With auction houses achieving new records all the time, don’t believe the moaning minnies, as the outlook for sales is more than on target for the year ahead. It would seem that the sky is indeed the limit where the global art market is concerned, with high-powered collectors prepared now more than ever to push the barrier of $100 million for works by big names, and with it possibly the envelope of good taste. The commodification of art seems to have no limit, much like the depths of the Qatar Royal family’s pockets. So dispense with caution and take some good buying advice; here Artlyst gives you the list of the most expensive works of art, so decide on your upper limit, get your cheque book at the ready, and pay close attention to the room – then check out a top ten that’ll blow your mind as well as every penny you have.

 

10. Alberto Giacometti – L’Homme Qui Marche I

 

Alberto Giacometti sculpture 'Pointing Man' sells for record ... The most expensive Alberto Giacometti artwork is "L'homme au doigt" (Pointing Man), a bronze sculpture from 1947, which sold for a record-breaking $141.3 million at Christie's in May 2015, making it the most expensive sculpture ever sold at auction at that time.

The most expensive Alberto Giacometti artwork is “L’homme au doigt” (Pointing Man), a bronze sculpture from 1947, which sold for a record-breaking $141.3 million at Christie’s in May 2015, making it the most expensive sculpture ever sold at auction at that time.

9. Pablo Picasso’s Women of Algiers (Version ‘O’) (1955)

 

15 Vincent van Gogh, Orchard with Cypresses, 1888 Vincent van Gogh, Orchard with Cypresses, 1888 Photo : Digital image copyright © Christie’s Images Ltd. via Bridgeman Images. Sold for $117 million at Christie’s New York in November 2022 Van Gogh’s Orchard with Cypresses (1888) was the first picture—and not the last, either—that broke the $100 million dollar ceiling during the Paul Allen sale at Christie’s, just as the art market was peeking its head out of a Covid-induced slumber. (Interest rates hibernate for another couple of years, making big-ticket purchases a little easier on the portfolio.) The painting, which depicts the blossoming cherry orchards that surrounded Van Gogh’s Arles residence, is deceptively cool, even though it was painted in the spring. It’s one of 14 pictures that helped solidify Van Gogh’s post-Paris style, with heavy impasto, intense colors, and wild expressionism. Orchard with Cypresses was just one of five lots that sold for more than $100 million in November 2022, a rarity in any season. (The other four works appear below, but more on those pieces later.) At the time, appraiser David Shapiro described the number of single lots to pass the $100 million mark as “unprecedented.” The van Gogh sale was part of an extraordinary auction of Paul Allen’s collection, which amassed a record-breaking $1.5 billion in a single evening—making it the most valuable single-owner sale in auction history. Every lot was sold, with many exceeding their high estimates, reinforcing the resilience of the high-end art market despite economic uncertainties. 14 Edvard Munch, The Scream, 1895 Edvard Munch, The Scream, 1895 Photo : Digital image copyright © Sotheby’s. Sold for $119.9 million at Sotheby’s New York in May 2012 When it sold for $107 million at Sotheby’s New York, Munch’s pastel The Scream (1895), one of the four versions—two painted and two in pastel—that he made of the same subject, became the most expensive work ever to be sold at a public auction, stealing the trophy from Picasso’s 1932 Nude, Green Leaves and Bust, which sold at Christie’s in 2010 for $106.5 million. At the time, it was the only version of The Scream still in private hands; its seller was Petter Olsen, a Norwegian businessman whose father, Thomas, was Munch’s friend and patron. The picture, which opened at $40 million, sparked a 12-minute bidding war, with wide-eyed potential buyers both in the salesroom and on the phones. According to the Wall Street Journal, its buyer was investor Leon Black, a trustee at the Museum of Modern Art, where The Scream later went on view. After the sale Olsen, described by Art in America as “the wild-haired and bespectacled seller,” read a statement that tied the work to climate change and global warming: “The Scream for me shows the horrifying moment when man realizes his impact on nature and the irreversible changes that he has initiated, making the planet increasingly uninhabitable. . . . More death, less life. And very few lifeboats left as we go down.” 13 René Magritte, Empire of Light, 1954 René Magritte, Empire of Light, 1954 Photo : Digital image copyright © Christie’s Images Ltd. Artwork copyright © 2025 C. Herscovici/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Sold for $121 million at Christie’s New York in November 2024 The “crown jewel” of the auction market in 2024 (as Christie’s so humbly put it) was perhaps the finest example of a subject that Magritte revisited more than 25 times throughout his career: an otherworldly scene showing a house on tree-lined street at night. But instead being enveloped in darkness, the sky above the trees is impossibly blue, with big, cottony clouds floating by. This 1954 version of Empire of Light, which sold for $121 million and came from the collection of designer and philanthropist Mica Ertegun, set a new record for Magritte’s work at auction. After the sale, Christie’s chairman of 20th and 21st century art Alex Rotter said the house that evening had adopted a “masterpiece approach” to this sale. “In a market that is not so easy to maneuver, we thought that if we present the greatest works we can get … these are the best examples,” Rotter said, admitting that the auction had its share of lots that didn’t catch collectors’ attention. But “the works that we put all the emphasis behind really proved us right. They had multiple bidders and showed that a market based on individual taste is on the rise.” 12 Paul Cézanne, Mont Sainte-Victoire, 1888–90 Paul Cézanne, Mont Sainte-Victoire, 1888–90 Photo : Digital image copyright © Christie’s Images Ltd. Sold for $137.7 million at Christie’s New York in November 2022 Cézanne’s deliciously rich landscape of the French countryside and his beloved Mont Sainte-Victoire is the second of five works from the Paul Allen sale at Christie’s to make this list. When the hammer fell, Mont Sainte-Victoire (1888–90) doubled Cézanne’s previous auction high of $60.5 million, for a still life from the collection of John Hay Whitney. Like Cézanne’s best works, Mont Sainte-Victoire breaks aspects of the world—in this case, a French mountain—into shapes shaded with color, as though they were three-dimensional geometrical forms. In that way, Cézanne paved the way for Cubist artists such as Pablo Picasso and George Braque, who would push his innovations even further toward abstraction. 11 Pablo Picasso, Woman with a Watch, 1932 Pablo Picasso, Woman with a Watch, 1932. Photo : Digital image copyright © Sotheby’s. Artwork copyright © 2025 Estate of Pablo Picasso/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Sold for $139.3 million at Sotheby’s New York in November 2023 Woman with a Watch (1932), one of Picasso’s many paintings of his mistress Marie-Thérèse Walter, became the second most expensive work by the artist ever sold at auction when it fetched $139 million at Sotheby’s in 2023. The canvas, from the collection of late philanthropist Emily Fisher Landau, drew intense bidding before selling to a phone bidder represented by Sotheby’s head of global fine art, Brooke Lampley. Woman with a Watch had a rarefied provenance, changing hands just a few times since Picasso painted it in 1932. It was acquired by Landau in 1968 from Pace Gallery, which had purchased it from Switzerland’s Galerie Beyeler two years earlier. Pictures of Walter typically go for top dollar. In 2010, Nude, Green Leaves and Bust—also painted in 1932—broke records at $106.5 million. Still, the most expensive Picasso of all time is a work that does not depict Walter. But more on that in a bit. 10 Qi Baishi, Twelve Screens of Landscapes, 1925 Qi Baishi, Twelve Screens of Landscapes, 1925 Photo : Courtesy Poly Beijing. Sold for $140.8 million at Poly International Auction Co., Ltd., Beijing in December 2017 Qi Baishi’s Twelve Screens of Landscapes (1925) shattered records in 2017, selling for RMB 931.5 million ($140.8 million) at Beijing Poly Auction and making it the most expensive Chinese artwork ever sold at auction. The bidding war lasted over 20 minutes, with more than 60 bid increments before a Chinese collector secured the 12-panel piece. Each 70-inch panel captures a sweeping vista from Qi’s travels across China. Originally displayed at his solo exhibition in 1954 and later featured in a memorial show in 1958, the set of panels was kept by Qi’s pupil, Xiuyi Guo, before resurfacing at auction. A similar version of Twelve Screens of Landscapes, painted around 1932 as a gift to Kuomintang general Wang Zuanxu, resides in the Chongqing Museum. The set sold in 2017 was the only one in private hands at the time, making it a rarity. 9 Alberto Giacometti, Pointing Man, 1947 Alberto Giacometti, Pointing Man, 1947 Photo : Digital image copyright © Christie’s Images Ltd. Artwork copyright © Succession Alberto Giacometti/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York 2025. Sold for $141.3 million at Christie’s New York in May 2015 Alberto Giacometti’s Pointing Man (1947) became the most expensive sculpture ever sold at auction when it fetched $141.3 million at Christie’s New York in May 2015. The life-size bronze, standing at more than five and a half feet tall, was sold by real estate magnate Sheldon Solow, surpassing Giacometti’s previous auction record of $104.3 million, which was set at Sotheby’s London five years earlier by Walking Man I (1960). One of six casts made by the artist (not counting an additional artist’s proof), this particular Pointing Man had been held privately for 45 years before the sale. Four of those casts reside in major museums, including the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Tate in London, which made this auction a prime opportunity for collectors. Similar sculptures by Giacometti depicting skeletal, elongated figures have likewise sold for big sums. At the time, Christie’s head Pylkkänen called the piece “one of the finest works of art I have had the honor to handle.” Whoever bought the piece clearly agreed about its quality. 8 Francis Bacon, Three Studies of Lucian Freud, 1969 Francis Bacon Three Studies of Lucian Freud, 1969 Photo : Digital image copyright © Christie’s Images Ltd. Artwork copyright © The Estate of Francis Bacon/DACS, London/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York 2025. (CR 69-07) Sold for $142.4 million at Christie’s New York in November 2013 Francis Bacon’s Three Studies of Lucian Freud (1969) briefly became the most expensive artwork ever sold at auction when it sold for $142.4 million at Christie’s New York in November 2013. The triptych surpassed the previous record, held by Edvard Munch’s pastel The Scream, which sold for $119.9 million at Sotheby’s in 2012 (and which also appears on this list, above). Bacon’s three-panel portrait—each part stands six and a half feet tall—depicts Bacon’s longtime friend and artistic rival, Lucian Freud, in a series of contorted poses. The piece had an unusual history: its panels were separated by a dealer in the 1970s and remained apart for 15 years before being reunited by a collector in 1989. The work was expected to sell for over $85 million, but after a five-minute bidding war, it was secured by New York’s Acquavella Galleries. In a strategic move, Christie’s shifted the Bacon painting to the ninth lot of the evening to allow unsuccessful bidders a chance at other works—an approach that proved successful, contributing to the auction house’s record-breaking $691.6 million total for the night. Shortly after the sale, the anonymous buyer lent the triptych to the Portland Art Museum for public viewing from December 2013 to March 2014. 7 Georges Seurat, Models (Small Version), 1888 Georges Seurat, Models (Small Version), 1888 Photo : Digital image copyright © Christie’s Images Ltd. Sold for $149 million at Christie’s New York in November 2022 In November 2022, an early 20th-century masterpiece by Georges Seurat, Models (Small Version) (1888), sold for a staggering $149 million at Christie’s New York. The painting, depicting three nude figures in Seurat’s signature pointillist style, was one of the rarest privately-owned works by the artist. It came from the collection of Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen and was expected to surpass $100 million at auction. The bidding opened at $75 million, drawing competition from four bidders, including specialists representing clients in New York and Asia. After several minutes of heated back-and-forth, the work hammered at $130 million, with Christie’s Asia chairman securing the piece for a final total of $149 million, including fees. The sale set a new auction record for Seurat, shattering his previous high of $34 million, achieved in 2018 for The Harbor at Grandcamp(1885). The last time Models (Small Version) appeared on the market was in 1970, when it fetched just over $1 million at Christie’s. Prior to Allen’s ownership, it had belonged to the influential collector John Quinn, a champion of modernist artists in the early 20th century. 6 Amedeo Modigliani, Reclining Nude (on Her Left Side), 1917 Amedeo Modigliani, Reclining Nude (on Her Left Side), 1917 Photo : Digital image copyright © Sotheby’s. Sold for $157.2 million at Sotheby’s New York in May 2018 Amedeo Modigliani’s Reclining Nude (on Her Left Side) (1917), one of the artist’s most celebrated nudes, sold for $157.2 million at Sotheby’s New York in 2018. The total price, including the buyer’s premium, followed a hammer bid of $139 million, which fell just short of its undisclosed estimate of $150 million. Despite this, the sale set a record for the most expensive artwork ever sold at Sotheby’s at the time. The large-scale canvas—depicting a nude woman gazing over her shoulder at the viewer—was the star lot of the auction house’s Impressionist and Modern art sale. Bidding opened at $125 million with auctioneer Helena Newman presiding over the room. The winning bid came from a client on the phone with Simon Shaw, Sotheby’s co-head of Impressionist and Modern art worldwide, after a subdued and measured exchange. The work belongs to Modigliani’s groundbreaking series of reclining nudes, painted between 1916 and 1919. When first exhibited in 1917 at Parisian dealer Berthe Weill’s gallery, these erotic paintings caused such a scandal that police shut down the show after just two days. At the time, only two drawings were sold. While the sale price was extraordinary, it did not surpass Modigliani’s auction record, which remains with Reclining Nude (1917–18), sold at Christie’s in 2015 for $170.4 million to Chinese collector Liu Yiqian. Sotheby’s, however, positioned Reclining Nude (on Her Left Side) as a transformative work, with Simon Shaw stating, “There is the nude before Modigliani, and there is the nude after Modigliani.” 5 Amedeo Modigliani, Nu couché, 1917–18 Amedeo Modigliani, <em>Reclining Nude</em>, 1917–18 Amedeo Modigliani, Reclining Nude, 1917–18 Photo : Wikimedia Commons. Sold for $170.4 million at Christie’s New York in November 2015 Amedeo Modigliani’s Reclining Nude (1917–18) shattered expectations at Christie’s New York in 2015, selling for $170.4 million, more than doubling the artist’s previous auction record of $70.7 million. The work, which carried an on-request estimate of over $100 million, became the second-most expensive painting ever sold at auction at the time. The sale took place during Christie’s curated evening auction, “The Artist’s Muse,” which aimed to build buzz around 20th-century masterpieces. Despite a mixed night—with several major lots, including works by Willem de Kooning and Lucian Freud, failing to sell—the Modigliani nude electrified the room. Bidding was fierce, ultimately concluding with a Chinese collector securing the work via telephone, as revealed by Pylkkänen after the sale. (The collector was later revealed to be Chinese billionaire businessman Liu Yiqian.) Reclining Nude is part of Modigliani’s celebrated series of reclining nudes, painted between 1916 and 1919. These works, revolutionary in their sensuality and bold in their approach to form, scandalized Paris when first exhibited at Berthe Weill’s gallery in 1917, leading to the show’s abrupt closure by police. Today, they are considered among the most important contributions to the modern nude tradition. The sale of Reclining Nude was a high point in an otherwise uneven auction, which totaled $491.4 million—above its $440 million low estimate but falling far short of the $705.8 million brought in by a similar sale earlier that year. While other records were set that night—including for works by Gustave Courbet, Balthus, and Roy Lichtenstein—the Modigliani painting stood out as the undeniable star of the evening, solidifying the artist’s status as one of the most sought-after names in the art market. 4 Pablo Picasso, Women of Algiers (Version ‘O’), 1955 Pablo Picasso, <em>Women of Algiers (Version 'O')</em>, 1955 Pablo Picasso, Women of Algiers (Version 'O'), 1955

Sold for $179.4 million at Christie’s New York in May 2015, Pablo Picasso’s Women of Algiers (Version ‘O’) (1955) rewrote the auction record books, briefly becoming the most expensive painting ever to sell under the hammer. The work—both the final and most complex canvas in Picasso’s 15-part Women of Algiers series (1954–55)—had carried an estimate of $140 million, but intense bidding quickly pushed it far beyond expectations.

8. Pablo Picasso – Garçon A La Pipe

 

top 10 most expensive artworks picasso

Here we are with Picasso yet again, with the work Garçon à la pipe as the first painting to break the $100 million barrier. The work sold for £68.3 million or $104 million. It was painted in 1905 when Picasso was 24 years old, during his Rose Period, soon after he settled in the Montmartre section of Paris, France. The oil on canvas depicts a Parisian boy holding a pipe in his left hand and wearing a garland of flowers. The strange thing is that it was never made public as to who expressed such an interest in Picasso’s portrait of a smoking Parisian.

7. Jackson Pollock – Painting No.5

 

Jackson Pollock top 10 most expensive artworks

Pollock’s famous drip-and-pour painting was sold for a then record £73 million in 2006, according to The New York Times. Reports said US media magnate David Geffen sold the 4ft by 8ft work to Mexican financier David Martinez. During his lifetime, Pollock enjoyed considerable fame and notoriety as a major artist of his generation. He was regarded as reclusive and had a volatile personality. The artist struggled with alcoholism for most of his life. In 1945, he married fellow artist Lee Krasner, who became an important influence on his career and on his legacy. Pollock died at the age of 44 in an alcohol-related single-car accident when he was at the wheel.

6. Gustav Klimt – Portrait Of Adele Bloch-Bauer

 

Gustav Klimt - Portrait Of Adele Bloch-Bauer

According to The New York Times, the Neue Galerie paid £135 million for the oil painting in a private sale in 2006. Adele Bloch-Bauer was the wife of Ferdinand Bloch-Bauer, who was a wealthy industrialist who sponsored the arts and the artist. Adele Bloch-Bauer was the only model to be painted twice by Klimt; she also appeared in the much more famous Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer I. The portraits had hung in the family home prior to their seizure by the Nazis during World War II. The Austrian museum where they resided after the war was reluctant to return them to their rightful owners; a protracted court battle ensued, which resulted in five Gustav Klimt paintings being returned to Maria Altmann, the niece of Ferdinand Bloch-Bauer.

5. Andy Warhol – Shot Sage Marilyn

 

Blue Marilyn

Setting new auction records, in 2022 Christie’s sold Andy Warhol’s Shot Sage Blue Marilyn for US$195 million, making it the most expensive work of 20th-century art ever to sell at auction.

4. Paul Cézanne – The Card Players

 

Cezanne Card Players

Before the recent Gauguin sale smashed all previous records, The Card Players by Cézanne was believed to be the most expensive painting ever sold. Painted during Cézanne’s final period in the early 1890s, the artist created five paintings in the series. The versions vary in size and in the number of players depicted. Cézanne also completed numerous drawings and studies in preparation for The Card Players series. The work was purchased by the Qatari Royal family – it fetched a reported £158 million in 2011.

3. Paul Gauguin – Nafea Faa Ipoipo

 

Gauguin Nafea Faa Ipoipo

When Will You Marry? (French: Quand te maries-tu, Tahitian: Nafea faa ipoipo) is an oil painting from 1892 by the French Post-Impressionist artist Paul Gauguin. On loan to the Kunstmuseum in Basel, Switzerland, for nearly a half-century, it was sold privately by the family of Rudolf Staechelin to Sheikha Al-Mayassa bint Hamad Al-Thani in February 2015 for close to US$210 million (£155 million), one of the highest prices ever paid for a work of art. The painting was on exhibition at the Fondation Beyeler, Riehen, until 28 June 2015.

2. Gustav Klimt Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer 1914–16

 

. Gustav Klimt, Bildnis Elisabeth Lederer (Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer), 1914–16 – 6.4 million

The leading lot of Sotheby’s Leonard Lauder sale: This portrait did more than break records—it made history. After a 20-minute bidding war, the work became the second-most-expensive artwork sold at auction. Klimt’s signature mosaicked texture and meticulous layering make Elisabeth Lederer’s gaze both distant and arresting. It’s one of only two full-length portraits still in private hands, and whispers of a UAE acquisition hint it may soon leave the market for good. There’s drama in its survival, too: confiscation, restitution, and nearly a century later, a room filled with eager collectors.  Sold $236.4 million

1. Salvator Mundi: Is It Really By Da Vinci

 

Salvator Mundi

Salvator Mundi (Latin for ‘Saviour of the World’) is a painting attributed in whole or part to the Italian High Renaissance artist Leonardo da Vinci, dated c. 1499–1510. Long thought to be a copy of a lost original veiled with overpainting, it was rediscovered, restored, and included in an exhibition of Leonardo’s work at the National Gallery, London, in 2011–2012. Christie’s, which sold the work in 2017 for $400 million, stated that most leading scholars consider it an original work by Leonardo, but this attribution has been disputed by some leading specialists, some of whom propose that he only contributed certain elements; others believe that the extensive restoration prevents a definitive attribution.

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