Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Christie's The Art of the Surreal Evening Sale March 2026

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Christie's presents its March 2026 The Art of the Surreal Evening Sale
From left to right: Joan Miró, Peinture (1949; estimate: £1,500,000–2,500,000); Paul Delvaux, La Ville lunaire (1944; estimate: £2,000,000–3,000,000); René Magritte, Le choeur des sphinges (1964; estimate: £5,000,000-8,000,000); Odilon Redon, Profil bleu (circa 1895; estimate: £500,000–800,000); René Magritte, Les grâces naturelles (circa 1961; estimate: £6,500,000–9,500,000) and Dorothea Tanning, Children's Games (1942; estimate: £1,000,000–2,000,000).

Christie's is delighted to present the 25th edition of The Art of the Surreal Evening Sale, a highlight of its 20th/21st Century Art London Marquee Week, taking place on 5 March 2026. The auction is the only international sale devoted exclusively to Dada, Surrealism, and their enduring influences. Held by Christie's since 1989 - longer and with greater consistency than any other auction house - The Art of the Surreal is celebrated for the exceptional quality of its offerings. The sale has repeatedly achieved record-breaking results and continues to play a defining role in shaping the market for Surrealist and Dada art. This year's edition brings together an outstanding selection of works that capture the imagination, innovation and enduring power of these revolutionary movements, including highlights from René Magritte, Max Ernst, Odilon Redon, Dorothea Tanning, Joan Miró, Paul Delvaux, and Toyen among others.

Leading the sale is Magritte's Les grâces naturelles (circa 1961; estimate: £6,500,000–9,500,000). Painted in vivid, luminous colour and exhibited at the Magritte Museum in Brussels since its opening in 2009, the work exemplifies the artist's fascination with transformation and visual paradoxes. It features one of his most celebrated motifs: the “leaf-bird,” a hybrid form captured at the moment it shifts between states of being.

Five more works by Magritte will be offered in the sale, including Le choeur des sphinges (1964; estimate: £5,000,000-8,000,000), a playful landscape showcasing Magritte's signature transformations, with five floating forms - including a pipe - hovering above a forest, each rendered with the same woodland texture as the trees below. Executed during the 1960s, the work reflects Magritte's return to his earlier themes, reimagined with greater wit and simplicity, and subtly echoes the collage techniques he first explored in the late 1920s. Completing this grouping is La jeunesse illustrée (1937; estimate: £1,800,000–2,500,000). Set within a tranquil countryside, the painting presents a dreamlike procession of figures and objects whose unexpected relationships invite imaginative interpretation. The work was acquired shortly after Magritte's return from London in 1938 by Paul-Henri Spaak, the future Prime Minister of Belgium, underscoring its early and distinguished provenance.

After the exceptional results achieved for the artist in last year's sale at Christie's in London, two important works by Paul Delvaux are presented. Painted in spring 1944, La Ville lunaire (estimate: £2,000,000–3,000,000) is a striking example of Delvaux's mature Surrealist vision: a meticulously constructed dream world that is at once familiar and deeply enigmatic. Held in the same private collection for over 50 years, the painting was included in Delvaux's first major retrospective at the Palais des Beaux-Arts in Brussels in 1944 - organised shortly after the city's liberation - and later shown at the 1954 Venice Biennale, affirming the artist's standing within Belgian Surrealism. Also offered is L'Été (1963; estimate: £1,500,000–2,500,000), a serene yet unsettling woodland scene populated by five female figures draped in timeless, colourful garments. The work reflects Delvaux's lifelong fascination with the female form and his engagement with the metaphysical legacy of Giorgio de Chirico, whose fusion of the ancient and the modern helped shape Delvaux's distinctive, dreamlike visual language.

Dorothea Tanning's Children's Games (1942; estimate: £1,000,000–2,000,000) is a powerful example of the artist's early Surrealist work, charged with an unsettling psychological intensity. Painted in 1942, the composition depicts two young girls tearing at the wallpaper of a narrow corridor to reveal a hidden world of exposed flesh beneath, transforming a familiar domestic setting into something disturbing. Created during a period when Tanning was increasingly exploring female sexuality, autonomy and the transition from childhood to adolescence, the work subverts the Surrealist trope of the femme-enfant, presenting its protagonists not as passive figures but as agents of disruption. Children's Games was included in the landmark 'Exhibition by 31 Women' at Peggy Guggenheim's Art of This Century gallery in New York in 1943, a pioneering show that brought together leading women artists of the period, including Frida Kahlo, Leonora Carrington, Meret Oppenheim, Kay Sage and Leonor Fini. It was acquired directly from Tanning and Ernst (by then married) in January 1948 by the legendary entertainer and queen of burlesque, Gypsy Rose Lee, who was an avid collector of Surrealism and a close friend of the painter's.

Another standout work in the sale comes from a pioneering female artist, Toyen's Le devenir de la liberté (1946; estimate: £1,200,000–2,200,000) is a compelling and enigmatic work by the Czech Surrealist. Executed shortly after Toyen emerged from six years of hiding during World War II, the painting blends dream-like imagery with meticulous detail, depicting a scene in which lush plant life appears to overtake the domestic sphere. At the centre, a dense mass of peas forms a suggestive, partially concealed humanoid figure, recalling the fantastical, hybrid constructions of Giuseppe Arcimboldo, while remaining mysteriously ambiguous. Above, a flock of swallows arcs across a trompe-l'oeil sky, evoking spring and renewal. Having discovered Surrealism in the early 1930s, Toyen quickly established a reputation for imaginative, erotically tinged works that challenged social conventions. Le devenir de la liberté marks one of the first new creations she completed after the war, reflecting her return to avant-garde circles and the ongoing dialogue between the Czech and Parisian Surrealists.

A key source of inspiration for the Surrealists, Odilon Redon is represented in the sale by two works: charcoal and estompe on paper, La grappe or Le marchand de ballons (estimate: £150,000–250,000) is a recently rediscovered drawing by the artist from his celebrated noirs series. Formerly owned by his friend, the painter Émile Bernard, the work dates to the 1870s–1890s, when Redon's dark, haunting imagery established him as a pioneer of the uncanny. Acquired in 1906 by the writer and collector Louis-Charles Libaude, it remained largely unseen until its rediscovery in 2020. Profil bleu (circa 1895; estimate: £500,000–800,000), is a mystical and poetic image exemplifying his visionary approach. Featuring one of his most recognisable motifs - an androgynous figure in profile, absorbed in inward contemplation - the work dates from a pivotal moment when the artist moved away from the dark, macabre imagery of his earlier noirs toward a more luminous language. Redon would repeatedly return to the motif of the dreaming head, often paired with flowers, a theme which later culminated in his celebrated floral still lifes.

Two major highlights from An Eye For The Sublime: The Renker Collection are offered in the sale. Joan Miró's Peinture (1949; estimate: £1,500,000–2,500,000) belongs to his celebrated group of so-called “Slow Paintings”, described by his friend and biographer Jacques Dupin as among the most important series of Miró's career. These works are distinguished by their poetic, whimsical imagery, delicately balanced forms and richly textured, meticulously worked surfaces. From the same collection is Pablo Picasso's Figure (1929; estimate: £600,000–800,000), painted during a period of intense personal and artistic transformation. Inspired by his relationship with Marie-Thérèse Walter and shaped by his engagement with Surrealist ideas and his sculptural collaboration with Julio González, the work exemplifies Picasso's radical rethinking of the human form. While remaining independent of the Surrealist movement, Picasso embraced its shared concerns, experimenting with metamorphosis and distortion to forge a powerful new pictorial language.

Completing the sale are two excellent works by Max ErnstSun over the desert (1925; estimate: £300,000–500,000) is a highly inventive collage painting depicting the sun casting light over a desert landscape. Created after Ernst's 1924 voyage through the Suez Canal, the work demonstrates his early experiments with semi-automatic techniques and elemental landscapes, both anticipating and foreshadowing many of Ernst's finest works of the later 1920s and early 1930s. Also offered is Le monde des flous – Refus absolu de vivre comme un tachiste (1965; estimate: £350,000–550,000), one of Ernst's most inventive works of the 1960s. A large painted assemblage, it was the centrepiece of his landmark 1965 exhibition at the Alexandre Iolas Gallery in Paris. Incorporating motifs from across his career, the work depicts a sparkling sequence of astronomical constellations, echoing the similarly titled Le monde des naïfs (now in the Centre Pompidou).

Olivier Camu, Deputy Chairman, Impressionist and Modern Art, Christie's: The Art of the Surreal has, for over three decades, defined the market for Surrealism, and this 25th edition reaffirms its unique relevance and authority. Bringing together museum-quality works by 15 artists - including René Magritte, Paul Delvaux, Max Ernst, Odilon Redon, and Joan Miró - the sale presents exceptional works from private collections, all fresh to market, with many offered at auction for the first time. Enhanced by standout Surrealist and Dada works from the Roger and Josette Vanthournout Collection, this year's Marquee Week evening sales offer a compelling perspective on the enduring power and influence of Surrealist and Dada art.”

Ottavia Marchitelli, Head of The Art of the Surreal Evening Sale, Christie's: “We are thrilled to present two landmark works by Toyen and Dorothea Tanning in this year's sale, highlighting the vital role women played in shaping Surrealism. Toyen's Le devenir de la liberté and Tanning's Children's Games are historically significant works that capture the movement's spirit of transformation, defiance, and imaginative freedom. Their inclusion not only deepens the scope of the auction, but also underscores The Art of the Surreal's ongoing commitment to presenting these two artists as essential voices within Surrealism.”

An exhibition will be on view and open to all in the lead up to the auction, at Christie's London from 25 February to 5 March 2026. More information on christies.com


 

  • JOAN MIRÓ (1893-1983)

    Peinture


    EstimateGBP 1,500,000 - 2,500,000





  • RENÉ MAGRITTE (1898-1967)

    Les grâces naturelles


    EstimateGBP 6,500,000 - 9,500,000


  • RENÉ MAGRITTE (1898-1967)

    L'esprit et la forme


    EstimateGBP 500,000 - 800,000


  • PAUL DELVAUX (1897-1994)

    La Ville lunaire


    EstimateGBP 2,000,000 - 3,000,000




Mabel Dwight: Cool Head, Warm Heart

 Celebrating one of the most notable American printmakers of the 1920s and 1930s, Mabel Dwight: Cool Head, Warm Heart foregrounds Mabel Dwight’s vivid portrayals of New York’s people, theaters, streets, and everyday rituals, rendered through a democratic print medium and a keen sense of composition.

Born in 1876 and raised in Cincinnati, New Orleans, and San Francisco, Dwight came to New York at the turn of the century as an illustrator and painter and soon became part of the downtown artistic community. She was an active member of the Whitney Studio Club in the 1910s and became the Studio Club’s first secretary in 1918, working closely with its director, Juliana Force, a foundational chapter in what would later become the Whitney Museum of American Art. In 1927, at the age of fifty-two, Dwight began working in lithography and quickly emerged as one of the era’s most respected printmakers.

Guided by her belief that art should be made with “a cool head and a warm heart,” Dwight wandered the city from Harlem to Staten Island, sketching scenes of human drama, humor, and quiet resilience before translating them into lithographs via stone or zinc plates. The Whitney holds nearly a third of her lithographs, and her work remains a gimlet-eyed, affectionate portrait of urban life. For Dwight, lithography offered not only aesthetic freedom but also political purpose. It allowed her work to circulate widely and inexpensively, aligning with her self-described “Socialist” vision of dignity across class divides. 

Dwight’s work has been part of the Whitney Museum's history since its founding; the Museum holds about a third of her lithographs. Nearly a century after Dwight published her prints, they stand as examples of how to capture the varieties of urban experiences with a keen-eyed affection for New York. 

Dwight, like her friend and contemporary Wanda Gág, also the subject of a recent exhibition at the Whitney, is an artist whose work offers an accessible but rigorous vision. “Dwight was always careful to avoid the grotesque,” said Dan Nadel, the Steven and Ann Ames Curator of Drawings and Prints, Whitney Museum, “preferring a gentler but no less sharp approach, rendering her subjects in rounded, solid forms, dignified and individual.” 

Dwight believed that her art should be made with “a cool head and a warm heart,” so that it might become a “living influence on the world.” That philosophy shaped both her working process and her subjects. She spent days wandering the City, from Harlem to Staten Island, often sketching in a notebook concealed inside her jacket. Back in her studio, she refined these observations before transferring them onto stone or zinc plates, producing prints that capture New York as a stage of human drama, humor, and quiet resilience. 

“Seeing these works fresh in 2026 is a reminder that New Yorkers, and any city dweller, havealways existed together as a community at play, work, and protest,” Nadel continued, “and it is a pleasure to show visitors that Dwight’s works and ideas are integral to the Whitney’s collection and vision, from founding to now.” 

Dwight’s bustling crowd scenes portray individuals with gently curving lines, dramatic lighting, and delicate highlights, each figure distinct yet inseparable from the whole. Whether depicting balloon sellers, subway riders, parkgoers, or theater audiences, Dwight imbued her subjects with what she called “the stuff of life”—an inner glow that conveys both vulnerability and strength. Her overtly political images are as theatrical as her scenes of entertainment, and her intimate portraits reveal faces alive with expression and psychological depth. 

One of the exhibition’s highlights, Life Class, exemplifies Dwight’s sharp eye for body language, crowds, and likenesses. The lithograph portrays some of the Studio Club’s regulars gathered 3 around the model in a figure drawing session. Dwight’s placement of lights and darks pulls our attention all the way around the space, making us feel the intimacy of the crowd and concentration in the room. Her likenesses of artists, including Peggy Beacon and Edward Hopper, are affectionate and broad. Dwight’s work was published widely in magazines as wideranging as Vanity Fair, The New Masses, and Theatre Guild Magazine, and circulated across the United States. Her lithographs reached a wide audience hungry for art rooted in everyday experience. At a moment when American artists were seeking new ways to connect art to lived reality, Dwight offered an enduring model of how humor, political awareness, and human warmth could coexist on a single printed sheet.

Mabel Dwight: Cool Head, Warm Heart is curated by Dan Nadel, Steven and Ann Ames Curator of Drawings and Prints, Whitney Museum of American Art, with Eli Harrison, Curatorial Fellow, Whitney Museum of American Art.


IMAGES


Three men in hats sit on a bench looking solemn and lost in thought.


Mabel Dwight, Abstract Thinking, c. 1932. Lithograph, 11 1/2 × 15 15/16in. (29.2 × 40.5 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase with funds from The Lauder Foundation, Leonard and Evelyn Lauder Fund 96.68.91 



Three women sit side-by-side on a ferry bench, the nun reading from a small book.


Mabel Dwight, Ferry Boat, 1930. Lithograph, 11 7/16 × 15 7/8 in. (29.1 × 40.3 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase with funds from The Lauder Foundation, Leonard and Evelyn Lauder Fund 96.68.89



Audience crowded in an old theater watching a romantic couple embrace on the screen.


Mabel Dwight, The Clinch, Movie Theatre, 1928. Lithograph, 11 9/16 × 15 7/8in. (29.4 × 40.3 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney 31.720 


Audience in a theater watches a masked gunslinger on screen pointing a pistol directly at them.
Mabel Dwight, Stick 'Em Up, 1928


Children play on a gravel street while a woman pushes a baby carriage and laundry hangs.


Old Greenwich Village, 1928. Lithograph, 16 1/6 × 11 3/4in. (40.8 × 29.8 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Gift of Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney 31.723



Woman wearing round glasses looks toward the viewer while holding a pencil and sketchbook.



Mabel Dwight, Self-Portrait, 1932. Lithograph, 15 15/16 × 11 1/2in. (40.5 × 29.2 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase 32.100 



Vaudeville performers and two showmen pose on stage as an amused audience watches.


Mabel Dwight, Mechano, Wonder of the World, 1928. Lithograph, 16 × 11 3/8in. (40.6 × 28.9 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney 31.722


A crowd of solemn-looking people surrounds a woman wearing a dark cloche hat.



Mabel Dwight, In the Crowd, 1931. Lithograph, 11 5/16 × 15 13/16in. (28.7 × 40.2 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase with funds from the Print Committee 98.
 



Two men embrace while other dockworkers sit and watch under a dark waterfront pier.


Mabel Dwight, Derelicts, 1931. Lithograph, 10 13/16 × 13 7/8in. (27.5 × 35.2 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase with funds from The Lauder Foundation, Leonard and Evelyn Lauder Fund 96.68.90



A crowd watches clowns and acrobats perform on a brightly lit circus stage.


Mabel Dwight, Toy Shop Window, 1927. Lithograph, 10 13/16 × 14 1/8in. (27.5 × 35.9 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase with funds from The Lauder Foundation, Leonard and Evelyn Lauder Fund 96.68.86



A gas-masked soldier watches marionette puppets on a stage, including a puppet with a swastika.


Mabel Dwight, Danse Macabre, 1933. Lithograph, 11 3/8 × 15 13/16in. (28.9 × 40.2 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase with funds from The Lauder Foundation, Leonard and Evelyn Lauder Fund 96.68.92


A crowded hat shop where a man tries on a helmet while others watch closely.


Mabel Dwight, Hat Sale, 1928. Lithograph, 16 1/8 × 11 1/2in. (41 × 29.2 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Gift of Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney 31.721 Mabel Dwight,


A nude woman reclines on a platform while a group of artists sketch her from various angles.



Mabel Dwight, Life Class, 1931. Lithograph, 13 11/16 × 18 1/16in. (34.8 × 45.9 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase 33.90


A worn wooden house stands amid industrial silos while people walk and talk along the street.


Mabel Dwight, The Survivor, Staten Island, 1929. Lithograph, 11 1/2 × 15 7/8in. (29.2 × 40.3 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of Mr. and Mrs. Michael H. Irving 78.85 


Crowded beach scene showing families and swimmers with a woman bending to tend a small child.

Mabel Dwight, The Ocean, Coney Island, 1928. Lithograph, 11 9/16 × 16in. (29.4 × 40.6 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of Diane and Thomas Tuft 2022.165


A female stage performer dances under a spotlight while an audience watches from seats.

Mabel Dwight, Houston St Burlesque, c. 1929. Lithograph, 16 × 11 1/2in. (40.6 × 29.2 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase with funds from The Lauder Foundation, Leonard and Evelyn Lauder Fund


Old stone mansion with tall trees and a walled garden path in front.

 

Mabel Dwight, Deserted Mansion, 1928. Lithograph, 15 7/8 × 11 1/2in. (40.3 × 29.2 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase 32.6


A crowd of people, including children, watch orange fish swimming in a large aquarium.


Mabel Dwight, Aquarium, 1928. Color lithograph, 11 5/8 × 16in. (29.5 × 40.6 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Gift of Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney 31.718 



A skeleton in a bearskin hat leads a procession of grim businessmen in top hats.
Mabel Dwight, Merchants of Death, 1935


Two men inspect the contents of a large tied bag on a city sidewalk near a stair railing.

Mabel Dwight, Buried Treasure, 1935-1939. Lithograph, 16 × 11 7/16in. (40.6 × 29.1 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase with funds from the Print Committee 94.119 



Crowded audience watches trapeze performers and carnival sellers hustling prizes and tickets.



Mabel Dwight, The Great Trapeze Act, 1930. Lithograph, 11 7/16 × 15 5/8in. (29.1 × 39.7 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; gift of Diane and Thomas Tuft 2022.166