3 min read · 05 Jun 2026




Girl Skipping Rope by Huguette Caland sold for $341,700. Image courtesy of Bonhams
A work by Huguette Caland was the headline sale at Bonhams 'Modern & Contemporary Middle Eastern Art' auction on June 4 in London.
The star lot was: Huguette Caland, Girl Skipping Rope (1998), which sold for $341,700, 67% above its $203,900 low estimate. It has been traded twice in the past.

Untitled (No. 143) by Marwan Kassab Bachi sold for $70,500 (1628% above estimate). Image courtesy of Bonhams
The outperformer sold for 1628% above its low estimate. Marwan Kassab Bachi, Untitled (No. 143) (1975), sold for $70,500 ($4,077 low estimate). It has been traded once in the past.
No sales had a guarantee.
27 works were bought-in, including: Mahmoud Sabri, C2 + H5 + OH (from the Quantum Realism Series) (1969), estimated at $81,500 (low) to $108,700 (high). It has not been traded before.
1 work was withdrawn before the sale: Faramarz Pilaram, Untitled (Calligraphic Composition on Red) (1972), estimated at $8,154 (low) to $12,900 (high).
All results include the fees and premiums added to the price of a work of art when the auctioneer's hammer falls. Estimates, sale prices and totals are converted into US dollars. Sale prices are compared to the auction house’s low estimate, which do not include premiums.
Guarantees: Sometimes an auction house guarantees to pay a seller for a work, regardless of whether the bidding reaches the reserve price, a figure that is typically confidential.
Bought-in: If there are no bids for a work, or if bidding falls short of the reserve price, the lot is unsold or “bought-in”.
Withdrawn: This happens when a seller decides, for whatever reason, to withdraw a work before the bidding begins.
Premiums: Typically a sliding-scale of charges paid in addition to the hammer price by the buyer, plus any other fees.
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