Finest sculpture on Earth breaks art sale record
The less than 4-inch tall Guennol Lioness from Mesopotamia was recently bought by an anonymous English collector from Sotheby's, the international auction house.
He or she paid US$57.2 million and broke all existing records for the sale of sculptural and antiquities work in human history.
I wouldn't mess with the Guennol Lioness, if it had been alive today - whether miniaturized or not!
Excerpts from a report of the auction sale:
[...
The sale easily broke the previous record for the highest price for a sculpture at auction, which had stood at 29.1 million dollars and was set just last month at Sotheby's in New York by Picasso's "Tete de Femme (Dora Maar)."
It also beat the 28.6 million dollars paid for "Artemis and the Stag," a 2,000-year-old bronze figure which sold also at Sotheby's in New York in June and held the record for the most expensive antiquity to be sold at auction.
Described by Sotheby's as diminutive in size, but monumental in conception, The Guennol Lioness was created around 5,000 years ago -- around the same time as the first known use of the wheel -- in the region of ancient Mesopotamia.
The piece was acquired by private collector Alastair Bradley Martin in 1948 and has been on display in New York's Brooklyn Museum of Art ever since.
Keresey described the work before the sale as "one of the oldest, rarest and most beautiful works of art from the ancient world."
"This storied figure, in its brilliant combination of an animal form and human pose, has captured the imagination of academics and the public since it was acquired by the Martins in the late 1940s," he added.
The figure depicts a standing lioness looking over her left shoulder, her paws clenched in front of her muscular chest.
Experts have speculated that the figure may have played a role in some ancient belief system or mythology in Mesopotamia, which today lies in parts of modern day Iraq, Syria, Turkey and Iran.
The proceeds of the auction are to go to a charitable trust formed by the Martin Family.]



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