-
Barca hoping Camp Nou return can spark Liga title defence
-
All Blacks bid to bounce back for season-ender against struggling Wales
-
Pogba set for long-awaited comeback as Ligue 1 returns
-
Inter and Milan in early Scudetto clash as Napoli attempt to bounce back
-
How England revived their rugby fortunes
-
A big deal: Robert Therrien's huge sculptures on show in LA
-
In U-turn, US rights report to track gender changes, DEI
-
Afghanistan seeks new trade routes as Pakistan ties sour
-
Iranian director Jafar Panahi ramps up French Oscars campaign
-
Cuba battles virus outbreak despite shortages of food, medicine
-
30-plus nations oppose COP30 draft over fossil fuel omission: Colombia
-
Tech firms lead Asian stock rout as AI bubble fears linger
-
Ukraine would give Russia chunk of territory under 28-point US plan
-
England win toss, bat in first Ashes Test
-
Teen saving India's ponds says everyone can be a leader
-
Frida Kahlo painting auctions for $54.6 mn, record for woman artist
-
Arsenal brace for Spurs clash without Gabriel, Man City in pursuit
-
Scramble for Sudan's resources fuels brutal civil war
-
Livestream giant Twitch to ban under-16s in Australia
-
Ukraine would cede Donbas to Russia under 28-point US plan
-
Spain and Germany reach Davis Cup semi-finals
-
'Black Panther' star Chadwick Boseman gets Hollywood star
-
Trump plans massive expansion of offshore oil drilling
-
South Korean Lee So-mi grabs LPGA Tour Championship lead
-
Fire breaks out at UN climate talks, forcing delay at critical phase
-
Carpenter strikes for Chelsea but Barca hold on for draw in Women's Champions League
-
Rams-Bucs and Steelers-Bears match NFL division leaders
-
ExxonMobil relaunches natural gas project in Mozambique
-
Colombia's Petro in hot water as records reveal Lisbon strip club visit
-
Stocks lose steam on AI concerns as jobs data cloud rate cut hopes
-
Messi's Inter to open Miami stadium in April against Austin
-
US health agency edits website to reflect anti-vax views
-
US denies ending South Africa G20 boycott
-
Iniesta's company rebranding Israel Premier Tech cycling team
-
US plan 'good' for Russia, Ukraine: White House
-
Piastri ready to forget struggles and enjoy Vegas GP
-
US peace plan 'good' for Russia, Ukraine: White House
-
Researchers stunned by wolf's use of crab traps to feed
-
Colombia shows first treasures recovered from 300-year-old shipwreck
-
England's Daly ready for aerial challenge against Argentina
-
Covid inquiry finds UK inaction cost thousands of lives
-
Italy probes Tod's executives over labour exploitation
-
Trump floats death penalty for 'seditious' Democrats
-
Fire forces evacuation at UN climate talks
-
South Africa says US asks to join G20 summit, ending boycott
-
Montpellier deny 'racism' allegations in Fowler's book
-
UK Covid inquiry says thousands of lives could have been saved
-
UK Covid inuiry says thousands of lives could have been saved
-
Erasmus wants to 'fix' his Lansdowne Road jinx
-
US breaks its boycott of South Africa's G20 summit
Frida Kahlo painting auctions for $54.6 mn, record for woman artist
A self-portrait by legendary Mexican artist Frida Kahlo sold for $54.66 million in New York on Thursday, setting a new record for the price of a painting by a woman, the auction house Sotheby's said.
The sale of Kahlo's 1940 artwork, titled "El sueno (la cama)" -- which translates to "The dream (The bed)" -- breaks the previous record in this category, set by American artist Georgia O'Keeffe, whose 1932 painting "Jimson Weed/White Flower No. 1," sold for $44.4 million in 2014.
Kahlo's painting is "the most valuable work by a woman artist ever sold at auction," Sotheby's said in a post on X.
The auction house said Kahlo's work was "painted in 1940 during a pivotal decade in her career, marked by her turbulent relationship with Diego Rivera."
Kahlo's self-portrait went on the auction block at Sotheby’s with an estimated price ranging from $40 million to $60 million.
The buyer's name was not disclosed.
The artwork depicts the artist sleeping in a bed that appears to float among clouds in the sky, laying beneath a skeleton with legs that are wrapped with sticks of dynamite.
This painting is a "very personal" image, in which Kahlo "merges folkloric motifs from Mexican culture with European surrealism," Anna Di Stasi, head of Latin American art at Sotheby's, told AFP.
The Mexican artist, who passed away in 1954 at age of 47, "did not completely agree" with her work being associated with the surrealist movement, Di Stasi said.
However, "given this magnificent iconography, it seems entirely appropriate to include it" in this movement.
The record-setting sale came two nights the New York auction house reeled in another record sale, with a painting by Austrian artist Gustav Klimt fetching $236.4 million on the block -- the second most expensive artwork ever sold at auction.
Klimt's "Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer," which he painted between 1914 and 1916, depicts the daughter of his main patron dressed in a white imperial Chinese dress, standing before a blue tapestry with Asian-inspired motifs.
The most expensive painting ever sold at auction remains the "Salvator Mundi," attributed to Leonardo da Vinci, which was bought for $450 million in 2017.
A.Rodriguezv--AMWN