Nos deux portraits is one of four portraits Ensor painted of Augusta. She met Ensor in 1888 while working for his family's business, and remained his close companion for over sixty years. Ensor's family never approved of the relationship and the two never married or lived together. Instead, Augusta took on the role of an unofficial business and studio manager. She supervised Ensor's production and arranged many of his still-lifes composed of trinkets, shells and skulls. Ensor wrote Augusta's initials A.B. in his sketchbook where he reproduced all his paintings, further indicating that she had enormous influence over his still-life compositions.
Two Merz collages by Kurt Schwitters (1887-1948) are also among the important highlights of this sale − 21 (estimate: $70,000-90,000) and Cigar, recognized for its significant provenance (illustrated above, estimate: $80,000-120,000). The first owner of Cigar was Edith 'Wantee' Thomas, Schwitters' beloved companion with whom he spent the last decade of his life. Edith inherited many of Schwitters' most important works, including Cigar, and managed the artist's estate. The second private owner was S.I. Hayakawa, an esteemed academician and United States Senator.
Additional top lots include Marino Marini's Acrobati e cavallo, a superb work on paper that combines two of Marini's favorite themes: that of the horse and rider and theatricality (estimate: $100,000-150,000); La Pêche au chevesne by Maurice de Vlaminck, a 1916 landscape inspired by Paul Cézanne's signature style of emboldened brushwork (estimate: $100,000-150,000); and Le Bouquet au pot vert by Marc Chagall, a painting imbued with symbols of life and bounty (estimate: $150,000-250,000).