<p>A creature from the late Cretaceous period smashed sales records Tuesday in an auction that also included works by Picasso, Pollock and Monet.</p>.<p>The Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton, nicknamed Stan, closed the 20th Century Evening Sale, nearly quadrupling its high estimate of $8 million to bring in $31.8 million, with fees. In the 20-minute war bidding war that ended with buyers on the telephone in London and New York, the price rocketed up from a start of $3 million, with the final bid ultimately taken in New York by James Hyslop, head of the auction house’s Scientific Instruments, Globes and Natural History department. The buyer has not been identified.</p>.<p>It’s rare that archaeologists find Tyrannosaur fossils as complete as Stan, according to Hyslop, and even rarer that such skeletons appear on the market. The last time a comparable specimen came to auction was in 1997, when a T. rex named Sue sold for $8.36 million — or nearly $13.5 million today, given the rate of inflation — to the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago.</p>.<p>“I’ll never forget the moment I came face to face with him for the first time,” in Colorado, said Hyslop. “He looked even larger and more ferocious than I’d imagined.”</p>.<p>Christie’s New York, facing the pandemic’s unpredictable art market, found a way to break with auction tradition. For starters, it chose to stage the auction in early October, avoiding its usual November date that this year would have followed the presidential election; the company hopes to mount another large sale before the December holidays.</p>.<p>Christie’s has also retrofitted its typical in-person experience for digital audiences by live streaming the sale with commentary from market experts, reducing its famously thick catalogs to miniature versions and overhauling the staging of its auction with help from an outside production company, Gradient Films.</p>.<p>“These are not temporary changes,” Adrien Meyer, Christie’s chairman of global private sales, said in an interview before the auction. “When we go beyond our traditional values, it’s because there is a feeling that clients will respond.”</p>.<p>That effort included featuring the dinosaur fossil among impressionist and modern paintings.</p>.<p>The decision to put Stan at the forefront of the marketing campaign seems partly responsible for attracting interest in the larger sale. Last month, Christie’s redesigned its public galleries so that the dinosaur could peer onto Rockefeller Center from the auctioneer’s flagship store, where it will remain on view through Oct. 21. The fossil, named after the amateur palaeontologist Stan Sacrison who discovered the remains in 1987, has spent recent years at the Black Hills Institute of Geological Research in South Dakota for study.</p>.<p>Standing 13 feet high and 40 feet long, Stan casts an imposing shadow. Over the past two decades, researchers have theorized that punctures in Stan’s skull and fused neck vertebrae demonstrate that this Tyrannosaur was a warrior, one likely to have survived attacks from his own species. Scientists also estimate that the dinosaur would have weighed nearly 8 tons when it was alive, more than twice the weight of a modern African elephant.</p>.<p>Stan brought energy to an otherwise muted auction. Of the 59 works, four were withdrawn before the auction began; nine works failed to sell.</p>
<p>A creature from the late Cretaceous period smashed sales records Tuesday in an auction that also included works by Picasso, Pollock and Monet.</p>.<p>The Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton, nicknamed Stan, closed the 20th Century Evening Sale, nearly quadrupling its high estimate of $8 million to bring in $31.8 million, with fees. In the 20-minute war bidding war that ended with buyers on the telephone in London and New York, the price rocketed up from a start of $3 million, with the final bid ultimately taken in New York by James Hyslop, head of the auction house’s Scientific Instruments, Globes and Natural History department. The buyer has not been identified.</p>.<p>It’s rare that archaeologists find Tyrannosaur fossils as complete as Stan, according to Hyslop, and even rarer that such skeletons appear on the market. The last time a comparable specimen came to auction was in 1997, when a T. rex named Sue sold for $8.36 million — or nearly $13.5 million today, given the rate of inflation — to the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago.</p>.<p>“I’ll never forget the moment I came face to face with him for the first time,” in Colorado, said Hyslop. “He looked even larger and more ferocious than I’d imagined.”</p>.<p>Christie’s New York, facing the pandemic’s unpredictable art market, found a way to break with auction tradition. For starters, it chose to stage the auction in early October, avoiding its usual November date that this year would have followed the presidential election; the company hopes to mount another large sale before the December holidays.</p>.<p>Christie’s has also retrofitted its typical in-person experience for digital audiences by live streaming the sale with commentary from market experts, reducing its famously thick catalogs to miniature versions and overhauling the staging of its auction with help from an outside production company, Gradient Films.</p>.<p>“These are not temporary changes,” Adrien Meyer, Christie’s chairman of global private sales, said in an interview before the auction. “When we go beyond our traditional values, it’s because there is a feeling that clients will respond.”</p>.<p>That effort included featuring the dinosaur fossil among impressionist and modern paintings.</p>.<p>The decision to put Stan at the forefront of the marketing campaign seems partly responsible for attracting interest in the larger sale. Last month, Christie’s redesigned its public galleries so that the dinosaur could peer onto Rockefeller Center from the auctioneer’s flagship store, where it will remain on view through Oct. 21. The fossil, named after the amateur palaeontologist Stan Sacrison who discovered the remains in 1987, has spent recent years at the Black Hills Institute of Geological Research in South Dakota for study.</p>.<p>Standing 13 feet high and 40 feet long, Stan casts an imposing shadow. Over the past two decades, researchers have theorized that punctures in Stan’s skull and fused neck vertebrae demonstrate that this Tyrannosaur was a warrior, one likely to have survived attacks from his own species. Scientists also estimate that the dinosaur would have weighed nearly 8 tons when it was alive, more than twice the weight of a modern African elephant.</p>.<p>Stan brought energy to an otherwise muted auction. Of the 59 works, four were withdrawn before the auction began; nine works failed to sell.</p>