At last, my cousin Leonora Carrington is queen of the art world

The surrealist has become the highest-selling British female artist in history. Her cousin and biographer tells the story of her scandalous life

Leonora Carrington at her home in Mexico City in 2000
Leonora Carrington at her home in Mexico City in 2000
REUTERS
The Times

On a spring day in 2009 I phoned my cousin Leonora Carrington with some big news. A painting by her, The Giantess (c 1950), had been sold at auction in New York for almost $1.5 million, the first of her works to break the million-dollar barrier.

It took me a while to convince her this wasn’t a joke, so I can’t imagine what her reaction would have been if I could have called her now. On May 15 another of her paintings, The Distractions of Dagobert (1945), went under the hammer at Sotheby’s in New York for $28.5 million. Which means Leonora is the highest-selling British female artist in history and the fifth highest-selling female artist globally, trumped only by Georgia O’Keeffe, Louise Bourgeois, Joan