Los Angeles Modern Auctions sets record with Asawa, Nakashima works
Los Angeles Modern Auctions (LAMA), which sold 86% of the nearly 400 lots offered in its Sunday sale, reported the highest total in its 22-year history Monday, realizing $5.12 million in sales, including commissions.
The surprise of the show was the sale of the intricate multi-lobed wire hanging sculpture “Untitled S. 437†by Ruth Asawa, shown above, which was expected to fetch between $300,000 and $400,000. The sculpture set a new LAMA record for a single work, going for $1.43 million and tying the world auction record for the sculptor who died last year.
“It was a surprise in that last year there were some new price points for Asawa’s work,†said Peter Loughrey, director of LAMA. “Sometimes when an artist’s work takes off and sells for a higher-than-normal price, the market doesn’t always sustain that new level. So it was nice to estimate this piece at a point where we left it up to the market to reconfirm the new price level.â€
Handcrafted furnishings were also a hot seller. A selection of 60 designs by woodworker George Nakashima, expected to sell for $372,800, totaled $469,875.
Other top lots in the art and design auction reported Monday include a dining table and chairs by Sam Maloof from 1968-69, estimated to sell between $50,000 and $70,000, went for $81,250. A set of 12 Conoid chairs in walnut and hickory by Nakashima, estimated at $60,000 to $80,000, realized $68,750. A hanging walnut wall case by Nakashima from 1963 sold for $65,625, nearly twice what was expected. And in a nod to the enduring passion for handcrafted woodwork, Sam Maloof’s rosewood and ebony rocking chair from 1982, estimated at $30,000 to $50,000, sold for $61,250.
If you missed out on the auction, it’s not too late. Four dozen unsold lots are currently posted online with a fixed price. Furnishings by Alvar Aalto, Hans Wegner, George Nelson and Evelyn Ackerman, among others, will be sold on a first-come, first-served basis and include the buyer’s premium -- a 25% commission to the auction house paid on top of the winning bid.
ALSO:
Architecture & Design Film Festival expands to Los Angeles
La Crescenta addition floats a treehouse view above original home
New Design Within Reach on Melrose offers more than just the classics
JOIN THE CONVERSATION: @latimeshome | pinterest.com/latimeshome | facebook.com/latimeshome | facebook.com/latimesgarden
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.