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‘Vent du nord,’ Canada’s second most expensive artwork, sells for over $7.4M

The Jean Paul Riopelle painting "Vent du nord" is shown in a handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Heffel Auction

TORONTO – A painting by the late Quebec artist Jean Paul Riopelle sold for more than $7.4 million on Wednesday, good for second on the list of Canada’s most expensive works of art.

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Going into the Heffel Fine Art Auction House’s spring sale, the painting “Vent du nord” had a conservative pre-sale estimate of $1 million to $1.5 million.

The final sale price of $7,438,750, which includes a buyer’s premium, trails only Lawren Harris’s “Mountain Forms.” That painting sold at a Heffel auction in November for $11.21 million, more than doubling the previous Canadian art record established in 2002 for Paul Kane’s 1845 oil canvas “Scene in the Northwest – Portrait.”

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“Vent du nord,” which adorned the cover of the auction’s catalogue, was described by Heffel as providing “endless adventures for the eye.”

“Historically, Riopelle is important because his work was a focal point for debates about the increasingly wide and fractious gap between post-World War II European and American abstract painting,” reads the Heffel auction catalogue. “In Europe and the U.S.A., he was seen as much as a French and specifically a Parisian artist as Canadian.”

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Six other works by Harris were set to go on the auction block Wednesday evening, including two sketches with pre-sale estimates of between $600,000 and $800,000.

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