Master Paintings Part II
Online Auction: 22–30 January 2021 • 10:00 AM EST • New York

Master Paintings Part II 22–30 January 2021 • 10:00 AM EST • New York

T his January’s Part II online sale of Master Paintings presents a wide range of works dating from the 14th to the 19th century. The sale includes a number of important Renaissance gold grounds, 17th century Dutch and Flemish paintings, portraiture across the ages, landscapes, still lifes and more. We are honored to feature property from three important groups which include works from the collection formed by Rembrandt scholar and museum director David Carter and his wife Louise Carter, property from the estate of world-renowned art collector, publisher, and writer Alexis Gregory, sold to benefit the Alexis Gregory Foundation, and a selection of paintings from the estate of prominent New York gallerist Paul Kasmin.

Additional Old Master paintings highlights include an impressive representation of Mars by Giovanni Francesco Barbieri, known as Guercino, an intimate Madonna and Child by Sir Anthony van Dyck, a rediscovered cassone panel by Liberale da Verona and a pair of charming portraits by Adriaen van Ostade. The sale also features 19th Century European Paintings, including a remarkable, rare self-portrait by William Bouguereau, a vivid series of works illustrating the antique ode The Story of Anacreon by Jean-Léon Gérôme, and an impressive equestrian painting by John Frederick Herring Snr. sold to Benefit The Edward M. Snider Youth Hockey Supporting Organization.

Visit the Exhibition

Following the guidelines for the Phase Four reopening of Manhattan, we are able to accommodate clients in our building by appointment only. The exhibition for this sale will open on 23 January and will close on 29 January at 5 PM EST. To schedule an appointment please click here or contact appointmentsNY@sothebys.com or +1 212 606 7171. You can read more about our safety requirements here.

Early Italian Highlights

Portraits Through the Ages

19th Century Highlights

Property from the Estate of Paul KasminLots 518 - 529

Property from the Collection of David and Louise CarterLots 540 - 561

S otheby’s is honored to be offering the collection of David and Louise Carter, including paintings, sculpture, and drawings, throughout Masters Week 2021. David G. Carter and Louise Belknap met at the Met in the museum’s library stacks where she was cataloguing for her first job after graduating as an Art History major from Bryn Mawr. David had a newly established Metropolitan Museum of Art fellowship after completing his doctoral studies at the Institute of Fine Arts at New York University. His earlier days saw him graduate from Princeton as an Art & Archeology major in a wartime accelerated class, then service as a diplomatic courier during WWII, followed by an MA at Harvard / the Fogg and his doctoral studies at NYU. The subsequent union of David and Louise in 1951 began a lifetime passion for building a superb Art Collection that they enjoyed surrounding themselves with over their 63 wonderful years together. While David came to be known as a Dutch & Flemish scholar with a specialty in Rembrandt, his was also a fine and discerning eye as a connoisseur with deep understanding of artistry and quality when selecting Artworks for their personal collection or as the director of the Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design and The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (where he nearly doubled the size of the exhibition space during his tenure). Art was the framework for his entire world.

C ornelis Cornelisz. van Haarlem (1562-1638) was a Dutch painter of the Golden Age. In the 1580s, Cornelis van Haarlem, together with the poet, painter and art theorist, Karel van Mander, and the painter and engraver, Hendrick Goltzius, was one of the principal exponents of the Mannerist style which enjoyed a brief but intense flowering in Haarlem. But in the later years of Cornelis's career, the artist abandoned the extreme Mannerism of the Haarlem Academy and turned toward a more temperate approach. The violent contortions and exaggeratedly muscular nudes which typified his earlier style gave way to restful poses and figure types, more akin to classical ideals of proportion and harmony. A recent New York Times Magazine article delves deeper into Cornelis's artistic style and legacy.

Property from the Estate of Alexis Gregory, sold to benefit the Alexis Gregory FoundationLots 599 - 610

Plein Air Painting

Still Lifes

Sold Without Reserve

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