Exhibitions Giacometti's work has been the subject of numerous solo exhibitions including the
High Museum of Art, Atlanta (1970);
Centre Pompidou, Paris (2007–2008);
Pushkin Museum, Moscow
"The Studio of Alberto Giacometti: Collection of the Fondation Alberto et Annette Giacometti" (2008);
Kunsthal Rotterdam (2008);
Fondation Beyeler, Basel (2009); Buenos Aires (2012);
Kunsthalle Hamburg (2013);
Pera Museum, Istanbul (2015);
Tate Modern, London (2017);
Vancouver Art Gallery,
"Alberto Giacometti: A Line Through Time" (2019);
National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin (2022). The
National Portrait Gallery, London's first solo exhibition of Giacometti's work,
Pure Presence opened to five-star reviews on 13 October 2015 (to 10 January 2016, in honour of the fiftieth anniversary of the artist's death). From April 2019, the
Prado Museum in Madrid, has been highlighting Giacometti in an exhibition.
Public collections Giacometti's work is displayed in numerous public collections, including: •
Albright-Knox Art Gallery,
Buffalo •
Art Institute of Chicago •
Baltimore Museum of Art,
Baltimore, Maryland •
Bechtler Museum of Modern Art,
Charlotte, North Carolina •
Berggruen Museum, Berlin •
Botero Museum,
Bogotá, Colombia •
Bündner Kunstmuseum Chur, Switzerland •
Carnegie Museum of Art,
Pittsburgh •
Detroit Institute of Arts •
Fondation Beyeler, Basel •
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C. •
Holstebro, Denmark •
J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, California •
Johnson Museum of Art,
Cornell University •
Kunsthaus Zürich •
Kunstmuseum Basel •
Leeum, Samsung Museum of Art,
South Korea •
Los Angeles County Museum of Art •
Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark •
Minneapolis Institute of Art •
Museum of Modern Art, New York •
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston •
National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. •
National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa •
North Carolina Museum of Art,
Raleigh, North Carolina •
Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts,
University of East Anglia •
Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art, Scottsdale, Arizona •
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York •
Tate, London •
Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art, Iran •
University of Michigan Museum of Art •
Wadsworth Atheneum,
Hartford •
Walker Art Center,
Minneapolis •
Vancouver Art Gallery •
Yale University Art Gallery,
New Haven Art foundations The
Fondation Alberto et Annette Giacometti, having received a bequest from Alberto Giacometti's widow Annette, holds a collection of circa 5,000 works, frequently displayed around the world through exhibitions and long-term loans. A public interest institution, the Foundation was created in 2003 and aims at promoting, disseminating, preserving and protecting Alberto Giacometti's work. The Alberto-Giacometti-Stiftung established in Zürich in 1965, holds a smaller collection of works acquired from the collection of the Pittsburgh industrialist
G. David Thompson.
Notable sales According to the record, Giacometti has sold the two
most expensive sculptures in history. In November 2000, a Giacometti bronze,
Grande Femme Debout I, sold for
$14.3 million.
Grande Femme Debout II was bought by the
Gagosian Gallery for $27.4 million at
Christie's auction in New York City on 6 May 2008. ''
L'Homme qui marche I'', a life-sized bronze sculpture of a man, became one of the most expensive works of art, and at the time was the most expensive sculpture ever sold at auction. It was in February 2010, when it sold for £65 million (US$104.3 million) at
Sotheby's, London.
Grande tête mince, a large bronze bust, sold for $53.3 million just three months later. ''
L'Homme au doigt (Pointing Man'') sold for $126 million (£81,314,455.32), or $141.3 million with fees, in Christie's May 2015, "Looking Forward to the Past" sale in New York City. The work had been in the same private collection for 45 years. As of now it is the most expensive sculpture sold at auction. After being showcased on the BBC programme
Fake or Fortune, a plaster sculpture, titled
Gazing Head, sold in 2019 for half a million pounds. In April 2021, Giacometti's small-scale bronze sculpture, Nu debout II (1953), was sold from a Japanese private collection and went for £1.5 million ($2 million), against an estimate of £800,000 ($1.1 million).
Other legacy Giacometti created the monument on the grave of
Gerda Taro at
Père Lachaise Cemetery. According to a lecture by
Michael Peppiatt at Cambridge University on 8 July 2010, Giacometti, who had a friendship with author/playwright
Samuel Beckett, created a tree for the
set of a 1961 Paris production of
Waiting for Godot. Giacometti and his sculpture ''L'Homme qui marche I'' appear on the former
100 Swiss franc banknote. In 2001, he was included in the
Painting the Century: 101 Portrait Masterpieces 1900–2000 exhibition held at the
National Portrait Gallery, London. Giacometti's sculptural style has featured in advertisements for various financial institutions, starting in 1987 with the
Shoes ad for
Royal Bank of Scotland directed by
Gerry Anderson. The 2017 film
Final Portrait retells the story of his friendship with the biographer
James Lord. Giacometti is played by
Geoffrey Rush. == References ==