LONDON--Christie's sold the most expensive work in this week's Impressionist and Modern evening sales Tuesday: Juan Gris' 1915 still life "The Checked Tablecloth," for $56.7 million.

This high-water mark was reached after a dramatic salesroom tug of war between two Western art dealers that highlighted the absence of aggressive Asian bidding at Christie's and Sotheby's for the type of work by Camille Pissarro, Pablo Picasso and Vincent van Gogh that Eastern collectors have favored in the past.

Lefevre Fine Art, a London dealership, beat out trans-Atlantic dealer Alexander Apsis for the Gris. Unusually, Mr. Apsis stood up several times during the bidding, phone in hand, and at one point bid right as auctioneer Jussi Pylkkänen slammed down his hammer at $49 million, prompting an awkward pause before bidding continued.

The $56.7 million price was unprecedented for Gris, besting the previous record of $28 million for "Violin and Guitar," sold at Christie's New York in 2010.

Sotheby's also set a record with its top work Wednesday, Camille Pissarro's "Boulevard Montmartre, Spring Morning," which at $32 million smashed Pissarro's record of $7 million set at Sotheby's in November 2009.

The house estimated it between $11.3 million and $16.1 million, but at least nine bidders fought to push the price up before it finally went to a phone bidder via a Sotheby's specialist who usually handles U.S.-based clients.

Art history met modern technology during the bidding as art dealer Thomas Seydoux filmed his business partner Lionel Pissarro--the artist's great-grandson--who bid steadily before stopping around $19 million.

The Pissarro received high publicity before the sale, as it was restituted recently to the heirs of Max Silberberg, a Jewish industrialist and prominent collector from whom the work was stolen by the Nazis.

Until last year it hung in the Israel museum as part of the restitution deal, meaning that the work came to market fresh, from a prominent collection, and having been placed in a respected museum--a rare combination that helped push up the price.

Dealers in London predicted that the Pissarro would receive aggressive Asian interest as is common for iconic examples of Impressionist works often passed over by edgier Western collectors.

But the house's Chinese-speaking specialists didn't place any aggressive bids on the work, and Patti Wong, Sotheby's Mandarin-speaking chairwoman of Asia who fields bids for high-profile Asian clients, departed mid-sale.

After the auction, Helena Newman, Sotheby's recently named co-head of Impressionist and Modern art, demurred on the topic, citing only the "deep breadth" of bidding from 44 different countries.

Bidders at both houses proved Picasso to be in high demand; Christie's earned $27.5 million for the 1955 painting "Woman in Turkish Costume in an Armchair," while Sotheby's saw a surprise hit in "Minotaur Composition" a 1936 work on paper depicting cavorting naked ladies and a virile Minotaur.

The piece once belonged to collector Jan Krugier and sold for $19.9 million, a record for a work on paper far above its $1.8 million to $2.5 million estimate. Charlie Moffett, a Manhattan-based specialist who typically works with U.S.-based clients, took the winning bid.

"It had the right ingredients: two similar works are in the Musée Picasso in Paris and it was completely fresh to the market," said Ms. Newman.

Overall both houses fared well, staving off concern from dealers that the success of the Impressionist and Modern sales last November in New York was a one-off in the midst of a financial crisis, rather than a sign that the art world is emerging from a slump.

Christie's revised their total auction estimate to between $184 million and $266 million after they withdrew $49 million worth of Miró works following a botched consignment of works from the Portuguese government. It sold 86% of its 76 offered lots, totaling $288 million.

Sotheby's sold 89% of their works for $266 million total, the highest ever total for a London evening sale, but a figure that fell shy of Christie's despite packing 89 lots into a marathon three-hour event.

Next week both houses will hold sales of postwar and contemporary art.

Write to Mary M. Lane at mary.lane@wsj.com

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