Art

Frans Post Painting Unearthed: €7 M Auction Triumph

A forgotten Frans Post painting, rescued from a Connecticut barn, just soared to €7 million at Sotheby’s—learn how rarity and restoration sparked record-breaking bids.

Por: Angela Leon Cervera
Frans Post painting
Frans Post View of Olinda, Brazil, with the Ruins of the Jesuit Church. Courtesy of Sotheby's

A Frans Post painting hidden beneath decades of grime has leapt from dusty obscurity to the glittering spotlight of Sotheby’s New York, rewriting the artist’s market history in one electrifying sale. The rediscovered canvas—View of Olinda, Brazil, with the Ruins of the Jesuit Church—hammered at €6 million and closed at €7.37 million with fees, smashing Post’s previous record.

 

Its unlikely journey began in a Connecticut barn attic in 1998, when Sotheby’s specialist George Wachter spotted potential beneath layers of soot. After a meticulous restoration by Dutch-school conservator Nancy Krieg, the tropical vista emerged in radiant detail—anteaters, lichens, and colonial ruins alive once more. That alchemy of expert eye and patient craft set the stage for auction fireworks.

Frans Post painting
Frans Post View of Olinda, Brazil, with the Ruins of the Jesuit Church. Courtesy of Sotheby's

How Was the Frans Post Painting Discovered?

  • Chance encounter: Wachter noticed the large, deteriorated canvas while valuing estate items and “could hardly see it,” yet sensed quality.

  • Collector faith: Financier Thomas Saunders and his wife Jordan acquired the work and funded its restoration, gambling on Wachter’s intuition.

  • Restoration reveal: Cleaning lifted centuries of soot, unveiling a rare 1666 Brazilian landscape—one of just seven surviving paintings from Post’s South-American period.

  • Scientific vetting: Pigment analysis and dendrochronology confirmed 17th-century materials, while connoisseurship matched Post’s brush-handling and Brazilian iconography.

Francesco Guardi Venice, A View of the Punta della Dogana and the Church of Santa Maria della Salute; Venice, A View of the Churches of San Giorgio Maggiore and Santa Maria della Salute. Courtesy of Sotheby's
Jan Davidsz. de Heem Still Life of Roses, Tulips, Lilies, Poppies, Honeysuckle, a Sunflower, an Iris, and Other Flowers in a Glass Vase with Two Birds, a Grasshopper, and a Snail. Courtesy of Sotheby's

Why Did the Frans Post Painting Command €7 Million?

  • Extreme scarcity – Only seven Brazilian-period works survive; collectors prize these for their documentary power.

  • Pristine condition – Krieg’s restoration returned jewel-toned foliage and crisp colonial architecture, adding market allure.

  • Gold-standard provenance – Two-decade ownership by the Saunders family, advised by Sotheby’s, assured pedigree.

  • Fresh-to-market mystique – First appearance at auction ever; pent-up demand energized bidding.

  • Broader market mood – Rising appetite for rediscovered Old Masters and cross-category collectors chasing trophy pieces.

Which Other Lots Lit Up the Same Sotheby’s Sale?

  • Francesco Guardi, pair of Venetian scenes – Top lot at $10.5 million with fees, just shy of estimate.

  • Jan Davidsz de Heem, luscious floral still life – Achieved $8.8 million, reinforcing demand for Dutch baroque opulence.

  • Frans Hals, musical child portraits (pair) – Sold as one lot for $7.9 million, delighting bidders with Hals’s spirited brushwork.

  • Luis Meléndez, 18th-century kitchen still life – Set a fresh artist record at $6.2 million, spotlighting Spanish still-life mastery.

These results reveal a resilient Old-Masters segment where rarity, condition, and narrative drive collectors past macro-market jitters.

Frans Hals Boy, Possibly Frans Hals (II), Playing the Violin; Girl, Possibly Sara Hals, Singing. Courtesy of Sotheby's

The saga of View of Olinda proves the art world still rewards sharp eyes and careful stewardship. From barn-attic obscurity to a €7 million crescendo, this Frans Post painting rekindles interest in colonial-era landscapes and underscores why discoveries continue to reshape art history—and collectors’ checkbooks—with breathtaking speed.

Barn Mysteries & Bidding Frenzies

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