
Before the prospective customers  could start making bid for the sale of this great connoisseur of art, a pool of  praises was around declaring it to be the 'finest sculpture on earth' taking it  for granted that the market agreed with him.
 The record-breaking sale managed to break the  previous record of the highest price paid for a sculpture that stood at $29.1  million for the Sotheby's for Picasso's "Tete de Femme (Dora Maar)" during last  month.
 The breaking sale of the sculpture has set a record  in the industry of artistic creation of sculpture and antiquities.
 The holder and now seller of this masterpiece  sculpture is a benevolent trust recognized by the family of Alastair Bradley  Martin, a former chairman of Brooklyn Museum who tagged this sculpture to his  name around 59 years ago.
 Featured above is a Guennol Lioness that is over  eight-centimetres tall and has bagged the tag of being the one of the last known  magnum opus from the dawn of civilisation residual in private  hands.
 Counted five bidders were battling for the  sculpture, three on the telephone and two in the room.
 A miniature and awfully rare 5,000- year-old white  sandstone sculpture from ancient Mesopotamia got sold for $57.2 mn in New  York.
 The proud English buyer wishes to stay  anonymous.
 










 
 
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