Christie’s Books $1.1 Billion Across Newhouse and 20th Century Evenings on May 18 — Brancusi Sets a $107.5M Record, Pollock Hammers $181.8M, and the Postwar Comp Table Just Got Rebuilt

Christie’s Books $1.1 Billion Across Newhouse and 20th Century Evenings on May 18 — Brancusi Sets a $107.5M Record, Pollock Hammers $181.8M, and the Postwar Comp Table Just Got Rebuilt

Richard Shults, GG (GIA)

Richard is the Chief Underwriter at Borro by Luxury Asset Capital and is a Graduate Gemologist, certified by the Gemological Institute of America (GIA).

Christie’s New York booked $1.1 billion across back-to-back evening sales on May 18, 2026 — a $540.5 million S.I. Newhouse 16-lot single-owner sale ($630.8 million with fees) followed by the $413 million 20th Century Evening Sale — clearing the room in roughly 40 minutes of hammer time and resetting the postwar comp table that anchors every domestic luxury-asset lender’s collateral book for the back half of 2026.

The headline result was a record for sculptor Constantin Brancusi. His 1913 bronze Danaïde hammered at $93 million and made $107.5 million with fees, smashing the prior $71 million Brancusi auction ceiling. The comp matters because the previous Brancusi high was set in 2018; seven years of frozen sculpture upside got cleared in a single lot, and every Brancusi at private banks and family offices repriced overnight.

Jackson Pollock’s Number 7 A (1948) followed at $157 million hammer / $181.8 million with fees — another auction record for the artist and the highest price for any American painting at auction this cycle. Mark Rothko’s No. 15 (Two Greens and Red Stripe) from 1964 added $85 million hammer / $98.3 million with fees from the same Newhouse trove; David Hockney printed $28.6 million; Cy Twombly’s Untitled (1961) made $39 million hammer / $45.4 million with fees.

For an asset-backed lending desk, the Newhouse total now matters across three distinct sleeves. First, the cumulative four-tranche Newhouse number — adding the prior 2018, 2019, and 2023 estate releases — sits at $1.05 billion with fees, the largest single-collector liquidation in postwar art-market history and a clean dataset for any LTV model that needs to mark a 16-lot estate against historicals.

Second, the K-shape that has defined this cycle softened tonight. Sotheby’s posted $433.1 million on May 14. Christie’s posted $399 million on its May 13 Imp/Mod Evening Sale, and now $953 million across the May 18 doubleheader. Spring Marquee Week total for the two houses is north of $1.78 billion before Phillips’ May 19 contemporary sale and Sotheby’s Modern Evening on the same date, both of which add an estimated $330 million of low-end inventory to the week’s pile. That is a functioning top of the market, not a bifurcated one.

Third, the Brancusi number forces an underwriting question that every collateral counter now has to answer this week. Pre-Newhouse, the sculpture sleeve traded at roughly 60–65% of the painting sleeve on like-for-like artists by realized auction velocity. A 51% repricing on a single Brancusi lot, on a bronze from 1913 — one of only five casts — is the cleanest signal we have had in 18 months that sculpture as a collateral class is mispriced against painting. Either the painting comps overshoot, or the sculpture comps catch up. Both rewrites are uncomfortable.

What Christie’s actually proved on May 18 is that estate trophy lots, properly guaranteed and properly staged, still clear at the top of estimate. The $462–$595 million pre-sale Newhouse band closed mid-range; that is a market behaving the way professionals want a market to behave. A market that overshoots its top estimate is a market in a 2007-style melt-up. A market that undershoots its low estimate is a 2009-style buyer’s market. A market that prints mid-range on a $540 million single-owner is a market priced fairly, which is the rarest state of all and the one that justifies new collateral being put on the books.

For lenders, the read-through is straightforward. Brancusi sculptures and major Pollocks just took a structural step up in collateral value. Rothko sat right on its expected price, which validates every LTV model that runs Rothko at the existing comp set. Hockney printed in line — no surprise, but a confirmation. And the $1.05 billion cumulative Newhouse number gives every estate planner an anchor for the largest single-collector liquidation case study in market history. The May fortnight is doing what May fortnights are supposed to do.

Related coverage: Christie’s New York Books $399 Million Imp/Mod Evening Sale on May 13 · Sotheby’s Posts $433.1 Million Across Two Sales in a Single Evening

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Christie’s Books $1.1 Billion Across Newhouse and 20th Century Evenings on May 18 — Brancusi Sets a $107.5M Record, Pollock Hammers $181.8M, and the Postwar Comp Table Just Got Rebuilt

Christie’s New York cleared $1.1 billion across back-to-back evening sales May 18, 2026. The Newhouse 16-lot single-owner closed at $540.5M / $630.8M with fees; the 20th Century Evening added $413M. Brancusi’s Danaïde set a $107.5M record. Pollock’s Number 7 A hammered $181.8M with fees. What it means for the postwar comp table.