“I think this is a sale that sort of exhausts superlatives,” said Johanna Flaum, vice-chairman of 20th and 21st Century Art at auctioneers Christie’s.
“This is… the most valuable collection ever sold at auction. It’s really a once-in-a-generation type of event.”
Highlights include “La montagne Sainte-Victoire” by Paul Cezanne, which is expected to fetch at least $120 million, and “Verger avec cypres” by Van Gogh, whose hammer price is estimated at over $100 million.
Allen co-founded Microsoft with Bill Gates in 1975, becoming fabulously rich as the company grew into the computing behemoth it is today.
By the time he died in 2018 at the age of 65, he had bought some of the most important works created in the last half a millennium.
“The collection is quite wide-ranging, it really makes Paul Allen a unique collector in that sense,” said Flaum.
The previous most expensive collection sold at auction was the Macklowe collection whose two tranches netted $922 million.
The auction will take place in New York on November 9 and 10. All proceeds due to Allen’s estate are to be dedicated to philanthropy, in line with his wishes.
Parts of the collection will be available for public viewing in Los Angeles, London, Paris, Shanghai and New York ahead of the sale.