S otheby’s is delighted to collaborate with Alyssa Kapito, the interior designer behind her eponymous design studio and gallery to present the February 2026 Contemporary Curated auction in New York, marking the auction platform’s first season at the iconic Breuer building, Sotheby’s new headquarters on Madison Avenue. The February sale will highlight landmark artists of the postwar era, including Donald Judd, Alma Thomas, Jean Dubuffet, Alexander Calder, and Helen Frankenthaler, alongside leading voices in contemporary art today.
Alyssa Kapito on Collecting Without Boundaries | Contemporary Curated
Highlights from Contemporary Curated
Featuring a dynamic collection of works, from Donald Judd to Alma Thomas, the Contemporary Curated sale highlights the innovative ways artists have pushed the boundaries of art over the course of the last seven decades. Discover exceptional highlights by some of the most influential artists working from the 20ᵗʰ century to this day.
Meet the Curator
Sotheby’s is thrilled to partner with Alyssa Kapito on a curation of contemporary art showcasing an outstanding selection of works by artists including Donald Judd, Alma Thomas, Richard Prince, Sean Scully, and Jack Whitten. An interior designer with an intuitive understanding of the power of art to complement interior spaces, Kapito selected works by some of the most inspiring voices of contemporary art.
Kapito’s selection highlights her passion for works that transform the spaces around them, a curatorial vision that closely aligns with her own interior design practice. Of Donald Judd’s Untitled, she remarks that "the work interacts with a room in a way that heightens the surrounding architecture and adds a refined, modern intensity.” She is equally drawn to the kaleidoscopic colors of Alma Thomas’ Snoopy Sees Sunrise on Earth, reflecting, "I’ve always felt that the optimism in her work is contagious, and this painting is a perfect example of the joy, wonder, and boldness that made her so special.” Together, her favorite lots from Contemporary Curated spotlight some of the most inspiring voices in contemporary art.
- Donald Judd
- Alma Thomas
- Jean Dubuffet
- Jack Whitten
- Sean Scully
- Richard Prince
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Lanna ApisukhUntitled“I love this series by Donald Judd because it captures everything that makes his sculpture so compelling. There’s an almost excruciating simplicity to the forms, yet the subtle play between opacity and transparency, solid and void, creates a constant visual tension that pulls you in.”
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Snoopy Sees Sunrise on Earth“This piece feels especially iconic because it captures her unmistakable visual language—those mosaic-like dabs of rectangular color that became her signature. At the same time, it shows her wonderfully playful side, blending childlike curiosity with serious, ambitious painting.”
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COPYRIGHT:JOSHUA WHITE/JWPictureTour Turbulente“I love the way it blurs categories. It’s sculpture, but it also feels like a drawing in space. There’s also this playful, almost childlike energy to it, but it’s executed on a serious, ambitious scale. It has personality—it animates the room rather than just occupying it—and that combination of spontaneity and structure is what makes it so great.”
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Lanna ApisukhXzee I“The scraped acrylic surface is layered and tactile, yet it’s contained within a deliberate, architectural framework of lines. That push and pull between improvisation and structure creates a wonderful tension and you can sense both the physical act of making and the intellectual rigor behind it. It very theatrical for me."
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Wall of Light Pink Black“This Sean Scully work has such a powerful quietness to it. At first glance the composition feels simple—just stacked and interlocking bands of color—but the longer you look, the more emotional it becomes. The soft pinks against the deep blacks and muted grays create a beautiful tension between warmth and weight.”
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Lanna ApisukhThe Nudist“I’ve been a fan of Richard Prince’s joke paintings since the first time I saw one. They’re cheeky and irreverent, and you really need a sense of humor to live with them. What I love about this one in particular is how hard it is to read—you actually have to slow down and engage with it. There’s something incredibly satisfying about deciphering the text and finally “getting” the joke.”
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Alyssa Kapito’s Picks
Energy and Gesture: Women of the New York School from an Important Private Collection
The works assembled in Energy and Gesture: Women of the New York School from an Important Private Collection offer a focused and compelling view of four artists whose work embodies the vitality and innovation of postwar American abstraction. Joan Mitchell, Lynne Drexler, Vivian Springford, and Elaine de Kooning each forged a distinctive visual language, united by a commitment to gesture, chromatic intensity, and the expressive possibilities of paint.
As the present owner reflects, they “began collecting the women of the New York School because of the extraordinary breadth and ambition of their talent.” For them, the decision was rooted not in revision, but in recognition: “For too long, the narrative of Abstract Expressionism has centered on the men. These women do not need to ‘earn’ their place in history – they have always been there: trailblazers of a seminal, uniquely American movement.” That conviction resonates powerfully in this group, where energy, gesture, color, texture, and resolution cohere with striking assurance. “It is all present, in every work,” they observe. “They are dazzling artists, full stop.”
“I’ve always felt deeply within myself that I was a damn good artist, though the world didn’t recognize me as such. I wasn’t about to play their game.”
With remarkable clarity of vision, these artists expanded abstraction through deeply personal approaches to form and surface. Joan Mitchell’s compositions pulse with layered color and sweeping movement, translating landscape and memory into immersive, emotionally resonant fields. Elaine de Kooning brought incisive intelligence and calligraphic energy to abstraction, her brushwork fluid, assured, and profoundly expressive. Lynne Drexler built richly structured surfaces from tessellated strokes of luminous pigment, creating rhythmic chromatic harmonies that shimmer and unfold. Vivian Springford explored the atmospheric possibilities of poured and stained paint, producing luminous compositions that balance spontaneity with meditative restraint.
Right:Vivian Springford in front of one of her paintings. Photo courtesy Vivian Springford Estate
Working with ambition and conviction, these artists helped define the language of abstraction through works of striking originality and emotional power. Their works reveal a fearless engagement with scale, surface, and color—each work a platform for experimentation and discovery. Together, they demonstrate the breadth and versatility of the New York School, affirming the movement not as a fixed style but as a dynamic field of individual expression.
“These works have lived beautifully with us,” the collector reflects. “We now want to introduce them to new custodians who will engage with them and treasure them, just as we have.” Drawn from an important private collection, this distinguished grouping thus marks both a celebration and a transition—an opportunity for a new chapter of stewardship. Sotheby’s is honored to present this remarkable selection, bringing forward works whose vision, rigor, and expressive force continue to shape the history of postwar American art.
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