From: Christie's - Saturday Feb 08, 2020 11:59 am
Christie’s
Lovestruck: 14 artworks to make the heart beat faster, What 150-year-old wine tastes like, How Magritte, Lempicka and Grosz seduced London, Ganesh Pyne and the ghosts of the past, The heroic Hans Hartung, plus more
 
 
 
 
Because Valentine’s is coming and love is in the air, 14 artworks that make our hearts beat faster
 
 
The quiet life and uncanny paintings of Ganesh Pyne, one of India’s foremost modernists
 
 
What does a fine wine taste like after 150 years? A special report from an extraordinary dinner
 
 
Why the presenter of Britain’s Lost Masterpieces wants these works by four emerging artists
 
 
He fought to liberate France, but painting was this artist’s truest expression of freedom
 
 
The director of the National Gallery of Canada on imaginary creatures, Kandinsky and canoes
 
 
More stories
 
Editor’s picks
 
 
 
 
Believe it or not, Chuck Close’s Lorna (2006) is a tapestry. ‘The black wool for the background absorbs so much light that it makes the tapestry almost like a holograph,’ Close explains of the piece, which stands more than 8ft high. His subject is the artist Lorna Simpson
 
Estimate: £15,000-20,000
7-18 February, Online
 
 
 
 
 
Shipbreaking #9b, Chittagong, Bangladesh 2000 was inspired by a radio programme about the decommissioning of single-hulled ships in the wake of the Exxon Valdez oil spill. ‘Most of the dismantling was happening in India and Bangladesh,’ explains Canadian photographer Edward Burtynsky, ‘so that’s where I went’
 
Estimate: £6,000-8,000
7-18 February, Online
 
 
 
 
 
Untitled (1990) by Günther Förg comprises 22 panels executed in acrylic on lead on wood, each approximately 60 cm x 40 cm. Another 22-panel work, Untitled (1991), is held by the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, where it was a highlight of the retrospective Günther Förg: A Fragile Beauty in 2018
 
Estimate: £1,000,000-1,500,000
12 February, London
 
 
 
 
 
In November 1970 the industrialists and collectors Luigi and Peppino Agrati witnessed Christo wrapping the statues of Vittorio Emanuele II and Leonardo da Vinci in Milan. They contacted the Bulgarian artist, who produced this sketch for a project designed for the garden of Peppino’s home
 
Estimate: £20,000-30,000
13 February, London
 
 
 
 
 
This small flambé-glazed vase, less than 6 inches high, dates to the Yongzheng Period (1723-1735). ‘Flambé glazes are the result of copper or other metallic materials breaking up on the surface of the very runny glaze,’ explains specialist Jessica Chang. ‘It is impossible to find two identical pieces’
 
Estimate: £3,000-5,000
13-20 February, Online
 
 
More trending lots
 
 
 
 
Also on Christies.com
 
 
 
An £18.9 million Magritte, record-breaking works by Lempicka and Grosz, plus all the big winners from our London evening sale
 
 
 
‘He didn’t really know the difference between a football and a golf ball’ — the inside story of Andy Warhol’s ‘Athletes’ series
 
 
 
Auction calendar
 
 
      
 
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Gustav Klimt (1862-1918), The Kiss, 1907-08 (detail). Osterreichische Galerie Belvedere, Vienna, Austria. Photo: Bridgeman Images // Ganesh Pyne photographed by Veena Bhargava, Kaviraj, in 1984. Copyright Veena Bhargava. Image courtesy Akar Prakar // Emma Dabiri with Genieve Figgis, 17th Century Family, 2018 (detail). Estimate: £20,000-30,000. Offered in the Post-War and Contemporary Art Day Sale on 13 February at Christie’s in London // Hans Hartung in Nice, 1958. Photo: Inge Morath / Magnum. Artwork: © Hans Hartung, DACS 2020 // Sasha Suda photographed by Brendan Burden