Art

Pauline Karpidas London Collection Surrealist Milestone

Discover why the Pauline Karpidas London Collection at Sotheby’s could redefine the surrealist market with record-setting estimates and museum-grade provenance.

Por: Angela Leon Cervera
Pauline Karpidas London Collection
Pauline Karpidas: The London Collection. Photo: Barney Hindle

The Pauline Karpidas London Collection heads to Sotheby’s on 17–18 September 2025, offering some 250 lots that fuse high surrealism and bold design. With a presale estimate above £60 million, it is set to become the most valuable single-owner sale ever staged by Sotheby’s Europe.

 

More than a commercial event, the auction is a portrait of a collector who trusted instinct over fashion. Pauline Karpidas assembled her trove under the mentorship of gallerist Alexander Iolas, championing artists long before the market caught up.

Pauline Karpidas London Collection
Pauline Karpidas: The London Collection. Photo: Barney Hindle

Why Is the Pauline Karpidas London Collection a Surrealist Game-Changer?

  • Record valuation. Sotheby’s assigns the sale an unprecedented >£60 million estimate, eclipsing landmark collections such as Freddie Mercury and David Bowie. 

  • Optimal timing. Scheduled weeks before the autumn auction rush, the sale avoids calendar congestion and secures maximum spotlight.

  • Rarity factor. Oliver Barker notes that collections with this depth and provenance “are increasingly scarce,” sharpening buyer urgency.

Pauline Karpidas London Collection
Pauline Karpidas: The London Collection. Photo: Barney Hindle
Pauline Karpidas London Collection
Pauline Karpidas: The London Collection. Photo: Barney Hindle

What Signature Masterpieces Anchor the London Collection?

  • René Magritte, La Statue volante (1940-41) – £9-12 million guideline; acquired through Iolas, never auctioned before.

  • Leonora Carrington, The Hour of Angelus (1949) – A ritual-laden Mexican canvas estimated at £600-800k, aligned with her soaring new record of $28.5 million.

  • Les Lalanne design icons – From Claude’s whimsical Butterfly Chandelier (£198-265k) to François-Xavier’s Aux Canards table (£794k-1.05 m), merging sculpture and function.

  • Andy Warhol, The Scream (After Munch) – Part of his “Art from Art” suite; £2-3 million estimate underscores the Pop-Surreal dialogue.

How Could This Auction Reshape the Surrealist Market Landscape?

Surrealism is enjoying a centenary-fueled boom; dedicated sales and institutional retrospectives have “put the movement back in the spotlight.” 


Magritte leads the charge: his auction volume jumped from $192.7 million in 2023 to $312.3 million in 2024, capped by the $121.2 million record for L’empire des lumières.


Price data confirm collector confidence. Works resold between 2003-17 delivered a 10.9 percent compound return, with 94.6 percent gaining value.

 

Carrington’s star is similarly ascending; her 2024 record shattered previous highs by a factor of eight and spotlights the rerating of female surrealists. 


Single-owner ensembles amplify these trends. Karpidas’s 2023 Hydra sale tripled estimates, signaling how coherent narratives invite aggressive bidding even in slower markets.

Pauline Karpidas London Collection
Pauline Karpidas: The London Collection. Photo: Barney Hindle

Sotheby’s September showcase is more than a blockbuster sale; it is a referendum on the future of high-end Surrealism. If estimates hold—or are eclipsed—the Pauline Karpidas London Collection will validate conviction-driven collecting and cement Surrealism’s position as a resilient blue-chip category. Collectors, curators and market watchers alike should tune in; moments like this rarely repeat.

FAQ

Receive the latest news

Subscribe To Our Magazine

Luster Magazine

Digital Magazine

Ingresa los siguientes datos y comienza a disfrutar de nuestra revista digital.