'Lost' Rubens fetches record £49.5m at auction
A long-lost Rubens became the most expensive painting sold at auction when it was bought for more than £49.5m last night.
Massacre of the Innocents, which for three centuries was wrongly attributed to another artist, achieved 10 times its estimated £4m to £6m price, going to a private collecter after a fierce bidding battle.
A packed salesroom at Sotheby's in London watched its price soar to £49,506,650 including buyer's premium – outstripping the previous highest by almost half a million pounds.
Vincent van Gogh's Portrait of Dr Gachet sold at Christie's, New York, 12 years ago for $82.5m (£49m at the 1990 exchange rate).
Offers by three bidders for the Rubens, which portrays the slaying of newborn boys by decree of King Herod, leapt up by increments of £1m. It eventually went to Sam Fogg, a London dealer, on behalf of a client.
A Sotheby's spokeswoman said: "It was completely the most wonderful thing to be in that room. Staff who have worked here for 30 years said they had never seen anything so wonderful."
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies
Comments