A record-breaking sale at Sotheby's Hong Kong has shattered expectations for Asian art collectors, generating HK$688 million ($88 million) across 125 works from the Okada Museum of Art. Kitagawa Utamaro's monumental panoramic ukiyo-e masterpiece "Fukagawa in Snow" led the sale, achieving HK$55,275,000 ($7,101,179) after a lengthy eight-minute bidding battle.
The composition unfolds as a full dioramic panorama, capturing the atmosphere of a grand Fukagawa teahouse in winter. The upper floor bustling with movement and activity, animated by customs and rituals specific to the Fukagawa licensed quarters. Rich pigments, intricate details, and twenty-seven figures animate this three-meter-wide scene that is unprecedented in scale within Utamaro's oeuvre.
Other top lots included Katsushika Hokusai's iconic "Under the Wave off Kanagawa," which fetched HK$21,725,000 (far exceeding its HK$8,000,000 high estimate). Strong demand also propelled an exquisite slip-inlaid celadon-glazed kundika from the 13th-century Goryeo dynasty to HK$2,159,000.
The sale sent a strong signal for the Asian art market, reaffirming the dedication of connoisseurs who are always ready to compete for works of such caliber. Sotheby's reported that Asian bidders accounted for 30 percent of the total amount bid in New York, chasing several of the Evening Sale's headline lots.
Featuring Sotheby's charismatic Phyllis Kao at the rostrum, The Now & Contemporary Evening Sale's $178 million result also saw robust bidding from Asia. Works by Antonio Obá, Yu Nishimura, and Yves Klein all saw aggressive competition from senior Sotheby's Asia specialists.
Asian collectors remain significant drivers of demand at the very top of the contemporary market, even as they have stepped back from the ultracontemporary speculative surge. Strong participation from Asia contributed to the success of the Cindy & Jay Pritzker Collection sale, where museum-grade European modernism drew notable interest, yielding a total of $109.5 million across just 13 lots.
The momentum continued in Exquisite Corpus, where Asian buyers secured key Surrealist and early modernist works. Max Ernst's "J'ai bu du tabourin, j'ai mangé du cymbal" ($2,246,000), Giorgio De Chirico's "Le Muse inquietanti" ($2,978,000), and René Magritte's "Le Symbole dissimulé" ($2,490,000) were all acquired by collectors from the region.
The sale marked a new era for Asian art market enthusiasts, as collectors remain committed to acquiring exceptional works at any cost. The success of Sotheby's Hong Kong demonstrates the unwavering dedication of connoisseurs who are passionate about building their collections and pushing the boundaries of what is possible in the world of art.
The composition unfolds as a full dioramic panorama, capturing the atmosphere of a grand Fukagawa teahouse in winter. The upper floor bustling with movement and activity, animated by customs and rituals specific to the Fukagawa licensed quarters. Rich pigments, intricate details, and twenty-seven figures animate this three-meter-wide scene that is unprecedented in scale within Utamaro's oeuvre.
Other top lots included Katsushika Hokusai's iconic "Under the Wave off Kanagawa," which fetched HK$21,725,000 (far exceeding its HK$8,000,000 high estimate). Strong demand also propelled an exquisite slip-inlaid celadon-glazed kundika from the 13th-century Goryeo dynasty to HK$2,159,000.
The sale sent a strong signal for the Asian art market, reaffirming the dedication of connoisseurs who are always ready to compete for works of such caliber. Sotheby's reported that Asian bidders accounted for 30 percent of the total amount bid in New York, chasing several of the Evening Sale's headline lots.
Featuring Sotheby's charismatic Phyllis Kao at the rostrum, The Now & Contemporary Evening Sale's $178 million result also saw robust bidding from Asia. Works by Antonio Obá, Yu Nishimura, and Yves Klein all saw aggressive competition from senior Sotheby's Asia specialists.
Asian collectors remain significant drivers of demand at the very top of the contemporary market, even as they have stepped back from the ultracontemporary speculative surge. Strong participation from Asia contributed to the success of the Cindy & Jay Pritzker Collection sale, where museum-grade European modernism drew notable interest, yielding a total of $109.5 million across just 13 lots.
The momentum continued in Exquisite Corpus, where Asian buyers secured key Surrealist and early modernist works. Max Ernst's "J'ai bu du tabourin, j'ai mangé du cymbal" ($2,246,000), Giorgio De Chirico's "Le Muse inquietanti" ($2,978,000), and René Magritte's "Le Symbole dissimulé" ($2,490,000) were all acquired by collectors from the region.
The sale marked a new era for Asian art market enthusiasts, as collectors remain committed to acquiring exceptional works at any cost. The success of Sotheby's Hong Kong demonstrates the unwavering dedication of connoisseurs who are passionate about building their collections and pushing the boundaries of what is possible in the world of art.