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YSL auction of a lifetime set to fetch $380M

  • Story Highlights
  • Auction of late fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent's art nets top sale prices
  • 700 pieces from Matisse to Brancusi could fetch €300M ($384M), Christie's says
  • Auction preview drew tens of thousands of visitors to Grand Palais hall in Paris
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PARIS, France (CNN) -- A three-day auction of art and furnishings that belonged to the late fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent is seeing sale prices far exceeding estimates, with dollar amounts almost as spectacular as the range of items being sold.

Yves Saint Laurent's private collection takes in masterpieces by Picasso, Mondrian and Matisse, Art Deco gems, bronzes, enamels and antiques.

Yves Saint Laurent's private collection takes in masterpieces by Picasso, Mondrian and Matisse, Art Deco gems, bronzes, enamels and antiques.

A list of artwork already sold in the Monday-to-Wednesday auction in Paris shows pieces from Matisse to Brancusi fetching tens of millions of dollars, according to the Web site of Christie's, the auction house that is holding the sale.

The largest amount so far was €35,905,000 ($45,264,579), the price realized for French Impressionist Henri Matisse's painting "Les coucous, tapis bleu et rose." That was more than double Christie's estimate of €12 to 18 million ($15,526,268 and $23,289,403).

A Brancusi sculpture valued at €15 to 20 million ($19,407,836 to $25,877,114) sold for 29,185,000 ($36,792,835). "Madame L.R. (Portrait de Mme L.R.)" is an example of the artist's early work in wood and takes its influence from African art.

More than 700 items are up for sale at the auction, which Christie's estimates could bring in as much as €300 million ($384 million).

"It is one of the most sumptuous private collections of our time, a French paragon of quality and taste," Christie's said of the auction.

Saint Laurent, who died last year, bequeathed his joint share of the collection to a foundation he ran with his partner. His lifelong companion, Pierre Berge, decided to sell the entire collection and to create a new foundation dedicated mainly to scientific research and the fight against AIDS, Christie's said.

The collection displays great quality and creative harmony, experts say.

"They were extremely rigorous," Thomas Seydoux, an expert in 20th-century paintings, said of Saint Laurent and Berge. "Every work has been chosen for a date, for its artist, for its subject, for its pedigree and is the highest possible standard."

The auction preview over the weekend drew tens of thousands of visitors to the Grand Palais hall in Paris. It was a glimpse into the reclusive designer's life with Berge, a stylish and lavishly decorated existence that few people saw and most could hardly imagine.

"The first highlight was going into the apartment for the first time and really getting to grips with the quantity of material and the quality of the material that Mr. Saint Laurent and Mr. Berge put together," Christie's Vice President Jonathan Rendell told CNN. "You don't often walk into a house like this, and I've been doing this for a very long time."

Paintings by Picasso, Mondrian and Manet join sculptures, furnishings, ancient art and jewelry at the auction. Some of the artwork inspired Saint Laurent's designs, while others were simply decoration.

"There are works from every corner of the globe," said Philippe Garner, an expert in 20th-century decor. It's "really a wide range of cultures and works from so many different centuries."

Two paintings by Piet Mondrian sold for eight-digit figures. One of the artist's familiar grid patterns with blue, red and yellow sold for €21,569,000 ($27,191,525), more than double the estimate of €10 million ($12,938,557). Another grid pattern in black and gray, with the same estimate, sold for €14,401,000.

Most of the items came from the apartment on Paris's Left Bank where Saint Laurent and Berge lived for decades. Christie's re-created whole rooms for the sale to convey the pair's taste and how they lived among their collection.

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At least two pieces in the sale are controversial: sculptured bronze heads of a rat and a rabbit, from China's Qing Dynasty. The Chinese government says they were stolen during the 19th century and belong to Beijing.

The sculptures are still up for auction and are estimated to fetch €8 to 10 million ($10,350,846 to $12,938,557).

CNN Senior International Correspondent Jim Bittermann contributed to this report.

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