At Christie’s auction house in New York, USA, on 11 May 2015, Swiss sculptor Alberto Giacometti’s 1947 work L’homme au doigt (Pointing Man) was sold for $141 m (£98.9 m), the most ever paid for a bronze statue at auction. The 180-cm sculpture shows a man – tall and spindly (Giacometti’s trademark style) – with one arm extended in a pointing gesture. It is believed that the left arm was originally curled around a second figure, which Giacometti subsequently removed.

Created at short notice for an exhibition in New York in 1947, Giacometti reportedly made L’homme au doigt in a single night between midnight and 9 am. He produced a total of six casts of the piece, most of which are in museums around the world.

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History of Auctioneering

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