Renewed enthusiasm for Orientalist paintings and a £3.7m coin buoy London’s Islamic sales week

Arts

Osman Hamdy Bey's record-breaking Koranic Instruction Courtesy of Sotheby's

This week has seen one of the busiest London Islamic seasons to date with twelve auctions, with traditional divisions overlapping and with renewed demand for the sometimes culturally sensitive area of Orientalist paintings.

The continuing popularity among Islamic art collectors for portraits by European artists propelled Bonhams cover lot, a late 18th century British oil painting of an Indian official, Nur Al-Din Hussain Khan by James Wales, to £275,063 (with fees), five times its estimate.

In contrast, the top lot in Sothebys 22 October Orientalist sale of 36 paintings from the well-known Najd collection—and the most expensive work of the week—was by the only non-European painter in the group, Osman Hamdi Bey. The Turkish-born artists Koranic Instruction sold within estimate for £4.6m (with fees)—the day before, at Dorotheum in Vienna, another painting by Bey, a 1881 depiction of a Turkish woman, sold for €1.7m (with fees). Also from the Najd collection was Jean-Léon Gérômes Riders Crossing the Desert which sold for a record £3.1m (with fees) and auction records were also set for seven other Orientalists including Gustav Bauernfeind—Market in Jaffa sold for £3.7m (with fees).

8th century Umayyad gold dinar sold for £3.7m Courtesy of Morton & Eden

Also sold for £3.7m (with fees) was a rare 8th century Umayyad gold dinar, which went to an anonymous telephone bidder at the coin specialists Morton & Edens sale yesterday, 24 October—a joint auction record for an Islamic coin and for a coin sold at auction in Europe.

For Islamic art, the highest price of the week was at Christies yesterday for a large Kufic Quran section sold for £851,250 (with fees). Christies also controversially sold two 15th century Timurid illustrated folios, which went for £791,250 and £851,250 (both with fees) against estimates of £700,000-£1m. Though bidding on the two folios was undoubtedly dampened by scholarly disapproval and reluctance to condone the practice of separating leaves from their parent manuscript, both sold to the same telephone buyer.

Meanwhile during Sothebys sale of the Shakerine collection of calligraphy in Qurans and other manuscripts, a monumental Safavid Quran went for £735,000 (with fees). As ever, the vast majority of high-flying items had solid provenance.

A large Kufic QRead More – Source