• Lehman Brothers: Artwork and E auction at Christies

    Sale 5682

    Lehman Brothers: Artwork and Ephemera

    London, South Kensington

    |

    29 September 2010

    Browse Sale
Previous Lot
Search
Next Lot
    • John Hoyland, R.A. (B. 1934)
    Lot 1231

    John Hoyland, R.A. (B. 1934)

    Abstract

    Price realised

    GBP 1,062

    Estimate

    GBP 200 - GBP 300

    This lot is offered without a reserve

    Follow lot
    Add to Interests

    John Hoyland, R.A. (B. 1934)
    Abstract
    signed, dated and numbered '15/300 John Hoyland 96' (lower edge)
    screenprint
    18½ x 14 in. (47 x 35.5 cm.)
    and two abstract prints by an unknown hand and two screenprints 'Album' and 'Les Flon-Flons' by Stephen Buckley and one pastel 'Journey I' by Bernard Myers. (6)

    Contact us

    • Contact Client Service

      info@christies.com

      New York +1 212 636 2000

      London +44 (0)20 7839 9060

      infoasia@christies.com

      Asia +852 2760 1766

    • William Porter

      wporter@christies.com

      +44 (0)20 7752 3311

    • Sophie Thorburn

      sthorburn@christies.com

      +44 (0)20 7752 3254

    Other information

    Special Notice

    This lot is offered without reserve.
    Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's Resale Right Regulations 2006 apply to this lot, the buyer agrees to pay us an amount equal to the resale royalty provided for in those Regulations, and we undertake to the buyer to pay such amount to the artist's collection agent.


    Recommended features

      • From Gertrude Stein to the Roc
      • From Gertrude Stein to the Rockefellers: The collecting of modernist masterpieces

        Impressionist & Modern specialists Max Carter and Jessica Fertig on how works collected by Gertrude Stein came to be acquired by Peggy and David Rockefeller

      • ‘An equal partnership’ between
      • ‘An equal partnership’ between Matisse and his model

        Biographer Hilary Spurling admires the superlative Odalisque couchée aux magnolias from the Rockefellers’ collection

      • Why Britain was first to go Po
      • Why Britain was first to go Pop

        Pop art was not an all-American phenomenon — the UK, in fact, was where it started. Illustrated with works in our Modern British & Irish Art sale, 22 November

      • What I’ve learned: The Private
      • What I’ve learned: The Private Collections Director

        ​Adrian Hume-Sayer, the specialist spearheading the Audrey Hepburn sale, shares the stories behind our celebrity auctions​

      • 5 minutes with… An early al-Tu
      • 5 minutes with… An early al-Tusi astronomical manuscript

        Islamic art specialist Romain Pingannaud on a 13th-century copy of a key compendium on astronomy and mathemetics

      • From collar to codpiece: power
      • From collar to codpiece: power dressing in the 16th century

        Old Masters specialist Jonquil O’Reilly explains how one dressed to impress in the 1500s, with the aid of portraits by Cranach and Mor offered in New York on 19 April

Share
Email
Copy link
Share
Email
Copy link