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‘Lost’ artworks shown before sale

Wonderful works of art by artists such as Turner, that have been lost to the world for years, are due to be shown again before going under the hammer at Sothebys next week.

Christies are also showing several works by Goya, also unseen for many years, before they too are put up for auction soon.

Bajar Rinendo (Down They Come), The Constable Lampinos Stitched Inside A Dead Horse and Repentance, turned up recently in a Swiss private collection whose owners contacted Christie’s.

Dating from the early 19th Century, they have been missing and presumed lost since 1877 and are expected to fetch more than £2m.

Christie’s will also be displaying a painting called La Surprise by Jean-Antoine Watteau, previously missing for almost 200 years and presumed to have been destroyed.

Found in the corner of a drawing room in a British country house during a valuation last year, it is expected to be sold for up to £5m.

The Turner is entitled Pope’s Villa At Twickenham, which has not appeared on the open market since 1827. It could fetch up to £7m and is being sold to help fund the development of Sudeley Castle in Gloucestershire, where it has hung for 40 years.

The sale is on the 9 July

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Nude image of Carla Bruni sold

The nude image of Carla Bruni was sold for much more than expected
Photo being auctioned

A nude photograph of France’s first lady, Carla Bruni, has been auctioned for $91,000 (£46,098) - more than 20 times the expected price.


The nude image of Carla Bruni was
sold for much more than expected

The image was taken by photographer Michel Comte in 1993, when Ms Bruni was a highly sought-after model.

The picture was bought by an anonymous bidder on behalf of a collector, said Christie’s auction house in New York, which sold the image. Read more

Freud painting ‘will set record’

A painting by Lucian Freud is expected to become the most expensive work by a living artist sold at auction when it goes under the hammer next month.

The 1995 work, Benefits Supervisor Sleeping, is estimated to fetch between $25m and $35m (£12.7m to £17.7m).


Freud painted Benefits Supervisor Sleeping back in 1995

The current auction record for a picture by a living artist is Hanging Heart, by Jeff Koons, which sold for $23.6m (£11.3m) in November 2007.

Freud’s painting has never been seen in public in the UK before. Read more

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