Picasso’s mistress fetches $95 million
Picasso’s 1941 portrait of his mistress, Dora Maar with Cat, has been sold for $95 million at Sotheby’s, the second-most expensive painting in auction history.

The world record for any art sold at auction is held by another Picasso, Boy With a Pipe, which Sotheby’s sold two years ago for $104 million. The second-highest price before Wednesday was van Gogh’s Portrait of Dr Gachet at $82.5 million, which sold in 1990.
The vibrant, large-scale work depicts Maar, the surrealist photographer with whom Picasso was romantically involved for a decade, seated in a chair with a small cat perched on the back.
It had been expected to sell for $40 million or more, but the winning bid of $95,216,000 on Wednesday, including commission, caught even Sotheby’s officials by surprise.
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The winning bid was $95,216,000, |
David Norman, Sotheby’s co-chair of impressionist and modern art, said after the sale: “I was hoping for 70-plus. We thought it was worth more, and we were right.”
Even Tobias Meyer, the usually unflappable auctioneer, admitted that he was surprised when the bidding passed $65 million.
“The energy in the room was incredible,” he said. “There’s just a very clear, strong demand for the kind of intense painting with an emotional pull that the Picasso represents; things that are made for our times.”
The auction of impressionist and modern art brought in more than $207 million, it’s third-highest sales figure to date, Sotheby’s said.