Art Industry News: A Purple, Diamond-Dusted Picture of Queen Elizabeth II Smashes a Record for Andy Warhol Prints + Other Stories

Art Industry News provides a daily digest of the most significant developments in the art market and world. Here’s what you need to know on this Tuesday, November 29.

MUST READ

London Museum Returns Benin Bronzes to Nigeria – Six artifacts, out of 72 Benin pieces from Horniman Museum’s collection, are being repatriated and sent to Nigeria. British Museum will be under pressure to follow their lead after they return. (Guardian)

Restituted Bronzino Portrait to Hit the Block – The circa 1527 painting restituted to the heirs of Jewish art collector Isle Hesselberger from the German government earlier this year is set to go on sale in January at Sotheby’s Old Masters auction in New York. The presale estimate is between $3 million to $5 million. (ARTnews)

Warhol Print of Queen Elizabeth II Sets Auction Record – In front of its first live audience since the start of the pandemic, Toronto’s Heffel auction house sold a diamond-dusted print from Warhol’s “Reining Queens” series for $853,000 including fees—nearly a double the high end of presale expectations. That’s an auction record for Warhol’s editioned prints. (ARTnews, Canada.com)

Anti-Flood Barriers Installed in Venice – A wall of glass has been installed outside of St. Mark’s Basilica to prevent water from flooding into the 1,000-year-old church, which has been under threat from the rise of water levels over the past decades. (The Art Newspaper)

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Warhol Museum Show Heads to the Saudi Desert – Next year, the exhibition “Fame Andy Warhol in AlUla” will open at the Maraya cultural venue. Organized by the artist’s eponymous museum in Pittsburgh, the show will test the conservative country’s attitude toward the openly gay artist. The Andy Warhol Museum director said that he was given “complete freedom” in deciding which works to show, adding that “as a gay man, also, I was treated with the greatest respect and openness.” (TAN)

Pope’s Old Swatch Watch Could Fetch $100K – A simple black Swatch watch that belonged to Pope Francis back in the 2010s is hitting the auction block as part of Chicago-based Rago/Wright auction house’s “Once Upon a Time Watch Project” benefit sale. It is estimated that it will sell for between $10,000 and $100,000. (Robb Report)

Collin Sekajugo Joins Blum & Poe – The Ugandan artist whose work was part of the Uganda National Pavilion at the Venice Biennale, has joined the stable at Blum & Poe. Sekajugo’s work will be on view this week at the gallery’s booth at Art Basel in Miami Beach, and a solo exhibition of his work at the gallery is in the works. (Press release)

Skeleton of Pregnant T-Rex Will be Unveiled in New Zealand – The skeleton of the 38-foot-long predator was named “Barbara” after she was found by paleontologists in the Hell Creek Formation of northwestern Montana. On December 2, the Auckland War Memorial Museum will unveil the 66-million-year old skeleton. (Daily Mail)

FOR ART’S SAKE

World’s Largest Dino Skeleton Heads to London’s Natural History Museum – The replica of the 100 million-year-old skeleton of a 114-foot long Patagotitan dinosaur will make its European debut at the South Kensington museum starting March 31, 2023 in a show called “Titanosaur: Life as the Biggest Dinosaur.” The skeleton is on loan from Museo Paleontológico Egidio Feruglio in Argentina. (Evening Standard)

Patagotitan, Museo Paleontológico Egidio Feruglio (MEF) CREDIT D.Pol

Patagotitan, Museo Paleontológico Egidio Feruglio (MEF) CREDIT D.Pol. Courtesy Natural History Museum.

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