A Pablo Picasso portrait of his mistress and ‘golden muse’ Marie-Therese Walter sold for £28.6 million (€33 million), leading an important Sotheby’s auction of impressionist, modern and surrealist art.

Prices for the most sought-after works have soared in recent years

The sale was the first of a series held in London this month by Sotheby’s, Christie’s and smaller auction houses in the latest barometer of the strength of the high-end art market.

Prices for the most sought-after works have soared in recent years despite broader economic concerns, with collectors in China, Russia and the Middle East joining more established patrons in Europe and the US.

Subtracting the buyer’s premium of more than 10 per cent, the amount realised for the 1932 Picasso was at the lower end of pre-sale estimates of £25-£35 million (circa €29-€38 million).

Nonetheless, it was comfortably the top lot of an evening when a series of works on paper by Austrian artist Egon Schiele arguably stole the limelight.

Schiele’s 1914 Lovers (Self-Portrait with Wally) fetched £7.9 million (€9.1 million), an auction record for the artist for a work on paper.

Also sold by the Leopold Museum in Vienna was his Self-Portrait in Green Shirt with Eyes Closed which sold for £5.1 million (€5.9 million), well above expectations of between £1.8 million (€2 million) and £2.5 million (€2.9 million).

The combined tally for Schiele works, sold by the museum to help settle a long-running restitution case involving art, deemed to have been stolen by the Nazis in the 1930s, was £14 million (€16.1 million).

Other lots fared less well, notably Max Beckmann’s Before the Ball – Two Women with a Cat which went unsold despite pre-sale estimates of £5-£8 million (€5.7-€9.2 million).

Overall the evening brought in £121.1 million (€140 million) in sales, within expectations of £103-£149 million (€119-€172 million). Sotheby’s said it was their second highest total from an equivalent sale in London.

“Bidders, both new to the market as well as seasoned buyers, reacted with great enthusiasm, in particular to the selection of impressionist works that were considered to be the strongest offering in many years,” said Helena Newman, chair of Sotheby’s impressionist and modern art in Europe.

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