




Kaaba key sets new Islamic art auction record
A 12 century key to the Kaaba in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, the holiest site in Islam, sold for 9.2 million pounds ($18.1 million) late on Wednesday, setting a new record for an Islamic work of art at auction.
Thursday, 10 April 2008 13:50
The Abbasid period key, made
of iron and measuring 37 cm long, sold at Sotheby's in London for more than 18
times its pre-sale estimate and was bought anonymously. It is the only known
example to remain in private hands.
The key is engraved with the words: "This is what was made for the Holy
House of God during the time of the Imam son of Imam al-Muqtadi Abu Ja'far al-Mustansir
Abu'l-Abbas 573."
It was the highlight of the auctioneer's Islamic sale, which realised 21.5
million pounds, in excess of the pre-sale high estimate of 13.1 million pounds
and a new record for an Islamic art auction.
"Remarkably, the sale realised more than the Islamic department's annual total
in 2007, demonstrating beyond doubt the burgeoning and international demand for
Islamic Art," said Edward Gibbs, head of Sotheby's Islamic art department.
The previous record for a work of Islamic art sold at auction is believed to be
a bronze fountainhead in the form of a hind dating from mid-10th century Spain.
It sold at Christie's in 1997 for 3.6 million pounds.
On Tuesday, Christie's held its own London Islamic sale which fetched 11.8
million pounds, including a leaf from a mid-seventh century copy of the Holy
Koran sold for 2.5 million pounds versus a pre-sale estimate of 100-150,000
pounds.
It was a new world auction record for an Islamic manuscript, the
company said.
In addition to the example sold at Sotheby's this week, there are 58 recorded
Kaaba keys, all of which are held in museums.
Most, 54, are in the Topkapi Palace Museum in Istanbul Turkey, two are in the
Nuhad Es-Said Collection, one is in the Louvre in Paris and one is in the
Islamic Art Museum in Cairo.
Sotheby's called the Kaaba key "arguably one of the most important symbols of
Islam". According to the auctioneer, the tradition of dedicating the key to each
caliph appears to have originated with the Abbasid caliphs in Baghdad.
"As a physical object -- the key to the holiest building of an entire religion
-- it demonstrates the authority of the caliph and is the ultimate emblem of
power," Sotheby's said. The Kaaba is the ancient cubic shrine which all Muslims
face when they perform their daily prayers, and is located at the centre of the
Grand Mosque in Mecca.