Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Artemis Fine Arts And Arte Primitivo's Debut Auction Was A Huge Success, Totaling Nearly $1.5 M


(MENAFN- ForPressRelease) Boulder, CO, USA, March 31, 2026 -- An exquisite pair of Royal Moche gold and mosaic ear ornaments fashioned circa 100-300 AD soared to $82,500 in the first of many anticipated auctions to be produced jointly by Artemis Fine Arts and Arte Primitivo. The large and important ear ornaments were the top lot in a February 26-27 sale whose 900 lots totaled just shy of $1.5 million.

Artemis Fine Arts is a Colorado auction house known internationally as a premier authority in the field of ancient and ethnographic art, while Arte Primitivo is a New York City auction gallery that specializes in Pre-Columbian, African, ethnographic and ancient art. This collaboration unites decades of combined expertise from the highest echelon of the antiquities field.

“Our debut auction with Arte Primitivo attracted strong international participation and achieved excellent results across a wide range of collecting categories,” said Teresa Dodge, owner and executive director of Artemis Fine Arts.“The sale demonstrated continued demand among serious collectors for exceptional works, with competitive bidding and outstanding prices realized during both sessions.”

Day 1 featured 540 lots of fine Pre-Columbian, Native American, African, and Ethnographic Art. Day 2 contained 380 lots of Egyptian, Greek, Roman and Near Eastern antiquities, Asian art, fine arts and fossils. Including post-auction sales, the total sell-through rate was 82 percent. Nearly 100 new bidders registered to participate, and the sales lift achieved from running on four online-bidding platforms was 45 percent.

The aforementioned Royal Moche ear ornaments were composed of gold frames inlaid with colorful tessarae of gold, turquoise, Chilean lapis (sodalite), nephrite, jadeite and mother-of-pearl. The iconography on each was of a Moche lord or noble, facing in opposite directions and clad in full ceremonial regalia, all on a custom bronze base. These beautiful examples breezed past the $50,000 high estimate to bring $82,500.

Pre-Columbian objects were led by a large openwork Veraguas-Diquis gold pendant depicting a large central deity having a human body with a long openwork bird-of-prey hooked beak, wearing a fancy double-plumed headdress. The 4-inch by 41⁄4-inch pendant, from the region of southern Costa Rica to the border of Panama, dated to the Late Period V to VI, circa 700-1550 A.D. It changed hands for $30,550.

A lovely 111⁄2-inch-tall seahorse vase by the Pueblo de Cochiti, NM artisan Victor Ortiz (b. 1969-) sold within estimate for $3,380. The large polychrome pottery vase was decorated with two opposing seahorses having long curled tails. The base was signed "Virgil Ortiz Cochiti Pueblo" in a fancy style, with the date "05." Ortiz's exquisite clay works are exhibited in museums worldwide.

An untitled Aboriginal (Yingapungapu – Burial Ground) bark painting from around 1972 by the Yolngu artist and activist Narritjin Maymuru (circa 1916–1981) realized $5,200. The work depicted one of the central ceremonial mortuary rituals of the Manggalili clan of the northeast Arnhem Land in Australia. At the center of the 671⁄2-inch by 321⁄2-inch rectangular eucalyptus bark painting was an oval burial ground sculpture known as yingapungapu – a form modeled in sand that was the focal point of the ceremony.

The meticulously-curated two-day event was made available to bidders through Artemis Fine Arts' dedicated online platform as well as Arte Primitivo's established proprietary online bidding system.

Artemis Fine Arts and Arte Primitivo are already preparing for their next joint venture auction, slated for Thursday and Friday, June 11-12. Consignments with solid provenance are currently being accepted from the following categories: Pre-Columbian art; African and ethnographic art; Native American artifacts; fossils and natural history; and classical antiquities. The deadline for consignments is Thursday, April 30.

“As we assemble this upcoming joint sale, we are seeking select consignments of antiquities, ethnographic works and related items that would benefit from presentation to our international network of collectors and institutions,” Teresa Dodge said.“Our team would be more than happy to provide confidential evaluations and guidance on the best strategy for bringing works to market.”

To discuss consigning ancient art, antiquities or cultural relics to a future auction, call Teresa Dodge at 720-890-7700 or email [email protected]. All enquires are kept strictly confidential and there is never an obligation to consign. Visit Artemis Fine Arts online at

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