Monet's Le Grand Canal et Santa Maria della Salute sells for $56.6m
- Life
- DPA
- Published Date: 12:35 | 18 May 2022
- Modified Date: 12:42 | 18 May 2022
The piece has joined a series of Monet masterworks that have sold for more than 50 million dollars in consecutive New York sales at Sotheby's auction house.
The previous record sale for any view of Italy was achieved by Turner's Rome, From Mount Aventine, which sold at Sotheby's in London for 47.6 million dollars in 2014.
The sum also makes the painting the most valuable painting of Venice by the artist sold at auction.
Monet's previous record was 36.5 million dollars achieved by LePalais Ducal, sold at Sotheby's in London in 2019.
Channeling the magic of the water-based city on canvas, Le Grand Canal showcases pure brushstrokes of colour and light.
"Le Grand Canal is a pivotal work that bridges the artist's ground-breaking Impressionist innovations and their continued evolution into a more freeform abstract approach," Sotheby's said.
Many canvases created by Monet during his three-month trip to Venice in 1908 are in prominent international museum collections, such as the Museum of Fine Arts Boston and the Fine Art Museums of San Francisco.
The trip produced a series of 37 paintings capturing Venice's world-famous views.
Le Grand Canal et Santa Maria della Salute features in Sotheby's Modern Evening Auction, which ended the evening having totalled 408.5 million dollars - the third highest total for any sale held at Sotheby's.
Elsewhere, Pablo Picasso's Large-Scale Portrait of Marie-Therese Walter sold for 67.5 million dollars.
"The two titans of modern art - Pablo Picasso and Claude Monet - squared off tonight as the standard-bearers for the market and the foundation for another record-setting night at Sotheby's," said Brooke Lampley, Sotheby's chairman & worldwide head of sales for global fine art.
"Both works sold tonight showcased the artists at the height of their powers, with each representing a distinct moment of transformation that would play a pivotal role in defining their respective careers."