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Frida Kahlo dreamscape estimated between $40m to $60m could break artist's auction record

El Sueňo is from a major Surrealist collection amassed by Nesuhi and Selma Ertegun, being sold at Sotheby's New York this November

Kabir Jhala
19 September 2025
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Frida Kahlo, El Sueño (La Cama), 1940, is estimated between $40m to $60m at Sotheby's 

Courtesy of Sotheby's

Frida Kahlo, El Sueño (La Cama), 1940, is estimated between $40m to $60m at Sotheby's

Courtesy of Sotheby's

A self-portrait by Frida Kahlo could best the artist's auction record when it is offered by Sotheby's in New York this November.

El Sueño (La Cama) (the dream, the bed), painted in 1940, depicts a slumbering Kahlo wreathed in vines and floating in the sky, while a large skeleton, wired with explosives and clutching a bouquet, lies atop the bed's canopy. The work references real life: Kahlo did in fact place a smaller papier-mâché skeleton atop her bed, to symbolise the continuity between life and death, a theme prevalent throughout her work. Her husband, the artist Diego Rivera, would joke that it was her lover.

The oil on canvas, which measures 74cm by 98cm, has been not been guaranteed—though this does not rule out the possibility of it being pre-sold closer to the auction. Should it sell near its low estimate, it will achieve the artist's highest price at auction. This title is presently claimed by Diego y yo (1949), depicting the artist and Rivera, which netted $34.9m (with fees) at Sotheby's New York in 2021. Kahlo's paintings are understood to have sold for much more on the private market.

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Moreover, should the work surpass its low estimate, it could also break the record for the most expensive work by any female artist, which currently stands at $44.4m for Georgia O Keeffe's Jimson Weed/White Flower No 1 (1932), made at Sotheby's New York in 2014.

El Sueňo is one of a number of gems from a major private collection to have been consigned to the November sale, Sotheby's announced today. Other highlights from the collection include Interior with Sudden Joy (1951) by Dorothea Tanning, estimated between $2m and $3m, which is likely to beat her $2.3m record. Two paintings by Magritte, La Représentation (1962, est $4m-$6m) and La Révélation du présent (1936, est $2m-$3m) and on by Dalí, Symbiose de la tête aux coquillages (1931, est $2m-$3m), are also offered from the collection.

Dorothea Tanning, Interior with Sudden Joy (1951)

While Sotheby's has declined to identify the collection, The Art Newspaper understands it to be that of the Turkish-American record label executive Nesuhi Ertegun and his wife Selma. Nesuhi died in 1989, and two years later his collection was shown alongside that of his friend, Daniel Filipacchi, at the Solomon R Guggenheim Museum in New York, for the exhibition Surrealism, two private eyes. Every work announced by Sotheby's today was exhibited at this Guggenheim show as part of the Nesuhi Ertegun collection. In the exhibition catalogue, the museum's then director, Thomas Krens, described both collections as "perhaps the finest holdings of Surrealist art in private hands today".

Selma, who was 35 years Nesuhi's junior, died in December 2024. She is survived by the two children she shared with her husband.

The couple were related to another prominent collector of Surrealism, the interior designer Mica Ertegun, who was married to Nesuhi's brother, Ahmet. The Mica Ertegun collection was sold at Christie's New York last year, led by Magritte’s L'empire des lumières (1954), which broke the artist's record, making $121.m (with fees).

The consignment of the Nesuhi and Selma Ertegun collection comes hot on the heels of a major sale for the category at Sotheby's in London this week, of art from the Hyde Park home of Pauline Karpidas. Anchored by a trove of 23 Surrealist works, the sale made a total of £73m (with fees) against a £60m high estimate (all estimates calculated without fees), becoming the most expensive single-owner collection ever sold in Europe. Leading the sale was Magritte's La Statue Volante which made £10.1m with fees.

Surrealist art appears to be cresting a wave. According to a report released this month by Sotheby's and ArtTactic, auction sales for this category have increased from $726.1m to $800.7m and the genre’s share of the global art market has nearly doubled from 9.3% to 16.8%.

Art marketFrida KahloAuctionsSotheby's
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