Friday, April 17, 2015

Edward Hopper's "Two Puritans" to Lead Spring American Art Sale | Christie's New York, May 21

On May 21, as the star lot of its sale of American Art, Christie’s will offer  




Two Puritans by Edward Hopper (1882-1967).

Painted in 1945 at the height of Hopper’s career, Two Puritans, one of only three canvases by the artist of that year and the only one in private hands,  is estimated to bring in excess of $20 million when it appears at auction for the first time this spring.  The painting has been included in nearly every major exhibition and publication on the artist and, most recently was on view in Paris at the Grand Palais, where the Hopper exhibition broke attendance records, proving that the artist has arrived on an international stage.

Elizabeth Beaman, Head of American Art, states; “Edward Hopper's masterwork Two Puritans can be considered at once an intimate and revealing portrait of the artist and his wife, as well as a testament to his dogged dedication to realism in the face of a changing visual world that increasingly championed abstraction. We are privileged to offer this seminal work, which has never appeared at auction before.”   

Hopper's oeuvre is defined by what is at first glance a seemingly mundane, American subject yet in each canvas, and perhaps most poignantly in Two Puritans, a complex psychological subtext lies just beneath the surface, betraying the simplicity of the scene.  The frisson created in this disconnect between subject and meaning defines his best work and imbues his compositions with an almost haunting permanence, leaving an indelible mark on the mind's eye. This ability to distill time, to freeze a single moment in perpetuity, cemented his legacy and inspired future generations of artists.

Edward Hopper’s choice and earnest representation of commonplace subject matter in works such as Two Puritans set the artist apart from his contemporaries and allowed him to create a new and uniquely American iconography.  In Two Puritans and throughout his career, Hopper painted aspects of America that few other artists addressed.  He portrayed unromantic visions of life in a broad and increasingly modern style. While Hopper's paintings have formal qualities in common with other Modernists, his art remained steadfastly realist.


EDWARD HOPPER | A MARKET LEADER 
In recent seasons, prices for Hopper’s paintings have soared at auction, driven by renewed demand for masterpiece-quality works.  In October 2013,




East Wind Over Weehawken




 sold for $40,485,000 setting a new world auction record for the artist and in November of 2012,  

October on Cape Cod 

sold via Christie’s LIVE™ for $9.6 million, setting the world record for an item sold online at any international auction house.