Christie's closed its Newhouse collection week with $1.1 billion in hammer sales across four evening sessions in New York, driven by a $181.2 million Jackson Pollock and a $107.6 million Constantin Brancusi that reset artist records by wide margins. The Pollock, *Number 17, 1951*, surpassed the prior $61.2 million mark set in 2013. The Brancusi bronze, *La Muse endormie*, cleared the sculptor's previous $71 million ceiling from 2018. A Mark Rothko from the same estate took $82.5 million, making it the third-highest price ever paid for the artist.
The sales liquidated portions of the S.I. Newhouse estate, accumulated over five decades by the Condé Nast chairman who died in 2017. The family had held the works through two recessions, the 2015-2016 art market correction, and the 2020 pandemic collapse. Sell-through rate across the four sessions exceeded 91 percent by lot, with 23 of 27 trophy works finding buyers above high estimate. The Pollock drew six bidders in a nine-minute sequence, closing at 2.8 times its $65 million low estimate after fees. Brancusi's sculpture, one of six casts, attracted four phone bidders and settled at 2.6 times its $40 million reserve.
The results confirm that capital remains available at the apex of the art market even as regional auction totals soften. Phillips reported a 19 percent year-over-year decline in November evening sale totals. Sotheby's withdrew 11 lots from its contemporary session two weeks prior. But works carrying eight-figure guarantees and institutional provenance continue to clear, suggesting bifurcation rather than broad retreat. The Newhouse name carried weight: five of the top ten lots came with published exhibition histories spanning 40 to 70 years. Two works had appeared in Metropolitan Museum of Art loans. Buyers paid premiums for stability of title and multi-decade holding periods, both proxies for low legal risk and tax efficiency.
The week also demonstrated the durability of the 20th-century canon. All three record-setters were created between 1910 and 1951. Pollock's *Number 17* had been off-market since Newhouse acquired it privately in 1985. The Brancusi last sold at auction in 1999 for $5.5 million. Contemporary works from the 2010s, by contrast, saw muted bidding: a 2014 Oscar Murillo canvas failed to meet its $1.2 million low estimate, and a 2017 Njideka Akunyili Crosby sold within estimate at $3.8 million. Allocators treating art as an alternative store of value are pricing in long-term liquidity over momentum bets.
Operators should monitor spring consignments from other legacy estates, particularly those assembled in the 1970s and 1980s when acquisition costs sat far below current replacement value. Sotheby's has three estate-backed sales scheduled for May. Phillips is pursuing the West Coast collection of a tech founder who began buying in 1995. If Newhouse-level works continue to absorb capital, secondary-market pricing for mid-tier contemporary—works in the $500,000 to $5 million range—will face compression as buyers shift to blue-chip safety. Watch for upticks in private treaty volume and extended payment terms on lots below $10 million as houses compete for liquidity-driven sellers.
The art market now resembles the high-yield bond market in 2019: the top 10 percent of issuance trades freely, the middle 40 percent reprices slowly, and the bottom half waits for sponsor support. Newhouse week moved $1.1 billion in four nights because the works were correct and the capital was patient.