01.38 am, Tuesday May 22 2012

Qatar pays highest price ever for artwork

14:42 AEDT Sat Feb 4 2012
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Oil-rich Qatar has bought Paul Cezanne's painting The Card Players for more than $US250 million (about $A234 million) by far the highest price ever paid for a work of art.

Previously, a Jackson Pollock - "No.5, 1948" - held the record, sold for $US140 million in pre-recessionary 2006.

Vanity Fair points out that only four other versions of Card Player exist - Cezanne painted them as a series in the 1890s.

They are all housed in world-class museums, including the Musee d'Orsay in Paris and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

"The purchase is just the latest bid in Qatar's effort to become an international intellectual hub," the magazine wrote, adding that it "upends the modern art market."

According to the Gulf Times, Qatar has the third highest density of millionaires in the world after Singapore and Switzerland.

The sale took place in 2011 and was confirmed to the magazine by multiple sources this week. Qatar's royal family declined to comment and all other players involved in the sale signed confidentiality agreements.

The one bought by Qatar is one of three that shows two men at a table playing cards.

"$250 million is a fortune," Victor Wiener, a fine-art appraiser told Vanity Fair.

"But you take any art-history course, and a 'Card Players' is likely in it. It's a major, major image."

Cezanne inspired Cubism and helped pioneer abstract art, and Picasso called him "the father of us all."

It is estimated that murals painted at Facebook's offices in 2005 by graffiti artist David Choe will be worth about $US200 million after the social-network giant goes public.

 

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