museums. Before the Metropolit­an Museum of Art, it was at the National Gallery of Art in Washington for 23 years, according to Sotheby’s provenance. While it was sold anonymousl­y, during much of this time, it was also listed among the assets of the Solow Art and Architectu­re Foundation in tax documents.

But over the years, scholars have questioned the work’s attributio­n to Botticelli. It’s still unclear when the tondo of the saint was inserted, and the issue remains “perhaps the most debated question about the painting,” according to Sotheby’s catalog.

Such doubts are common with old master paintings. What makes Botticelli more complicate­d is that the artist was completely forgotten for centuries after his death, said Mark Evans, senior curator of painting at Victoria and Albert Museum in London. The artist was rediscover­ed in the 19th century by pre-Raphaelite painters and has since become one of the most recognizab­le names in art history.

Only three “movable” Botticelli works — two paintings and a drawing — have documentat­ion leading directly to the artist, said Evans, a co-curator of an exhibition, “Botticelli Reimagined,” for the museum in 2016.

“Almost 90% of Botticelli’s oeuvre consists of attributio­n. What we know for sure about 15th-century paintings is often very little. In the case of Botticelli, almost nothing was remembered about him 200 years ago.’’

But the vagaries of scholarshi­p often don’t stand in the way of astronomic­al prices, as was the case with the “Salvator Mundi,” which remains the most expensive work of art ever sold.

Botticelli’s “Young Man” may have an even broader appeal, said art consultant Beverly Schreiber Jacoby, president of BSJ Fine Art in New York.

“It’s not religious,’’ she said. “It’s a handsome youth of high birth and manners. You don’t have to be a collector of old master painting to want to buy it. It appeals to the widest possible audience.”

 ?? Timothy A. Clary/AFP via Getty Images ?? An art handler from Sothebys arranges Botticelli’s “Young Man Holding a Roundel” during a press preview in September. The painting sold at auction last week for $92.2 miillion.
Timothy A. Clary/AFP via Getty Images An art handler from Sothebys arranges Botticelli’s “Young Man Holding a Roundel” during a press preview in September. The painting sold at auction last week for $92.2 miillion.

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