A probably record-breaking portrait by Diego Velázquez of Isabel de Borbón, queen of Spain and the primary spouse of Philip IV, has been withdrawn from Sotheby’s in New York as a result of “ongoing discussions” on the a part of the sellers—a non-public household belief within the US that has owned the work since 1978.
Sotheby’s declined to touch upon hypothesis {that a} US museum could have put in a suggestion—the portray, dated to the late 1620s, had been assured by the public sale home to promote for round $35m in its Previous Grasp sale on 1 February. The work was quietly withdrawn forward of the publication of the web catalogue on 21 December.
In a press release, the public sale home stated the consignors “have reluctantly selected a short lived pause within the sale course of, as a result of ongoing discussions on their facet”. Regardless of this, and “given the joy with which the Velázquez has been obtained to date”, Sotheby’s stated each the public sale home and the sellers “sit up for providing this distinctive portray on the market within the close to future”.
Most court docket work by Velázquez are held in royal or museum collections and the $35m price ticket—greater than double the present $16.9m public sale document for the Seventeenth-century Spanish painter—displays this rarity in addition to the portray’s superb situation. Depicting Isabel in her 20s, Sotheby’s says the two-metre-tall portrait is a very powerful work by Velázquez to return to the market in additional than 50 years.
The portrait has disappeared earlier than. Taken from Madrid—the place it hung within the Spanish royal assortment as a pendant to Velázquez’s portrait of Philip IV—throughout Napoleon’s 1808 invasion, it solely reappeared in France in 1838, when it was placed on show within the so-called “Spanish Gallery” on the Musée du Louvre in Paris throughout King Louis Philippe’s reign.
After the king fell from energy, the portray was bought at Christie’s to the service provider banker and ebook collector Henry Huth, who displayed it at Wykehurst Park in West Sussex. The portrait remained in Huth’s household till it was bought in 1950—the final time it appeared on the public sale market.