Monday, June 8, 2026

Sotheby's Masterpieces from the Lewis Collection 24 June 2026 Part III

Part I

Part II

 Last month, Sotheby’s shared the news that it would bring to market a group of masterpieces from the legendary Lewis Collection. Since then, some ten works – each one exceptional in its own right – have been revealed, including paintings by Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele, Gustave Caillebotte, Lucian Freud, Francis Bacon and Chaïm Soutine. 

This landmark offering is led by a sensuous nude by Amedeo Modigliani (estimated in excess of £45 million) which ranks among the most important examples of the artist’s work ever to come to market. Painted in 1917, Nu assis au collier belongs to a series of works now widely regarded as pivotal in the evolution of modern art, but considered so outrageous at the time the exhibition in which they featured was shut down by the police. Modigliani is one of a rare coterie of artists to have broken the $100 million threshold at auction, not just once but twice – each time for a work from this series, and each time in New York. Now, with this sale, the mantle passes to London, where this painting represents not only one of the highest value works of any kind ever offered in the city, but also the highest value work by Modigliani ever to be offered in Europe. In this ground-breaking painting, Modigliani reinvents the tradition of the nude – a tradition marked most notably by the work of Rubens, Velázquez, Titian and, not least, Manet’s Olympia – in a way so radical it shook the foundations of art history. 

Some 80 years later, Lucian Freud took that reinvention one step further, breaking new ground with the four seminal portraits of ‘benefits supervisor’ Sue Tilley, described by art critic and historian Sebastian Smee as “among the most exciting and unprecedented paintings of the human figure in the history of art.” The final, and most ambitious of the works in that series – Sleeping by the Lion Carpet (est. £25-35m) – will also feature in the June sale. 

A further star work in the collection, Edgar Degas’ Petite Danseuse de quatorze ans (est. £18-25m) marks another of these radical moments. While Modigliani’s 1917 exhibition was considered so scandalous the police were called in, this extraordinary sculpture by Degas – with its real hair, dressed in a tutu and real dancing shoes – was considered at the time so shockingly realistic it was vilified: “Can art descend any lower?” asked one critic, describing the dancer as full of ‘bestial effrontery’’, while others called her ‘hideously ugly’. Now considered one of the icons of modern art, Degas’ ‘little rat’ is – in spite of the artist’s lifelong preoccupation with the medium – the only sculpture exhibited in his lifetime. Of the 27 casts produced of this work, the vast majority now reside in international museums. These iconic sculptures are even rarer on the market – aside from this, only four other example have ever appeared at auction. 

A suite of seven works by Pablo Picasso, spanning eight full decades of the artist’s long and varied career. The group is led by a highly unusual and evocative portrait of Dora Maar, the vibrant, fiercely independent artist who first attracted his attention by playing ‘knife roulette’ between her splayed fingers on an adjacent table at Les Deux Magots, and who, in addition to becoming Picasso’s muse and lover, also became his indispensable intellectual and artistic sparring partner. Given both the provocative nature of their relationship and the tumultuous backdrop against which it unfolded (the Spanish Civil War and the Second World War), the vast majority of Picasso’s renditions of Dora Maar are angular and jagged in form. The work to be offered this June, unseen until now for over half a century, is a rare example of something quite different – a generous, sweepingly lyrical rendition of the Dora Maar with whom, in 1938 when this work was painted, Picasso was still entirely besotted.

Buste de femme (est. £12–18m) will be presented alongside Tête de femme (est. £2–3m), a monumental work on paper from 1921 depicting Picasso’s first wife Olga Khokhlova. Produced during the years following the First World War, the work hails from Picasso’s Neoclassical period, part of the broader cultural reckoning known as the Return to Order. Among other works by Picasso to be offered this June is one of the earliest fully realised portraits by the artist ever to come to market, painted when he was just seventeen and already displaying his abundant precocious talent. 



AMEDEO MODIGLIANI Nu assis au collier 1917-18, oil on canvas Estimate: In excess of £45 million 

One of the greatest works by Modigliani ever to appear on the market, Nu assis au collier belongs to a pivotal moment in the artist’s career: 1917, the year of his first and only lifetime solo exhibition at Berthe Weill’s gallery on the rue Taitbout in Paris – a shortlived but infamous presentation that scandalised Parisian society and was closed by police on its opening day. The legendary nudes in the show are the works for which the Italian artist is today best known. The two highest-achieving works by the artist at auction – both titled Nu couché – were painted in that same year (selling for $170.4 million and $157.2 million in 2015 and 2018, respectively), underscoring the exceptional importance of this moment within his oeuvre. Last offered at auction in 1995, and unseen in Europe since 1938, the work emerges from the long tradition of the nude in Western art, tracing a lineage from Titian’s Venus of Urbino to Manet’s Olympia. With this series, Modigliani firmly positioned himself within that canon, reimagining it for a modern audience. 

Leopold Zborowski, Modigliani’s dealer, offered the artist a stipend of 15 francs a day in 1917 to paint a series of nudes. With this sum Modigliani created several of the most arresting paintings in the history of art, reimagining the nude for the Modern era, including Nu assis au collier. The artist’s models were paid five francs to pose in an apartment just above Zborowksi’s own at 3 rue Joseph Bara, tucked between the Cimetière du Montparnasse and the Jardin du Luxembourg. 

Just as Manet had confounded contemporary audiences of the previous generation with his Olympia, Modigliani’s provocatively modern take on the timeless subject of the reclining female nude would have a profound impact on twentieth century art. Where Manet’s figure confronts the viewer directly, Modigliani’s model turns inward. Seated in a pose that knowingly echoes the Venus pudica of classical antiquity, and wearing a coral necklace reminiscent of those worn in the Italian Renaissance portraits that Modigliani so admired, Nu assis au collier is a timeless fusion of ancient tradition and Modernist innovation. The work combines the influence of Italian Renaissance and Mannerist painting, of African carvings and the earth-toned palette and geometric modelling of Cubism, to unique effect. With her elongated form and averted gaze, Modigliani’s anonymous sitter feels both classical and deeply personal and intimate – she lifts one hand to her necklace, while the other rests between her legs in a gesture that is at once protective and provocative. Ultimately, her nudity is self-assured and proud, not cloaked in myth or allegory. 

Modigliani died in 1920 at just 35, from tubercular meningitis, followed by his pregnant partner Jeanne Hébuterne dying the next day. The tragedy of the artist’s life has become inseparable from the perception of his oeuvre, and the notoriety surrounding the enforced closure of the infamous 1917 exhibition played an important role in establishing the “myth of Modigliani.” The strength of reaction to his now-celebrated nudes was indicative of their central role in establishing him as one of the great voices in the history of twentieth century art. 

Nu assis au collier has been exhibited in major exhibitions at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Museum of Modern Art, and The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, among others. “‘Nu assis au collier’ is a cornerstone within Modigliani’s celebrated series of nudes, distinguished by its restraint and psychological depth and – quite frankly – by its audaciousness. As restrained as she seems on the surface, this ‘modern-day Olympia’ nonetheless had the power to upturn tradition, causing a sensation. 


EDGAS DEGAS Petite danseuse de quatorze ans Conceived in wax circa 1879-81; cast in bronze from 1922 Estimate: £18–25 million 

Although approximately 150 sculptures in varying states of repair were found in Degas’s studio after his death in 1917, only one sculpture had been exhibited during his lifetime – the Petite danseuse de quatorze ans. The artist’s most ambitious and important sculpture, the work depicts Marie van Goethem, one of the ballet students at the Paris Opéra, or ‘little rats’, as they were known. These young dancers were a constant source of fascination for Degas, who – in his renderings – evokes not only the time-honoured elegance of ballet dancers, but also the relentless work and physical strain that their work demanded. When the wax model for this piece was first seen in Paris in 1881 during the Sixth Impressionist Exhibition, audiences were shocked by its realism, and it was at once acclaimed for its modernity and chastised for its realism and perceived vulgarity. 

Degas’ unconventional use of materials also caused a stir: using a wire armature for the body and hemp for the arms and hands, he dressed the figure in real silk, tulle and gauze. The wig, meanwhile, came from Madame Cusset, supplier of ‘hair for puppets and dolls’. Now in the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C., a part of the Mellon collection, the wax model for this work was found in Degas’s studio following his death in 1917 and cast in bronze from 1922. The collection also includes La Loge, a pastel by Degas completed in 1880 that is distinct from any previous image of the theatre the artist had yet created (est. £3-4 million). Unveiled at the Fifth Impressionist Exhibition, the work can be seen as an entirely new kind of portrait, focused on a modern individual in her modern surroundings, and depicted in a resolutely modern way. The artist’s detached view of a solitary human figure, seen from a low vantage point, caught the eye of nineteenth-century critic Charles Ephrussi: “The impression is strange, but captured with great accuracy”. 

PABLO PICASSO Buste de femme 1938, oil on paper laid down on canvas Estimate: £12–18 million 

Not seen in public for over half a century, Buste de femme is among the finest of Picasso’s celebrated series of portraits of Dora Maar, his lover and artistic companion in the late 1930s and early 1940s. In contrast to Picasso’s later distortions of Dora’s features, the work ranks as one of the artist’s more reverent and affectionate portrayals of the woman whose startling beauty and fierce intelligence was to inspire the creation of some of the greatest portraits of the artist’s career. Picasso’s affair with Maar was a partnership of intellectual exchange and intense passion. Maar, a talented artist and photographer closely associated with the Surrealist movement, first met Picasso early in 1936 while he was still married to Olga Khokhlova and involved in an illicit affair with Marie-Thérèse Walter. Unlike MarieThérèse, whose golden beauty had dominated Picasso’s subject matter in the previous decade, Maar spoke Picasso’s native Spanish, and shared his intellectual and political concerns. She even assisted with the execution of the monumental Guernica. Throughout their time together, Picasso would depict her in a variety of ways, from the monstrous character of the weeping women series to the vibrant and dignified depictions such as Buste de femme. 

The most symbolic element of the sitter’s wardrobe in this picture is the hat, Maar’s most famous accessory and signifier of her involvement in the Surrealist movement. In 1937 the critic Paul Éluard wrote about the symbolism of the hat, explaining its fetishistic importance within the Surrealist movement and shedding light on its role in Picasso’s paintings: “Among the objects tangled in the web of life, the female hat is one of those that require the most insight, the most audacity. A head must dare to wear a crown.”


RENÉ MAGRITTE La Belle promenade 1965, gouache on paper Estimate: £3–4 million  

La Belle promenade features the instantly recognisable image of the bowler-hatted man – not only the most iconic motif in Magritte’s oeuvre, but arguably one of the defining images of twentieth century Western art. In his works from the 1960s, Magritte reduced the man to a silhouette; by this point in his career, the image had become widely recognisable and a recurring stand-in for the artist himself. Executed in gouache – a medium he often used to revisit and distill key motifs – the work was last exhibited more than half a century ago. Only three significant bowler-hatted images have come to auction in the last decade.


MAX BECKMANN Stillleben mit Grammophon und Schwertlilien (Still Life with Gramophone and Irises) 1924, oil on canvas Estimate: £3–4 million

 Stillleben mit Grammophon und Schwertlilien is an exceptional painting from Max Beckmann’s formative years in Frankfurt in the 1920s when he was recuperating from the trauma he experienced during the First World War. Painted in 1924, it is the first in an important series of mysterious and complex allegorical still-life paintings that the artist was to make throughout his career. Depicting a sequence of objects arranged at convoluted angles and on the verge of collapse, the work expresses Beckmann’s anger and pessimism towards Germany’s impoverished state. The masked figure of the woman serves not only to disguise her identity (she may be his mistress or his wife), but also to signify – together with the mirror reflection – illusion and artifice. The collection includes Artisten, a further work by Beckmann, painted in 1948, in which an ageing clown and a young snake charmer serve as proxies for the artist and his wife navigating their American exile (est. £2-3 million). Formerly in the celebrated Thyssen-Bornemisza collection and exhibited in Beckmann: Exile Figures (2018), the work was first owned by the American collector Morton D. May, an early patron of the artist. 


FRANCIS BACON Study for Portrait 1976, oil on canvas Estimate: £3–4 million 

Executed in 1976, Study for Portrait was painted in the shadow of Francis Bacon’s partner George Dyer’s death in 1971. It belongs to a pivotal group of works shown at Galerie Claude Bernard in 1977 – widely considered the most important exhibition of the artist’s career. An exemplary “head,” the painting fuses the features of Bacon’s close circle – most notably Henrietta Moraes – into a single, unstable presence. Constructed from memory and photographic source rather than direct observation, the face feels at once specific and elusive. A stark black circle, likely traced from a paint lid in the artist’s studio, frames a miniature self-portrait, inserting Bacon into the composition. 


PABLO PICASSO Tête de femme 1921, pastel on paper mounted on board Estimate: £2–3 million 

The monumental Tête de femme is one of five portrait heads executed in 1921 that relate directly to one of Picasso’s most iconic Neoclassical paintings of the period, Trois femmes à la fontaine. In the early 1920s, in the wake of the First World War, the artist took the features of his wife, Olga Khokhlova, as his subject and inspiration and an embodiment of the Classical ideal. Always at the forefront – if not leading – the prevailing zeitgeist of any given period throughout his career, Picasso forged a uniquely modern take on Neoclassicism amid the broad cultural reckoning known as the rappel à l’ordre, or call to order. Picasso’s style and preoccupations often changed in response to the circumstances around him, most particularly, to the ravages of war-torn Europe – an artistic reckoning that would have chimed deeply with the Lewises. Tête de femme is one of just two pastel heads from this group of five to remain in private hands. 


PABLO PICASSO Angel Fernández de Soto circa 1899, oil on canvas Estimate: £1.5–2 million 

  Picasso was just 17 years old when he painted this early masterpiece – among the earliest fully realised portraits by the artist to ever come to market. It is a rarity amongst the portraits of his peers, most of which were drawings on paper rather than oil paintings. The sitter is Àngel Fernández de Soto – nicknamed “Patas” by Picasso – a spice merchant’s clerk who picked up extra money as a theatre extra. Both men were part of the Els Quatre Gats circle, a Barcelona café that brought together Catalan artists, bohemians and young intellectuals. The brooding mood anticipates the Blue Period, still two years away, a transition that would be hastened by the suicide of Picasso’s closest friend in 1901. Soto sat for Picasso again at the height of that period, resulting in the 1903 painting Portrait of Àngel Fernández de Soto, also known as The Absinthe Drinker – the same face, now carrying a far heavier expression. Soto was killed in the Spanish Civil War in 1938. 



HENRI MATISSE Lydia (Étude pour ‘Portrait au manteau bleu’) 1935, charcoal on paper Estimate: £1.5–2 million

The 1930s were pivotal years for Matisse, when he refined his focus on the human form. During this period, the artist’s drawings take on a new dimension as he pursued a synthesis between line and ‘colour’, producing works of striking sensuality and sculptural presence, saturating the paper with richly shaded charcoal, and creating deep, textural layers through repeated drawing, rubbing and erasure. Acquired by the Lewises some three decades ago, this drawing is a key preparatory study for the artist’s celebrated painting Portrait au manteau bleu (1935) depicting Lydia Delectorskaya, who in the 1930s became Matisse’s devoted muse, assistant and companion of many years. 1

Monday, June 1, 2026

Jasper Johns Night Driver

Guggenheim Museum Bilbao

May 29 – October 12, 2026 


 Flags, targets, numbers, and letters are the motifs that run through Jasper Johns’s work, often in variations, and for which he is generally renowned. In his oeuvre, the American artist explores the painterly process and the nature of representation. On the one hand, he is indebted to the great masters of art history; on the other, he questions and challenges these, dissociating himself from tradition and from the dominant trend of his time, Abstract Expressionism. In this sense, he is a key figure in the birth of movements such as Pop Art, Minimalism, and Conceptual Art, that transcended the subjectivity and individualism that prevailed in the 1950s. 

The show takes us on a journey through a critical period in art, spanning the seven decades of work of a quintessential artist of the second half of the twentieth century, whose oeuvre is at once deeply plastic and essentially intellectual. Johns’s creations combine the mundane and the sublime, life and death, criticism and humor, anatomy and the cosmos, play and reflection, seeking to activate the gaze of the viewer. 

The Guggenheim Museum Bilbao presents Jasper Johns: Night Driver , an ambitious retrospective dedicated to one of the most celebrated artists of our time. The exhibition is sponsored by the BBVA Foundation, a Strategic Trustee of the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao since 1997. Night Driver takes is entitled after a 1960 drawing by Johns, described by the artist as his first work based on a personal feeling. Guggenheim Museum Bilbao.

The show features nearly 140 works, including paintings, sculptures, drawings, prints, an artist’s book, and a stage design. The pieces are organized chronologically, reflecting Johns’s repeated return to certain themes. In this presentation, paintings and sculptures are shown separately from works on paper. 

Jasper Johns was born in Augusta, Georgia, in 1930 and grew up in South Carolina, where he was raised before continuing his studies in New York. In 1953, he moved to New York, where he soon formed close friendships with figures such as artist Robert Rauschenberg, composer John Cage, and choreographer Merce Cunningham. Together, they would reshape the artis tic landscape of their country. 

Between 1954 and 1955, Johns destroyed his earlier work and painted his first American flag, marking the beginning of a series of iconic works that feature signs and flat elements — numbers, letters, targets, and maps — drawn from everyday, recognizable imagery and widely regarded as precursors to Pop Art. When these works were exhibited at the Leo Castelli Gallery in 1958, they brought him immediate recognition, and the Museum of Modern Art acquired three of the works on view. 

Between 1950s and 1960s, Johns was also in contact with Marcel Duchamp, whose work and thinking would have a defining influence on his practice. 

The exhibition then moves into the 1970s and 1980s. Here, Johns develops abstract compositions built from crosshatched patterns of strokes, alongside pieces rich in visual references to artists of different periods. Also included are the series devoted to the four seasons, as well as a group of images in which Johns depicts a woman’s face, with eyes, nose, and lips drifting toward the edge of a rectangular field. 

The exhibition concludes with a selection from the 1990s and 2000s, where the artist returns to some of his best -known themes while continuing to explore new ideas, as in the Catenary series. 

Far from Expressionist rhetoric, Johns’s oeuvre is defined by an ironic, restrained approach that nonetheless carries emotional weight and is widely regarded as a forerunner of Minimalism and Conceptual Art. Although often interpreted allegorically, his work is rich in biographical references, though not always immediately apparent, as well as philosophical ideas and metalinguistic reflections. Despite this intellectual, at times hermetic dimension, the artist does not renounce the power of images or of pai nting itself. 

EXHIBITION WALKTHROUGH 

Gallery 205 The exhibition opens with examples of Johns’s celebrated paintings of flat motifs, including such well - known works as Flag on Orange Field and Drawer (both 1957), False Start (1959), and Target, Map, and In Memory of My Feelings – Frank O’Hara (all 1961). In Memory of My Feelings – Frank O’Hara marks a moment, between 1961and 1964, when the impersonal subject matter of Johns’s work begins to shift, giving way to more emotional concerns. The dominant gray palette of these paintings lends them a melancholic tone. 

Gallery 206 This gallery presents a number of Johns’s early sculptures, most of which were produced between 1958 and 1961.These are small -scale pieces based on everyday objects ,such as light bulbs or flashlights. Rather than casting light on other objects , they become the object of vision itself. Also on view are three large -scale works, Studio (1964), Untitled (1964–65), and Studio II (1966), centered on the theme of the artist’s studio. Although abstract in appearance, they are made using impressions of doors or windows and incorporate a range of objects such as cups, brooms, brushes, cutlery, and measuring tools, evoking the atmosphe re of the studio. Between 1964 and 1972, Johns introduces numerous new subjects, including a renewed presence of the human figure, among them self -portraits, imagery related to his studio and tiled walls. In Souvenir (1964), a self -portrait created after a trip to Japan with composer Tōru Takemitsu, Johns printed a photobooth portrait onto a ceramic plate purchased in a souvenir store . 

Gallery 207 This gallery brings together a significant group of abstract works from the Crosshatch series, produced by Johns between 1973 and 1984. These include Corpse and Mirror (1974-75 ), Cicada (1979), and Dancers on a Plane (1980-81). In these works, Johns explores simple variations in the organization of the pictorial space using strategies such as repetition, cropping, inversion, and displacement. From the mid -1980s onward, Johns continued to explore new directions, including the autobiographical Seasons series, with works such as Summer (1985) and Fall (1986), characterized by dense, complex compositions and an allegorical dimension. During this period, his practice also reflects an ongoing engagement with other artists, including Edvard Munch in Between the Clock and the Bed (1983), Picasso in After Picasso (1998), and Frida Kahlo in The Bath (1988). 

Gallery 209 This gallery presents works from the 1990s onward, including two from the Catenary series, created by Johns between 1997 and 2003 and once again marked by the gray tones and a play on language. From this period is Untitled (1992–94), a work of complex composition that introduces new imagery, including floor plans of his grandparents’ house, where Johns grew up, as well as images of galaxies and references to other artists. The gallery also features a large -scale bronze work, Numbers (0–9) (2007 –11),composed of twelve units, along with a video of a collaboration between Jasper Johns, Marcel Duchamp, and choreographer Merce Cunningham, titled Walkaround Time (1968). Johns designed the costumes and the set based on a work by Duchamp, which is shown alongside the film. 

Gallery 202 This gallery features a large selection of works on paper. Johns’s drawings are not preparatory studies but rather variations on earlier paintings, and they form an essential part of his practice. In addition to demonstrating his technical skill, they also reveal the reflective nature of his approach. Johns works with a wide range of materials and mediums , often combining them, including pencil, charcoal, pastel, encaustic, ink, ballpoint pen, watercolor, collage with paper and objects, and metallic pigments. Beyond paper, Johns has also drawn on plastic, exploiting its transparency and varying degrees of absorbency. Printmaking likewise allows the artist to alter the colors of earlier images and to reproduce details or fragments rearranged in different ways and configurations. For decades, Johns has worked with Gemini and ULAE, two of the most important print workshops in the United States. 

Gallery 203 Alongside additional works on paper and a group of monotypes, this final gallery presents Foirades/Fizzles (1976), an artist’s book produced in Paris with Irish writer Samuel Beckett that includes five texts by Beckett alongside some thirty prints by Johns. The gallery also highlights works connected to Johns’s friendships with other artists, including several very small drawings he gave to Robert Rauschenberg, reinterpretations of other artists’ works, a drawing he gifted to Richard Serra in exchange for one of Serra’s, and a rare portrait of Marcel Duchamp, M.D. (1964). Also on view are tracings after works by artists such as Paul Cézanne and Willem de Kooning, which serve as points of departure for Johns’s reflections on the image and artistic tradition. 

DIDAKTIKA 

The Museum’s Didaktika program offers educational spaces and digital content that complement the exhibitions, providing visitors with tools and resources to deepen their understanding and appreciation of the works on view. On this occasion, the exhibition includes two educational spaces, one located in the corridor adjacent to the galleries and the other in gallery 201. The first explores Jasper Johns’s creative process through interactive displays designed to reveal the multiple layers of meaning in his practice. The second highlights key 20th - century artists such as Marcel Duchamp, whose legacy Johns engaged with, as well as contemporary figures with whom Johns exchanged ideas, including Robert Rauschenberg. This exchange fostered significant interdisciplinary innovation in New York during the 1950s and 1960s.


Images 


Jasper Johns

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Jasper Johns

Flag on Orange Field, 1957
Encaustic on canvas
167.6 x 123.8 cm
Museum Ludwig, Cologne
Gift, Ludwig Collection, 1976
© Jasper Johns, VEGAP, Bilbao, 2026


Jasper Johns

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Jasper Johns

Painting with Two Balls, 1960
Encaustic and collage on canvas with objects (3 panels)
165.1 x 137.5 cm
Collection of the artist
© Jasper Johns, VEGAP, Bilbao, 2026


Jasper Johns

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Jasper Johns

Target, 1961
Encaustic and collage on canvas
167.6 x 167.6 cm
The Art Institute of Chicago
Gift of the Edlis Neeson Collection
© Jasper Johns, VEGAP, Bilbao, 2026


Jasper Johns

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Jasper Johns

0 through 9, 1961
Oil on canvas
137.2 x 104.8 cm
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
Gift of The American Contemporary Art Foundation, Inc., Leonard A. Lauder, President
© Jasper Johns, VEGAP, Bilbao, 2026


Jasper Johns

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Jasper Johns

Map, 1961
Oil on canvas
198.1 x 313.1 cm
The Museum of Modern Art, New York
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Scull, 1963
© Jasper Johns, VEGAP, Bilbao, 2026


Jasper Johns

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Jasper Johns

In Memory of My Feelings – Frank O’Hara, 1961
Oil on canvas with objects (2 panels)
101.6 x 151.8 cm
Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago
Partial gift of Apollo Plastics Corporation
Courtesy of Stefan T. Edlis and H. Gael Neeson
© Jasper Johns, VEGAP, Bilbao, 2026


Jasper Johns

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Jasper Johns

Flags, 1987
Encaustic and collage on canvas
65.5 x 83.8 cm
Collection of the artist
© Jasper Johns, VEGAP, Bilbao, 2026


Jasper Johns

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Jasper Johns

Untitled, 1964–65
Oil and charcoal on canvas with objects (4 panels)
182.9 x 426.7 cm
Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam
© Jasper Johns, VEGAP, Bilbao, 2026


Jasper Johns

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Jasper Johns

The Bath, 1988
Encaustic on canvas
122.6 x 153 cm
Kunstmuseum Basel
Acquired with funds from the Freunde des Kunstmuseums Basel, 1988
© Jasper Johns, VEGAP, Bilbao, 2026


Jasper Johns

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Jasper Johns

Flashlight III, 1958 (cast 2010)
Bronze, tempered glass, and silver plating. Edition of 2 (2/2)
13.3 x 21 x 9.5 cm
Collection of the artist
© Jasper Johns, VEGAP, Bilbao, 2026


Jasper Johns

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Jasper Johns

Dancers on a Plane, 1980–81
Oil on canvas with painted bronze frame
200 x 161.9 cm
Tate, London. Purchased 1981
© Jasper Johns, VEGAP, Bilbao, 2026


Jasper Johns

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Jasper Johns

Summer, 1985
Encaustic on canvas
190.5 x 127 cm
The Museum of Modern Art, New York
Gift of Philip Johnson, 1998
© Jasper Johns, VEGAP, Bilbao, 2026


Jasper Johns

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Jasper Johns

Untitled, 1992-94
Encaustic on canvas
198.1 x 300.7 cm
The Eli and Edythe L. Broad Collection
© Jasper Johns, VEGAP, Bilbao, 2026


Jasper Johns

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Jasper Johns

Savarin, 1982
Monotype
127 x 96.5 cm
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
Gift of The American Contemporary Art Foundation, Inc., Leonard A. Lauder, President
© Jasper Johns, VEGAP, Bilbao, 2026


Jasper Johns

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Jasper Johns

Untitled (Red, Yellow, Blue), 1998
Acrylic over intaglio mounted on canvas
86.4 x 191.8 cm
Collection of the artist
© Jasper Johns, VEGAP, Bilbao, 2026


Jasper Johns

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Jasper Johns

Slice, 2020
Oil on canvas
127 x 168 cm
Private collection
Promised gift to The Museum of Modern Art
© Jasper Johns, VEGAP, Bilbao, 2026

Francis Picabia. Expanding Horizons


Hauser & Wirth London 

21 May – 1 August 2026

From the mid-1910s, Picabia, alongside Marcel Duchamp and others, participated in anti-painting manifestations in New York and he later became involved in Dada circles in Zurich and Paris until 1921, when he denounced the movement for no longer being ‘new.’ Yet, traces of his Dada sensibility remained and the rare self-portrait ‘Francis Picabia’ (ca. 1924) evokes his Dada works and playful use of text. As this chapter drew to a close, Picabia moved from Paris to the Cote d’Azur in the mid-1920s. Untethered to the capital, the Dadaists or a single creative style, he expanded his artistic horizon while living in the Château de Mai and aboard his numerous yachts, such as ‘L’Horizon I,’ moored across from the casino in Cannes.

Francis Picabia (1879 – 1953) is one of the most influential and essential artists of the 20th Century. His career and worldview were marked by ceaseless experimentation and his oeuvre demonstrated a rapid progression through various artistic movements. Organized in collaboration with the Comité Picabia, this wide-ranging overview covers five decades of creative output, from his early landscapes, Dada works and Transparencies through to his radical nudes, realist works made during World War II and textural abstract paintings created in his final years. Shedding light across every area of the artist’s practice, this exhibition highlights his fluid movement between figurative art and abstraction, affirming Picabia’s reputation as one of art history’s most ingenious shape shifters. 

About the exhibition 

Offering a rare glimpse into Francis Picabia’s practice before he began his many self-reinventions, his 1902 landscape—the earliest work on view—attests to his Impressionist period at the start of his career. His approach began to shift as early as 1908, albeit subtly, towards Neo-impressionism and he broadened his horizon to encompass Fauvism and Cubism. This spirit of creative renewal is encapsulated in ‘Le Zèbre (The Zebra)’ (ca. 1909 – 1933), which presents a Neo-impressionist coastal scene in the background. This was later superimposed with a playful line drawing in the 1930s, emblematic of the artist’s tendency to revisit and revise canvases across decades. ‘Untitled’ (ca. 1911) sees Picabia’s landscapes moving even further from Impressionism, with simplified forms bordering on abstraction.

This departure marked the artist’s move away from the Parisian avant-garde and towards figuration. From the late 1920s to the early 1930s, Picabia was occupied with his Transparencies, the name of which points to the visual effects of double and layered images. This new, highly personal style is exemplified in a charcoal and ink on paper from 1932 and the oil on canvas ‘Genèses (Geneses)’ (ca. 1930 – 1931). The title of ‘Genèses’ describes multiple points of origin, much like Picabia himself, whose career is marked by many creative beginnings. At the end of this era, the oil painting ‘Transparence, Portrait de femme (Transparency, Portrait of a Woman)’ (ca. 1937 – 1939) sees Picabia poised between the opposing forces of realism and abstraction. 

Picabia’s figurative imagery entered a new phase during the 1930s and 1940s, dominated by photo-based portraits and nudes. Using images from risqué publications such as Paris Sex Appeal and Mon Paris, the artist imitated their smoothness by flattening the picture plane and his application of paint. Adapted from a photograph published in Paris Magazine, ‘Nu de dos devant la mer (Nude from Behind, in Front of the Sea)’ (ca. 1942 – 1943) depicts a model sat with her back to the viewer. Almost resembling an odalisque pose, Picabia’s painting makes a reference to the tradition of the nude, juxtaposing art historical ideals with risqué images, ‘high’ art with ‘low’ culture. 

These wartime realist works were in stark contrast to Picabia’s previous styles, yet they did not exist in isolation. The appropriation inherent across these so-called kitsch pieces can be seen as echoing his Dadaist practice. Produced around the same time, the seascape ‘Les rochers rouges (The Red Rocks)’ (ca. 1942 – 1943) is based on a postcard and harks back to his Impressionist scenes, though with a wry undercurrent as Picabia parodies the movement’s gestural brushwork and pointedly challenges the conventions of plein air painting. 

Picabia remained steadfast in following his own path and the post-war period was no exception, during which time he returned to Paris. From 1945 to 1952, his new aesthetic direction embraced emblematic abstractions. With this group of work, the artist’s handling of paint also changed as he fully adopted impasto, evident in ‘Composition’ (1951). Though a significant move away from his preceding series of female nudes and figures, he continued to employ his tried-and-tested technique of sampling, borrowing and assimilating. 

The selection on view highlights the role that prehistoric and primitive artistic sources had on Picabia’s creative output, evoking cave paintings, Neolithic artefacts as well as African and Oceanic art. The central figure in ‘Trèfle à une feuille (One-Leaf Clover)’ (ca. 1946 – 1947) can be considered a shield-like form or a stylization of an African mask—both haunting and powerful images that capture the existential angst of the post-war era. Although ostensibly abstract, the amorphous form in ‘Composition abstraite’ (1947) recalls a shell, embodying the rich diversity of shapes, tones and textures that inhabit Picabia’s sophisticated late oil paintings. 

The breadth of Picabia’s works on view concludes with works on paper that testify to his self-referential impulse. Unable to settle with either figuration or abstraction throughout his career, ‘Ilma’s Paris Horizons’ (1951) balances both with the hair and lips of a woman discernible amongst curvilinear forms. Parallels can be found between the work’s composition and some of Picabia’s final oils, ‘Tableau vivant’ (1951) and ‘Jeudi’ (1951), rendered here in black ink. 

The use of text as a compositional device recalls his Dada spirit, inviting comparison with his seminal work ‘L’Œil cacodylate (The Cacodylic Eye)’ (1921). ‘Dada’ (1951) sees Picabia personify the movement with an ironic inflection, a final statement on the death of Dada. Stretching from the painted horizons of his early landscapes to the fluid forms of ‘Ilma’s Paris Horizons,’ this exploration of Picabia’s restless shift between different styles reminds us of how contemporary he was. 

His legacy lives on in the art scene today, with the many facets of his oeuvre offering various touchpoints of inspiration. His role within international circles is highlighted in the forthcoming exhibition ‘Picabia Méditerranée. Picasso,Delaunay, Laurencin…’ at Musée d’Art Moderne de Céret, France, from 27 June to 29 November 2026.



Francis Picabia Francis Picabia Ca. 1924 Pencil and ink on paper 23 x 16 cm / 9 x 6 1/4 in 

Francis Picabia Composition 1951 Oil on cardboard, mounted on canvas 55 x 46 cm / 21 5/8 x 18 1/8 in Photo: Damian Griffiths 


Francis Picabia Untitled Ca. 1911 Oil on canvas board 34.2 x 38.3 cm / 13 1/2 x 15 1/8 in Photo: Marc Gouby 



Francis Picabia Genèses (Geneses) Ca. 1930 – 1931 Oil on canvas 116 x 85 cm / 45 5/8 x 33 1/2 in Photo: Damian Griffiths 


Francis Picabia Nu de dos devant la mer (Nude from Behind, in Front of the Sea) Ca. 1942 – 1943 Oil on cardboard mounted on canvas 75 x 53 cm / 29 1/2 x 20 7/8 in 


Francis Picabia Les rochers rouges (The Red Rocks) Ca. 1942 – 1943 Oil on cardboard mounted on wood 54 x 64.5 cm / 21 1/4 x 25 3/8 in Photo: Stefan Altenburger Photography Zürich 


Francis Picabia Composition abstraite 1947 Oil on cardboard 90 x 72 cm / 35 3/8 x 28 3/8 in Photo: Jon Etter 


Francis Picabia Ilma’s Paris Horizons 1951 Ink on paper 65.1 x 49.8 cm / 25 5/8 x 19 5/8 in Photo: Thomas Barratt

Max Beckmann


Hauser & Wirth Basel

 June – 11 July 2026


Widely regarded as one of the most important painters of the 20th Century, German artist Max Beckmann created a singular position in the history of art through a figurative language of extraordinary psychological depth, resisting categorization within expressionism and new objectivity. Ahead of Art Basel 2026, a dedicated exhibition on the artist—curated in close collaboration with his granddaughter, Mayen Beckmann—will open at the Basel gallery this June.

Shaped by a life lived between two World Wars and culminating in his emigration to the United States in 1947, Beckmann’s work bears witness to the psychological intensity and moral fractures of the inter-war period. The exhibition spans the entirety of the artist’s career and brings together his brooding social allegories with luminous landscapes and portraits, revealing a tension between intimacy and the brutality of the 20th Century.


Image for exhibition

Die Erschrockene (The Frightened Woman)

1947


Image for exhibition

Mädchen mit gelber Katze (auf Grau) (Girl with Yellow Cat (on Gray))

1937


Image for exhibition

Küstenlandschaft mit Ballon (Seashore with Balloon)

1932


Image for exhibition titled About the Artist

Selbstbildnis mit Seifenblasen (Self-Portrait With Soap Bubbles), c. 1900. Courtesy Private Collection, Germany. Photo: ARTOTHEK

About the Artist

Max Beckmann (1884–1950) was a leading German painter and a fiercely individual modern artist whose work bridged tradition and upheaval. Born in Leipzig, he trained in a conservative academic style but soon rejected its limits, developing a bold visual language of compressed space, strong outlines, and symbolic intensity. The trauma of World War I deeply shaped his vision, leading him to depict tense, often crowded scenes that explore human vulnerability and resilience. Though sometimes linked to New Objectivity, he remained independent, drawing on myth, religion, and personal experience. Forced into exile by the Nazi regime, Beckmann continued to paint powerful works reflecting identity and displacement, creating art that challenges viewers to search for meaning within complexity.


 

Saturday, May 30, 2026

Sotheby's Masterpieces from the Lewis Collection 24 June 2026 Part II


Lucian Freud

Sleeping by the Lion Carpet

oil on canvas

228 by 120.6 cm. 89¾ by 47½ in. 

Executed in 1995-96. 

signed Henri Matisse and dated 19 XI 35 (lower left)

charcoal on paper

67.2 by 47.5 cm. 26½ by 18¾ in.

Executed in Nice on 19 November 1935. 


Edgar Degas


Petite danseuse de quatorze ans

inscribed Degas, numbered HER and stamped with the foundry mark A.A. HÉBRARD CIRE PERDUE (on the base)

bronze with muslin skirt and satin hair ribbon on a wooden base

height: 101.3 cm. 39⅞ in.

Conceived in wax circa 1879-81 and cast in bronze from 1922.

Estimate

18,000,000 - 25,000,000 GBP