BEIJING, March. 11 -- Kate Moss and Gisele Bundchen
are among several celebrities featured in a stunning collection of photography
which is set to go under the hammer Christie's auction house in New York.
Athletic Giselle Bundchen goes au natural with
bronzed skin and tousled locks for this Irving Penn portrait which is part of an
extensive private collection being auctioned off by Christie's New York, next
month.
Supermodel Kate's photo is expected to fetch
30,000-40,000 U.S. dollars at auction, as is Brazilian Gisele's.
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A woman hangs a 1996 photographic
portrait of an innocent, unspoilt Kate Moss by Irving Penn. The auction of
pictures of Kate Moss, Gisele Bundchen and other celebrities will take
place at Christie's auction house in New York on April 10. (Photo source:
China Daily/Agencies) Photo Gallery>>>
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Photos: Kate Moss Gisele Bundchen
The photographs are taken from collector Gert
Elfering extensive collection which will be auctioned off at Christie's next
month.
It's expected to fetch in excess of 2-3 million.
Among the images on offer are portraits of 60s icon
Brigitte Bardot and a reclining nude of American actress Lauren Hutton and a set
of four psychedelic Beatles portraits all by celebrated fashion photographer
Richard Avedon.
Elfering, 49, one of the world's foremost collectors
of 20th-century photography, owns iconic prints by such greats as Helmut Newton,
Avedon, Man Ray, Robert Mapplethorpe, Guy Bourdin, Cindy Sherman, Diane Arbus
and legendary photographer Horst P. Horst.
He first encountered the work of Horst in the early
Eighties when the then 25-year-old German walked into Hamilton's Gallery while
vacationing in London.
Elfering recalled he was instantly taken with the
dramatic portraits but was unable to afford even a single print.
Instead, he left with a book and a poster. In 1998 he
acquired the complete Horst archive.
"It just shows," says Elfering, "how times can
change."
"I started with a book and a poster, then moved on to
smaller prints, then more expensive ones, and finally the estate," says
Elfering.
And now he's letting most of it go - 135 lots - in a
sale in New York on April 10, 2008.
But not before giving the public a chance to see them
one more time.
(Source: China Daily/Agencies)
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