Group of Seven work surpasses $900,000 at auction
'Pleine Saison' by Jean Paul Riopelle fetchs $1.3 million
A painting by Group of Seven artist Lawren Harris fetched just under $1 million Wednesday at the Heffel Fine Art auction in Vancouver.
Harris' work, entitled Lake Superior Sketch LXI, sold for $973,500 to surpass the pre-auction estimate of between $500,000 and $700,000. Another painting by the Brantford, Ont., native, The Old Stump, sold for more than $3.5 million at a Heffel auction in 2009.
One painting topped the $1 million mark. Pleine saison by Jean Paul Riopelle was auctioned for $1.3 million, more than double the pre-sale estimate.
Eight Emily Carr lots, which included rare, early illustrations, sold for a combined $1.5 million at the Vancouver Convention Centre. One of her paintings, entitled Trees in Swirling Sky, was expected to sell in the $225,000 range, but sold for $590,000.
Other highlights included Jack Bush's Temple selling for $438,750 — well above the pre-sale maximum estimate of $175,000.
Michael Snow's Solar more than doubled its pre-auction estimate of up to $60,000 by selling for $129,800, a record for the artist.
Two lots by Quebec artist Jean Paul Lemieux collected $494,325, led by La Quebecoise, which sold for $442,500.
E.J. Hughes' painting called Looking South Over Sooke Harbour beat the high end of the pre-sale estimate of $150,000 and sold for $212,400.
And there was one oil painting by Edwin Holgate, titled Grand Manan, which sold for a modest $12,000. It was recently bought at a garage sale for just $2.
The Heffel Fine Art Auction House says the $9.7 million in sales Wednesday night surpassed pre-sale estimates of $6 to $8 million. Sales figures include an 18 per cent buyer's premium.