Auctioned Painting At The Cost of $142m

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A painting by Francis Bacon of his friend and fellow artist Lucian Freud has become the most expensive artwork ever sold at auction after it fetched $142m (?89m, 106m euros) in New York.

The triptych, Three Studies of Lucian Freud (1969), is considered one of Bacon’s greatest masterpieces.

It was sold after six minutes of fierce bidding, Christie’s auction house said.

The price eclipsed the $119.9m (?74m) paid for Edvard Munch’s The Scream last year, reports the BBC.

It was the first time Three Studies of Lucian Freud had been offered at auction and bidding opened at $80m (?50m, 60m euros). Its presale estimate was $85m (?53m, 64m euros).

The auction house did not disclose the identity of the buyer.

Bacon, known for his triptychs, painted Three Studies of Lucian Freud in 1969 at London’s Royal College of Art, after his studio was destroyed in a fire.

Francis Outred, head of Post-War and Contemporary Art at Christie’s Europe, said the work was “a true masterpiece and one of the greatest paintings to come up for auction in a current generation”.

“It marks Bacon and Freud’s relationship, paying tribute to the creative and emotional kinship between the two artists,” he added.

The pair met in 1945 and became close companions, painting each other on a number of occasions, before their relationship cooled during the 1970s.

Exhibited in Bacon’s renowned retrospective at the Grand Palais, Paris in 1971-1972, the three panels that form the painting were separated in the mid-1970s.

One panel was shown at the Tate in 1985 before the three sections were reassembled in their original splendour.

The complete work was displayed in New Haven, Connecticut in 1999.

It got its first ever UK public viewing at Christie’s in London in October this year.

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