A
detailed and and frequently updated list of the most expensive paintings ever by
G. Fernández - theartwolf.com
There
are a lot of websites displaying "the 10 most expensive paintings ever sold"
or similar lists. But unfortunately, most of these lists are incorrect, often
being obsoletes, often ignoring the private sales and showing only those
pictures sold at auction. This list showcases paintings sold at either public
auctions or private sales, and it is frequently updated. In addition to
'confirmed' sales, at the end of the list you can find a few works whose price
has not being confirmed despite the rumours about exorbitant sums
1.
PAUL CÉZANNE
"The
Card Players", 1892/93
$250
million
Private
sale, 2011. Seller: George Embiricos. Buyer: Royal Family of Qatar.
This
is the last version of this famous composition by Paul Cézanne still in private
hands. The fabulous psychological intensity in the faces of the players make
this painting a masterpiece of post-impressionist art.
2.
JACKSON POLLOCK
"Number
5, 1948", 1948
$140
million
Private
sale, 2006. Seller: David Geffen. Buyer: Unknown (rumoured to be Mexican
businessman David Martinez)
Right
now, this stunning "drip" by Jackson Pollock is the most expensive
contemporary painting ever sold, though the exact price was never confirmed
(but the price displayed here is generally accepted to be true). The exorbitant
sum demonstrates not only the strenght of the Art market, but also the increasing
interest for the contemporary works of Art.
3.
WILLEM DE KOONING
"Woman
III", 1952-53
$137.5
million
Private
sale, 2006. Seller: David Geffen. Buyer: Steven Cohen
This
painting is the only "Woman" by Willem de Kooning still in private
hands. One of this women -described by T. Hess as "black goddesses"-
has been chosen by theartwolf.com as one of the 50 masterworks of the history
of painting.
4.
GUSTAV KLIMT
"Adele
Bloch-bauer I", 1907
$135
million
Private
sale, 2006. Buyer: Ronald Lauder.
The
acquisition of this iconic work by cosmetic magnate Ronald Lauder caused a
shock in the Art world, not only for the spectacular sum paid for it, but also
for the way it was sold, far away from the noisy auction houses. The painting
was part of a group of five canvases which had been recently returned to the
heirs of Ferdinand Bloch-Bauer. The Nazis confiscated his paintings during the
World War II, and after the war, the canvases were placed at the National
Gallery of Austria in 1948.
5.
EDVARD MUNCH
"The
Scream", 1895
$119.9
million
Sotheby's
New York , May 2012. Buyer: anonymous
This
iconic work is the most expensive painting ever sold at auction. The work is
the most colorful of the four versions of Edvard Munch’s masterpiece 'The
Scream', and the only one still in private hands
6.
PABLO PICASSO
"Nude,
Green Leaves and Bust", 1932
$106.5
million
Christie's
New York , May 2010. Buyer: anonymous
This
sensual and colorful masterpiece the most expensive work by Picasso ever sold
at auction. The work, formerly in the collection of Mrs. Sidney F. Brody, had
been never exhibited in public since 1961
7.
PABLO PICASSO
"Garçon
a la pipe", 1904
$104.1
million
Sotheby's
New York , May 2004. Buyer: anonymous
The
sale of this young smoker was a milestone in the Art auctions world. It broke
the record that Vincent van Gogh held since 1990, and it was the first time
that the $100 million barrier was broken. Although the name of the buyer was
not revealed, some sources says that he could be Guido Barilla, the Italian
pasta magnate.
8.
ANDY WARHOL
"Eight
Elvises", 1963
$100
million
Private
sale, 2008. Buyer: anonymous
This
unique work by Warhol, measuring over 12 feet long, had been at the collection
of Roman collector Annibale Berlingieri for over 40 years. It surpassed the
previous world record for a work by Warhol, the $71.7 million paid at
Christie's New York in 2007 for "Green Car Crash (Green Burning Car
I)"
9.
PABLO PICASSO
"Dora
Maar au chat", 1941
$95.2
million
Sotheby's
New York , May 2006. Buyer: anonymous
Dora
Maar (1907-1997) met Picasso in 1930, and their relationship lasted until 1946.
A native from Paris, raised in Argentina and therefore fluent in Spanish, Maar
was one of Picasso's favourite models. This painting, measuring 130- 97 cm, was
recently rediscovered and authenticated by Picasso's daughter, Maya Widmaier
Picasso. You can read theArtWolf's article informing about this sale in this
link.
10.
TITIAN
"Diana
and Actaeon", 1556-1559
$91
million
Private
sale, February 2009. Buyer: United Kingdom
This
work have all the splendour and glory of the best of Titian's 'painted
poetries'. It was previously at the Duke of Sutherland collection, who offered
it to the U.K. It has a "sister picture", "Diana and
Callisto", bought for £45 million ($72 million) in 2012.
MORE
PRICES OVER $80 MILLION
Gustav
Klimt
"Adele Bloch-bauer II ", 1912
$87.9 million(2006) - Sold only
a few months later than Klimt's first version of Adele, this extremely
appealing canvas was the star lot in a highly succesful auction in which four
works by Klimt -including this- totalled a stunning $192 million
Mark
Rothko
"Orange, Red, Yellow", 1961
$86.9 million(2012) - This 1961
painting was the centerpiece of the Pincus Collection, sold at Christie's on
May 8 2012.
Francis
Bacon
"Tryptich, 1976", 1976
$86.3 million(2008) - Francis Bacon
is one of the most sought-after names in the Art market, and this work easily
surpassed its impressive $70 million pre-sale estimate at Sotheby's.
Vincent
van Gogh
"Portrait of Doctor Gachet", 1890
$82.5 million (1990) -
The story about this famous and brilliant work resumes by itself the
"Japanese buyer boom" of the late 80s and early 90s: great painting,
sold for an astronomic amount of money to a Japanese buyer (Ryoei Saito), who
was later ruined, and the whereabouts of the painting are now unknown. Some
sources places it in Europe , waiting for its return to the Art market
Claude
Monet
"Le bassin aux nymphéas", 1919
$80.6 million (2008) - This
green pictorial symphony almost duplicated it pre-sale highest estimate and
smashed the previous auction record for a Monet when it was auctioned at
Christie's London, June 2008
Jasper
Johns
"False Start", 1959
$80 million (2006) - This iconic work by
Johns, sold by David Geffen (see Pollock's 'Number 5' and Kooning's 'Woman'),
is the highest price ever paid for a work by a living artist
Andy
Warhol
"Turquoise Marilyn", 1964
$80 million(2007) - Bought by Mr.
Steve Cohen, the price was not confirmed but is generally accepted to be true
MORE
PRICES OVER $70 MILLION
Pierre
Auguste Renoir
"Le moulin de la Galette", 1876
$78.1 million (1990)
- Another victim of the Japanese "buy it and forget it" boom was this
masterpiece by Renoir, the little sister of the version currently exhibited at
the Orsay. The painting was bought by Ryoei Saito (see Van Gogh's 'Portrait of
Dr. Gachet) for $78.1 million at Sotheby's, 1990, and sold in 1997 to a
"European private collector" for $50 million
Peter
Paul Rubens
"Massacre of the innocents", 1610/11
$76.7 million
(£49.5 million) - Bought by Kenneth Thompson at Sotheby's London, July 2002.
The flamboyant and dramatic work by Rubens -though recently some voices
discussing its authenticity have been heard- could also fight for the title of
"most unexpected success": Christie's had estimated its price at a
mere £5 million
Mark
Rothko
"White center (yellow, pink and lavender on rose)", 1950
$72.8 million (2007) - Once in the collection of David Rockefeller, the work
was sold at Sotheby's New York for more than $72 million, making it one of the
most expensive contemporary artworks ever sold at auction
Titian
"Diana and Callisto", 1556-59
$72 million (2012) - The Duke of
Sutherland offered the painting to the United Kingdom for £45 million in 2009.
Later, the Duke and his family agreed to a further reduction of the asking
price to £45 million.
Andy
Warhol
"Green Car Crash (Green Burning Car)", 1963
$71.7 million
(2007) - Sold two days after the work above, in a record $384 million sale of
contemporary Art
Vincent
van Gogh
"Portrait of the artiste sans barbe", 1889
$71.5 million
(1998) - Van Gogh once again. The sale of this great picture -not a
masterpiece, however- represented an extraordinary success -the auction house
had estimated it in less than a half of its final price- and began the
recuperation of the Art market after the crisis of the middle 90s.
Titian
"Portrait of Alfonso d'Avalos", 1533
$70 million(2004) - A sum
never confirmed, but also never denied, by its buyer, the Getty Museum. The
glorious painting -it worths every dollar paid for it- was exhibited for many
years in the Louvre Museum, lent by the owners, and in fact the Parisian Museum
had the opportunity of acquire it for a sum much lower than the $70 million
paid by the Californian museum.
MORE
PRICES OVER $60 MILLION
Amedeo
Modigliani
"Nude Sitting on a Divan (La Belle Romaine)", 1917
$68.9 million (2010) - World auction record for a Modigliani
Thomas
Eakins
"The Gross clinic", 1875
$68 million(2006) - The picture,
previously in the Thomas Jefferson University, was purchased in november 2006
by the National Gallery of Washington and the new Crystal Bridges Museum of
American Art, setting a record for a 19th-century American painting. You can
read more in this link
Andy
Warhol
"Men in her life", 1962
$63.4 million(2010) - Sold at
Phillips de Pury & Company
Willem
de Kooning
"Police Gazette ", 1955
$63 million(2006) - Bought by
Steven Cohen, at the time one of the leading forces on the Art market (see
Kooning's 'Woman III'), this acquisition -completed just months before his
failed attempt to purchase Picasso's "The dream"- is still one of the
highest prices ever paid for a work by a contemporary artist.
Paul
Cezanne
"Rideau, crouchon et compotier", 1893/94
$60.5 million
(1999) - World auction record for a Cézanne
Kazimir
Malevich
"Suprematist Composition", 1916
$60 million (2008) - The
painting was once in the collection of the Stedelijk Museum, and then it was
returned to the artist's heirs.
MORE
PRICES OVER $50 MILLION
Vincent
van Gogh
"Wheat field with cypresses", 1889
$57 million (1993) -
The third van Gogh in this list. The price is really spectacular if we consider
that it was paid in 1993, in the middle of the recession after the boom of the
late 80s. The philanthropist Walter Annenberg lent the work to the Metropolitan
Museum shortly afterwards.
Pablo
Picasso
"Femme aux bras croisés", 1904
$55 million (2000)
Vincent
van Gogh
"Irises", 1888
$53.9 million (1991) - Later resold to the
Getty Museum in Malibú, California
Francis
Bacon: "Study for Innocent X", 1962 - $52.7 million (2007) - Sold at
the same auction in which Mark Rothko's "White center (yellow, pink and
lavender on rose)" went for $72.8 million (see above)
Pablo
Picasso
"Les noces de Pierrette", 1904
$51.9 million (1989)
TRUE
OR HYPE? NOT CONFIRMED SUMS
LEONARDO
DA VINCI(attributed to)
"Madonna
dei fusi", 1501
$150
million
Private
sale, late 90s. Buyer: private collector, New Work
Let's
put a lot of question marks on this sum. In fact, it is almost sure that this
almost offensive number is an exaggerated hype. Nevertheless, the spectacular
price suggested -it would be the most expensive painting ever sold- deserves to
be commented here. You can read more about this painting in this article
VINCENT
VAN GOGH
"Self-portrait
with bandaged ear", 1889
$90
million
Private
sale, late 90s. Buyer: Niarchos family
This
highly important work was previously in the collection of Leigh B. Block in
Chicago , and then it was quietly purchased by the Niarchos family. The sum
-never confirmed- is not absurd given the high quality of the painting.
SOONER
OR LATER. FUTURE SALES
There
are still several Art masterpieces in private hands, waiting to shine at the
Art market. You can find them at our article about The most important paintings
in private hands
source:
Gabriel
Fernández
www.theartwolf.com
Nice info Mr. DAvidson. Thank you.
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