Eric P. Widing
Deputy Chairman
New York, Rockefeller Center
Presently head of the American Paintings Department, Eric Widing has worked at Christie’s for over a dozen years. His interest in art started early, when at the age of eleven he purchased an exhibition catalogue on the art of Andrew Wyeth. Prior to joining Christie’s, Mr. Widing worked for seventeen years as a dealer in American Art, first with the Spanierman Gallery in New York. He later served as director of the Richard York Gallery. Subsequently he founded his own gallery, Widing & Peck Fine Art. His gallery represented the Estate of George Bellows and handled important American art from 1750 to 1950 – the focus of Mr. Widing’s entire career. In all, Mr. Widing has spent nearly thirty years in the American Art business.
During Mr. Widing’s tenure at Christie’s, the American Paintings Department has established new world records for artists in virtually every category of American Art. Among them is the 2008 sale of Thomas Moran’s Green River of Wyoming for $17,737,000, the highest price ever achieved at auction for any 19th century American painting. Also in recent years, among other records, Christie’s established a new world record for any painting of the Stieglitz circle with the sale of Marsden Hartley’s Lighthouse for $6,313,000. In the last year alone, Christie’s has established an additional thirty new world records in American art. With respect to private sales, an important part of Christie’s business, Mr. Widing was one of a team of two who sold Thomas Eakins’ The Gross Clinic in 2006 for $68,000,000, the highest price ever achieved for a work of art in the field.
A recognized authority on American painting and sculpture, Mr. Widing is often cited in the national press and has lectured widely at museums and universities across the country. He is a graduate of Williams College, where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and was awarded the Karl E. Weston prize for the best senior thesis in Art History.