The rare artworks hit the bidding block at Bonhams in London this week where the bizarre watercolors -- playful appropriations of traditional lithograph studies -- fetched a total of £726,700, or a little over $1.1 million. Titles like "Hasty Plum" and "Penitent Peach" present some of the world's most expensive, slightly erotic depictions of fruit in the history of art.
Originally commissioned in 1969 by German publisher Jean-Paul Schneider, this was the first time the watercolors were available to the public since 2001, when the botanical studies briefly went on view at the Galerie Orangerie-Reinz in Cologne, Germany. The pieces had previously been in Schneider's private collection until the sale at Bonhams this week, when "a private European collector saw them there and fell in love," Bonhams' Department Director of Impressionist and Modern Art, William O'Reilly, told The Huffington Post in an e-mail.
Scroll through Dali's takes on 19th century scientific illustrations at The Huffington Post.
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