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Sotheby's to offer a highly selective sale of African and Oceanic Art at auction
Fang Reliquary Figure by ‘Master of the Upper Ntem Valley’ (estimate €400,000-600,000 / $494,000-742,000). Photo: Sotheby's.
PARIS.- Sotheby'’s will be offering a highly selective sale of African and Oceanic Art for auction in Paris on June 12. The 137-lot sale showcases several remarkably coherent ensembles: two private collections from the U.S. – those of Oliver & Pamela Cobb and Thomas G. B. Wheelock (art of Burkina Faso); an ensemble of African masks with powerful aesthetic appeal; works from Congo and New Ireland; and a number of pieces fresh to the market.

Oliver & Pamela Cobb Collection
Oliver Cobb was initiated to art as a boy by his grandfather Albert Gallatin, a renowned collector of Egyptian art. Each piece in the collection reflects the ‘classical’ taste and sensitivity Cobb inherited, and all are imbued with the artistic individuality which Oliver Cobb holds dear. The history of these works is linked not just to the prestigious collectors who have owned them on both sides of the Atlantic, but also to their importance within the traditional cultures of their prodigiously creative sculptors.

The star work is an exceptional Fang reliquary figure attributed to a Master Sculptor from the Upper Ntem Valley: a magnificent specimen of ancestor statuary with rounded volumes, produced by the Fang Betsi people of northern Gabon. This is one of the very few works of Fang statuary identified as by the hand of this master and, like the figures in the Barnes Foundation (Philadelphia) and Georges de Miré Collection, superbly combines power with sensitivity. The figure is thought to have left Paris in the 1930s to enter the Los Angeles collection of American actor Edward G. Robinson (est. €400,000-600,000 / $494,000-742,000).*

The collection’s majestic Mbulu Ngulu figure is one of the rare ancestor effigies which, thanks to its remarkable artistic individuality, can be assigned to a specific Kota workshop in Equatorial Africa, based in the village of Zokolunga in the 19th century. This superb testament to the astonishing imagination of Kota sculptors is also of note for its great age (est. €150,000-250,000 / $185,000-309,000).

Nimba sculpture of the Baga people is among the rarest and most emblematic forms of African art. The singularity of its visual language influenced the work of modern artists, notably Picasso, from the start of the 20th century. Within the limited corpus of this ancient statuary, the work to be offered by Sotheby’s stands out for the energy emanating from its outlines – an arresting evocation of the vocabulary of Cubism and, for modern artists in general, of aesthetic research into movement (est. €60,000-90,000 / $74,000-104,000).

An Inhambe female figure, formerly in the Jacques Kerchache Collection, stands out as one of the most remarkable examples of Tiv statuary. The sculptor has superbly expressed the sensuality that is an integral part of Inhambe statuary, which is dedicated to marriage and fertility (est. €120,000-180,000 / $148,000-222,000).

A Kuba anthropomorphic cup, formerly in the Albert Gallatin Collection, was first reproduced in 1927 and regularly exhibited in the 1930s, and is a masterpiece of its kind – woven into the fabric of historic recognition of African Art in the early 20th century. These very rare anthropomorphic cups were reserved for the use of Kuba chiefs and dignitaries; their creation was a true test of skill for royal artists, marking the never-ending competition for prestige among both artists and their patrons (est. €50,000-70,000 / $62,000-87,000).

A superb, ancient, ancestor effigy figure attributed to the Northern Hemba counts among the most significant in the history of Hemba art. Although the identity of the chiefs they commemorated is now lost, these effigies served to keep alive the memory of those they honoured, while protecting the chief and members of the clan (est. €250,000-350,000 / $309,000-433,000).

Thomas G. B. Wheelock Collection & Art of Burkina Faso
This section includes fifteen works from an extensive collection of art from Burkina Faso, remarkable for their age and quality. The highlight is the finest known Bwa butterfly mask – a strikingly modern-looking piece which was exhibited at the Guggenheim Museum in New York in 1996, and whose beauty, age and rarity makes it one of the major pieces in the Wheelock Collection (est. €150,000-250,000 / $185,000-309,000).

Fascinating Ensemble of Power Masks from Across Africa
An Igala masquerade headpiece formerly in the Ben Heller Collection hails from the region to the south-east of the confluence of the Niger and Benue Rivers. This major piece was probably used during ceremonies commemorating either a famous warrior or the decapitated captive of a local hero. The rich patina suggests it may be as much as 100-150 years old (est. €250,000-300,000 / $309,000-371,000). A Guere mask from Ivory Coast is one of the most masterfully expressionistic examples of the warrior masks whose production died out in the early 20th century, in the wake of regional pacification (est. €120,000-180,000 / $148,000-222,000). A very old Kuba-Kete mask (Democratic Republic of Congo), formerly owned by the French sculptor Arman (who considered it ‘exceptional, a mini-masterpiece’), expresses all the force associated with forest spirits (est. €50,000-80,000 / $62,000-99,000).

Art from Congo
Eight ‘fetish’ figures from the Abla Volta & Alain Lecomte Collection, reflecting their lifelong passion for the art, magic and medicine of sub-Saharan Africa, are joined in the catalogue by a powerful Kongo figure once owned by Arman, who described it as ‘very complete’ with ‘charges on its feet and shoulders’ (est. €100,000-150,000 / $124,000-185,000); and by items collected by Charles Smets in the Mangbetu kingdoms between 1909-15, as part of the Congo Expedition of the American Museum of Natural History.

Unknown Masterpieces
An exceptional Bete/Guro mask belongs to one of the most iconic and restricted bodies of work in the history of African Art (est. €250,000-400,000 / $309,000-494,000). It was collected by Jean-Baptiste Filloux between 1911-13, and is only the third known work by a master sculptor famous for a mask now in the Art Institute of Chicago, and another once in the Tristan Tzara Collection – acquired by the French State in 1988 and now in the Musée du Quai Branly. Filloux also collected a very rare Bete/Guro figure with eyes inalid with mirror (est. €60,000-90,000 / $74,000-111,000), and an anthropomorphic ladle unique in Bete art (est. €12,000-18,000 / $15,000-22,000).

After the record €1.3m taken for a 16th century ivory salt by a Sapi-Portuguese artist in 2008, Sotheby’s will be offering a Sapi-Portuguese ivory cup, discovered in the home of an old family in south-west France, and which adds to our knowledge of the corpus of precious ivories carved for Portuguese navigators in what is now Sierra Leone during the late 15th and 16th centuries – and intended for the great collections of European sovereigns and noblemen (est. €150,000-250,000 / $185,000-309,000).

Oceanic Art
Sotheby’s will unveil 17 works of Melanesian & Polynesian Art from the Collection of Christopher & Anna Thorpe in Sydney, carefully selected for their rarity, age and beauty. They include an ancient Kanak hermaphrodite figure – only one other similar figure, now in the Musée du Quai Branly, is known to exist (est. €80,000-120,000 / $99,000-148,000); a very old Lower Sepik male figure, of note for its rare iconography and the quality of its carving (est. €70,000-100,000 / $87,000-124,000); and a Kiwai hunting charm. Used to encourage successful hunting of dugong by moonlight, the charm possessed powers of intercession between the hunter-fisherman and the large marine mammal (est. €25,000-40,000 / $31,000-49,000).

The sale also features a refined ensemble of five works from New Ireland, whose sculpture has long fascinated Europeans. The best known comes from the northern part of the island group, and reflect their variety of different ritual and artistic traditions. Superb examples here include a Uli ancestor figure, whose blend of male and female attributes represents the ideal qualities of a clan leader (est. €180,000-250,000 / $222,000-309,000); and a Malangan Lintel in the form of an imposing horizontal sculpture known as a kobokobor (est. €70,000-100,000 / $87,000-124,000).



Last Week News

June 1, 2012

"Napoleon: Revolution to Empire" opens at the National Gallery of Victoria in Melbourne

The devil's in the details: Getty's new manuscript exhibition gives death and the afterlife a warm welcome

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art acquires Robert Arneson's famous bust of George Moscone

One of the most beautiful Renoir paintings in private hands to be offered at Christie's

Exhibition of new paintings and graphics by Paula Rego opens at Marlborough Fine Art

The cabinet of natural curiosities: Bonhams introduces an original natural history auction

Nineteenth century cyanotypes by French engineer Georges Poulet on view at Daniel Blau Ltd.

Exhibition of recent prints by artist Erez Israeli on view at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art

Mary Lou Vansant Hughes Collection of Haitian art joins Spencer Museum of Art permanent collection

New York based Australian artist Jessica Rankin presents new work at White Cube

The MACBA showcases Gabriel Mascaro's latest work produced by ArtAids

Drawing by Ben Nicholson during time of personal upheaval sold at Bonhams' 20th Century British and Irish Art sale

Belgian/American artist Cécile B. Evans announced as winner of Emdash Award 2012

Heritage Auctions and President of Mongolia to cooperate in Tyrannosaurus bataar skeleton resolution

Buffalo Bill's favorite gun readies for Wild West Auction at Heritage

Solo exhibition of paintings by John Gordon Gauld opens at Salomon Contemporary

1stdibs at The New York Design Center presents photographs of Manhattan street surfaces by Dru DeSantis

Cut-up Statue of Liberty by Danh Vo on view at the National Gallery of Denmark

Leslie-Lohman Museum of Gay and Lesbian Art announces gifts in excess of $10 Million

May 31, 2012

Wim Delvoye is second artist to create a new, monumental sculpture for the Louvre

Joan Miró masterpiece leads Sotheby's Impressionist & Modern Art Sales in London this June

Major exhibition of large-scale sculptures by Henry Moore opens at Gagosian Gallery in London

Tate announces major gift of a group of British works from Mercedes and Ian Stoutzker's collection

Deacon Robert Peckham's recently attributed Hobby Horse is celebrated with focus exhibition

New discovery at early Islamic site in Jordan: Uncovered inscription reveals name of Umayyad prince

Getty Museum acquires fourteen photographs by famed fashion photographer Hiro

The Next Big Show: "Radcliffe Bailey Memory as Medicine" at the McNay Art Museum in San Antonio

Is one of America's leading potters related to the family of potters who owned him as a slave?

The Academy selects acclaimed architects Renzo Piano and Zoltan Pali for museum

Major summer auction at the Hôtel des Ventes, Geneva: Quality and diversity take pride of place

Most important work by Tyeb Mehta from his groundbreaking Mahishasura series to lead Christie's sale

Jamaica seeks heritage status for sunken Port Royal: The "wickedest city on earth"

Nationalmuseum announces new acquisition: Queen Lovisa Ulrika's memorial cup

Original painting of famous Pears Soap image hanging in primary school for sale at Bonhams

Wayne Newton denies museum developer allegations

Eisenhower family: Impasse on memorial design

9/11 first responders and recovery workers honored at museum

South African president withdraws case

May 30, 2012

Frieder Burda's collection on view for the first time in France at Musée Granet

First exhibition on the work of eighteenth-century court goldsmith opens at the Frick Collection

Baroness Carmen Thyssen Bornemisza to sell "The Lock" by John Constable at Christie's

Greek experts find Roman-era shipwrecks nearly a mile deep off an island

Archaeologists discover One thousand years of history in a Sicilian farmland estate

1,600-year-old mosaic at Israeli city of Tiberias synagogue damaged by vandals

Sotheby's to offer a fully functioning Apple I; First Apple Computer made by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak

Scottish auctioneers to sell the collection of a U.S. media family in Edinburgh

China Guardian Auctions Co.'s 2012 Spring Auctions season yields over $337mm USD in sales

Andy Warhol's take on the Queen, from the Reigning Queens series, for sale at Bonhams

Christie's Hong Kong Spring Sales of Chinese Paintings achieve HK$782,284,000/US$100,758,179

South Africa's Goodman Gallery to remove painting from website after thousands protest

"Goin' Home, Goin Home": Mike Kelley's mobile homestead to be built in Detroit

Susanne Ghez steps down at The Renaissance Society after 40 years

Historic New England awards prize for collecting works on paper

Fundacion Mapfre presents the exhibition Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (1880-1938)

Author's son seeks Malcolm X letter at Syracuse

Julien's Auctions to resent Sports Legends/Music Icons Auction on June 23rd and 24th

Galleri Lars Olsen presents two video works by Swiss artist Jessica Faiss

1908 Summer Games set the stage for other Olympics

May 29, 2012

Natalia Sergeevna Goncharova's "Still Life (Bluebells)" sells for $4,637,488 at Sotheby's

The Royal Academy celebrates the Queen's Diamond Jubilee with several displays

Christie's to present a selection of important works by two of the greatest British painters

Art historian cleans Mona Lisa: Interactive iBook uncovers art's dirtiest secret

Christie's announces an exhibition from the Collection of Sir Timothy Rice to celebrate the Diamond Jubilee

Jan David Winitz talks about the Art of Collecting Antique Oriental Carpets

Centuries after it disappeared from the Middle East, attempts to revive language spoken in Jesus' time

150 years after the last fusillade, scholars look at Civil War anew during anniversary

Christie's London Sale of Important Jewels comprises 368 lots, including royal and aristocratic jewels

Bonhams Hong Kong celebrates its 5th anniversary with quarter-billion Hong Kong dollar auction

First solo exhibition in Germany by the British artist Haroon Mirza opens at Schering Stiftung

Anticipation building for RM Auction's Dingman Collection 2012 Sale to be held in New Hampshire

From Morocco to Indonesia: Beirut Art Fair to showcase more than 40 international galleries

First retrospective in a German museum of photographer Lewis Baltz on view at Kunstmuseum Bonn

Marjorie Schiele Prize Award winner announced

Crowds gather for Golden Gate Bridge celebration

Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia showcases artist Kevin COle

Elvis Presley crypt up for auction this month

May 28, 2012

Christie's Spring Sales of Asian 20th Century and Contemporary Art achieve $81,076,863

Vancouver Art Gallery presents "Collecting Matisse and Modern Masters: The Cone Sisters"

Christie's announces it will sell one of the oldest artworks ever offered at auction

Bonhams achieves fifth sell out auction of the snuff bottles from the Mary & George Bloch Collection

Prized portrait of Consort Chunhui sold for almost HK$40 million at Bonhams Hong Kong 2012 Spring Auctions

Tracey Emin comes home to Margate with an exhibition of new works at Turner Contemporary

Solo exhibition of new sculpture by David Altmejd opens at Stuart Shave/Modern Art

Galleri Lars Olsen presents new Marianne Grønnow paintings in the exhibition Light. Dusk. Darkness.

Six young artists respond to the iconic sculptures of highly respected artist Lynn Chadwick

DeCordova Sculpture Park and Museum presents second nature: abstract photography then and now

This summer, Antwerp presents exhibition of Jan Fabre's Pietas in renovated Park Spoor Noord

Christie's New York announces Luxury Week, a bi-annual auction series devoted to the finest

'Who More Sci-Fi Than Us, contemporary art from the Caribbean' opens at KadE, Kunsthal Amersfoort

Acker ends spring season in Hong Kong on high note with impressive results of HK$70+ million/US$9+ million

Craft and Folk Art Museum opens exhibition of baseball-related traditional folk art

Final voyage: USS Iowa on way to Southern California home

Renovated Middelheim Museum in Antwerp reopens to the public

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Luis Gispert's first solo exhibition in Australia opens at Mclemoi Gallery in Sydney

Frieze Masters 2012: Participating galleries announced

May 27, 2012

Archaeologists find rare trove of 3,000-year-old jewelry near the ancient city of Megiddo

Brilliant results for selected works by Fontana, Burri, Castellani and Boetti at Sotheby's in Milan

First major Canadian exhibition of works by van Gogh for more than 25 years opens at the National Gallery

Pacific Science Center presents "Tutankhamun: The Golden King and the Golden Pharaohs"

Sotheby's announces sale of 20th Century Decorative Arts & Contemporary Design

Brancolini Grimaldi Gallery in London showcases the work of Cardiff-born artist Peter Fraser

Painting by Wu Guangzhong tops Bonhams Sale of Fine Chinese Paintings and Contemporary Asian Art

Kenyan-born paleoanthropologist Richard Leakey predicts evolution debate will soon be history

Exquisite vases owned by Bachelor of Narford Hall sell at Bonhams for outstanding price

"Phantom Limb: Approaches to Painting Today" opens at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago

At Home with the Queen: Photographic portraits of Londoners at home with their treasured souvenirs

Laumeier Sculpture Park receives grant to support conservation of a major art work by Donald Judd

New York's Metropolitan Museum lets visitors climb to cloud nine with Argentinian artist Tomas Saraceno

DeCordova Sculpture Park and Museum announces works by Jedediah Caesar as part of PLATFORM series

Thorburn owned by first man to propose remembrance silence to honour war dead for sale at Bonhams

Havana sees United States invasion at key art festival

First exhibition in Scandinavia by the Canadian artist Christina Mackie opens at Kunsthal Charlottenborg

Kaminski Auctions' June Estate Sale includes paintings by Canadian-born artist Victor Ostrovsky

Park of animatronic dinosaurs opening in New Jersey

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