With Sotheby’s record-breaking online auction of Cartier Tutti Frutti leading the way, expectations are high for the upcoming sale of Roy Lichtenstein’s White Brushstroke.

Following the pandemic and the weakened economic sentiment, auction houses have turned exclusively to online auctions. The initial estimate was that we weren’t likely to see any records being broken until late April 2020. A bracelet from Cartier’s iconic Tutti Frutti collection was sold for $US1.3 million through a Sotheby’s online auction, breaking the record for the most expensive piece of jewellery sold over the internet. To critics, it was a “black swan event” – surely, never to be repeated?

Well, Sotheby’s believes that their upcoming June auction of Roy Lichtenstein’s White Brushstroke is about to break another online auction record. Lichtenstein’s 1965 pop-art rendering of a black brushstroke against blue Ben-Day dots carries an estimate of $20 million to $30 million, and a spokesperson for Sotheby’s confirmed the work is guaranteed to sell.

Record-breaking Auction of Cartier’s Tutti Frutti shows Art & Jewellery are recession-proof

Catharine Becket, head of Sotheby’s Magnificent Jewels Auctions in New York, said, “The result achieved for this bracelet is testament to the fact that, even under the most challenging of circumstances, the demand for great art endures.” Adding that “Tutti Frutti jewels had always held a special allure for collectors, capturing the West’s fascination with the ‘exotic’ at a time when travel was relatively limited, much as it is today. Now, of course, we can connect with the touch of a button, which allowed us to engage with bidders worldwide.” The only other work which has achieved a higher price than the Tutti Frutti in an online sale at Sotheby’s: Friedrich von Hayek’s Nobel Prize in Economics from 1974 sold in 2019 for $1.5 million.

Indeed, Cartier Tutti Frutti, so named by fans for its colourful composition of single-cut diamonds, carved and cabochon emeralds and sapphires, rubies, onyx, and black enamel was owned by a US family and worn only once and never before seen at auction. During the online auction which ran April 24 – 28, it attracted five bidders and was eventually purchased by an anonymous bidder in the single-lot auction.

Sotheby’s auction of Roy Lichtenstein’s White Brushstroke expected to break new Records

While other bodies of work by Lichtenstein – his nudes and comic book panels, are more desirable than 1965’s White Brushstroke at auction, Lichtenstein’s Brushstroke comes from a series of 15 canvases completed between 1964 and 1965, a particularly sought-after period for the artist. The only comparable work from this series is Lichtenstein’s Red and White Brushstrokes which fetched $28.3 million at Christie’s New York in May 2017. According to Artnet Price Database, of the top 30 works by Lichtenstein to have sold at auction, two are brushstrokes.

That said, while it has become commonplace to buy jewellery and timepieces sight unseen across the internet, art sales have never quite gained the same commercial traction online. Most collectors (and their conservators and art advisors) would require in-person viewing before bidding on such high-value works, currently an impossibility given that when much of the world remains on lockdown. It remains to be seen precisely how Sotheby’s will allow for the kind of in-person viewing experience.

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