Christie's New York recorded a Jackson Pollock sale at $181 million and a Constantin Brancusi sculpture above $100 million during its marquee evening auction, marking the first time a Brancusi has crossed nine figures at public sale and the highest price paid for a Pollock work since 2016.
The Pollock, believed to be from the artist's classic drip period between 1947 and 1950, carried a pre-sale estimate in the $140-180 million range and cleared the high end with buyer's premium. The Brancusi, a bronze cast of *Bird in Space*, had been held in a European private collection for four decades and entered the market without reserve. Both pieces attracted telephone bidding from at least three continents, with the Pollock going to an undisclosed Asian buyer and the Brancusi to a North American family office, according to people familiar with the transactions.
The dual result extends a pattern visible since late 2023: ultra-high-net-worth allocators treating museum-tier works as balance-sheet instruments rather than discretionary acquisitions. Pollock has long occupied the $100-200 million bracket—his *Number 17A* sold for $200 million privately in 2016—but Brancusi's entry into nine figures creates a new comp for early-20th-century European sculpture. Only Giacometti and Moore have previously cleared $100 million in that category. The Brancusi sale also establishes a floor for the remaining eleven casts of *Bird in Space*, nine of which are in museum collections and unlikely to surface. The two in private hands are now effectively priced.
The Christie's result follows Sotheby's November sale of a Magritte for $121 million, the highest price ever paid for a Surrealist work. Taken together, the three sales suggest allocators are broadening their definition of store-of-value art beyond the Basquiat-Warhol-Rothko axis that has anchored the $100 million-plus tier since 2017. Family offices are treating singular works by historically significant but less liquid names—Brancusi, Magritte, and certain late-career Pollocks—as hedges against both inflation and the homogenization of blue-chip inventory. The calculus: scarcity and museological pedigree matter more than name recognition when the holding period is generational.
Allocators should track May's Impressionist and Modern evening sales in New York, where at least two Modigliani portraits are expected to test the $150 million threshold. If either clears that mark, it would confirm the market's willingness to pay nine figures for non-American Modernists with thin public sales history. Also worth monitoring: whether the Pollock buyer registers the work with the Pollock-Krasner Authentication Board within the standard six-month window, which would formalize its provenance and likely trigger a bump in private valuations for comparable drip paintings. The Brancusi comp will pressure the two Moore sculptures rumored to be circulating quietly among European dealers, both estimated in the $80-95 million range before this week.
The auction house disclosed total evening sales of $582 million across 47 lots, with a sell-through rate of 89 percent by value. Eleven lots exceeded $10 million, and four crossed $50 million, indicating depth beyond the headline results. Christie's next major evening sale is scheduled for mid-May.
The takeaway
Two nine-figure sales in one night broaden the definition of museum-tier liquidity stores beyond traditional blue-chip names.
fine artluxury sectoralternative assetsfamily officeauction resultscollectibles
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