The 2010s proved an exceptional decade for the art industry, with the world’s most expensive painting sold at auction, ever-increasing interest in native and minority art, and the growing influence of social media on our aesthetic perspective. American art has been no exception, with some of the most valuable masterpieces from the States changing hands, often with mind-boggling auction results.
What Is American Art?
American art is just that: art from America! Whether needlework or furniture, painting or print, if it is the work of an American artist, it can be considered American art. This broad category, therefore, spans a huge range of years, media, genres, styles and locations, but the most expensive auction results are almost always yielded by paintings. The twentieth century saw an explosion of creativity and innovation in American art, reflected in the eleven items listed here. Although some of them were placed in the Modern Art departments at the major auction houses, they have each contributed to the reputation and success of American art as a whole.
Read on to learn more about these eleven masterpieces and their makers.
11. Norman Rockwell, The Rookie (Red Sox Locker Room), 1957
Realized Price: USD 22,565,000
Realized Price: USD 22,565,000
Estimate: USD 20,000,000 – USD 30,000,000
Venue & Date: Christie’s, New York, 22 May 2014, Lot 30
Known Seller: Southwest American private collector
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About The Artwork
Originally created as the cover art for an edition of The Saturday Evening Post, Norman Rockwell’s locker room scene soon became an iconic image. Throughout the mid-20th century, Rockwell’s prolific illustrations helped forge a national identity, and as one of the country’s oldest and most beloved Major League Baseball teams, the Boston Red Sox were a sure way of touching the hearts of even the most old-school Americans.
Featuring recognizable ballplayers and published at the time of baseball legend Ted Williams’ retirement, the painting is topical but also timeless. The image of the underdog, nervous and out-of-place, is one that almost anyone can relate to in some way. The Rookie thus evokes two conflicting emotions, as the Red Sox paraphernalia immediately conjures up feelings of triumph and glory, while the awkward newcomer cannot help but create a sense of anxiety and even embarrassment. The deep emotional response provoked by an apparently simple image is undoubtedly the reason that this painting realized the staggering sum of $22m when it appeared at auction in 2014.
10. Edward Hopper, East Wind Over Weehawken, 1934
Realized Price: USD 40,485,000
Realized Price: USD 40,485,000
Estimate: USD 22,000,000 – USD 28,000,000
Venue & Date: Christie’s, New York, 05 December 2013, Lot 17
Known Seller: Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts
About The Artwork
One of the most important and influential artists of the twentieth century, Edward Hopper distinguished himself from his contemporaries by capturing scenes of everyday American life with an emotive but unembellished honesty. This is embodied by East Wind Over Weehawken, which shows Hopper’s own ordinary, even mundane, neighborhood in New Jersey. Despite its lack of drama or obvious beauty, the painting is charged with tension and emotion, particularly as the result of the ‘For Sale’ sign which could imply movement onward and progression, but equally suggests difficulty and struggle.
The many questions asked by this unromantic portrayal of American life have entranced its audience ever since it was painted in the 1930s. Its appeal has clearly not worn off since, as in 2013, it was sold at Christie’s for just under double its estimate, at $40.4m.
9. Georgia O’Keeffe, Jimson Weed/White Flower No. 1, 1932
Realized Price: USD 44,405,000
Realized Price: USD 44,405,000
Estimate: USD 10,000,000 — 15,000,000
Venue & Date: Sotheby’s, New York, 20 November 2014, Lot 11
Known Seller: The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum
About The Artwork
Constantly taking inspiration from the vegetable world, Georgia O’Keeffe captured American nature on a whole new scale. Instead of vast landscapes and sweeping vistas, she chose small buds or individual leaves as the subject of her paintings, hoping that “even busy New Yorkers” would get the opportunity to appreciate the beauty of the natural world.
One flower that features in a number of O’Keeffe’s paintings is the Jimson weed, a poisonous plant that she discovered near her home in New Mexico. Her close-up paintings of the delicate yet toxic flower transform the dangerous into the beautiful and freeze the ephemeral, making it immortal.
Despite the sexual undertones that have often been attributed to her flower paintings, O’Keeffe insisted that they were an homage to the beauty of nature and that such interpretations are the result of the critic’s own projections rather than her intentions.
However it is interpreted, Jimson Weed/White Flower No.1 has always been appreciated as a fine piece of art. When it appeared at Sotheby’s in 2014, however, it caused amazement when it sold at triple its estimate for an almighty $44.4m, which made it the most expensive work by a female artist.
8. Mark Rothko, No. 10, 1958
Realized Price: USD 81,925,000
Realized Price: USD 81,925,000
Venue & Date: Christie’s, New York, 13 May 2015, Lot 35B
Known Seller: Anonymous American collector
About The Artwork
Although at first glance it seems so simple that anyone with a paintbrush and canvas could compose it, Mark Rothko’s No. 10, in fact, represents the artist’s mastery of both tools and techniques. The oils appear to shine with a supernatural radiance that gives the painting energy and movement. The color palette evokes immediate associations with heat, fire, and passion, and the areas in which yellow meets orange, and red fades to black are imbued with a haunting sense of the unknown.
The huge piece, which stands at almost eight feet in height, has been said to evoke near-religious experiences in those who stand before it. Perhaps it was under the influence of such an awakening that one anonymous bidder at Christie’s parted with nearly $82m to call the canvas their own.
7. Andy Warhol, Triple Elvis [Ferus Type], 1963
Realized Price: USD 81,925,000
Realized Price: USD 81,925,000
Venue & Date: Christie’s, New York, 12 November 2014, Lot 9
About The Artwork
After portraying the likes of Marilyn Monroe, Elizabeth Taylor, and Marlon Brando, it was almost inevitable that the master of Pop art would turn to the King of Rock to complete his pantheon of American icons. Warhol’s fascination with popular culture made Elvis Presley the perfect subject for one of his characteristic silkscreen prints. The overlapping monochrome images, reminiscent of a film reel, and the idea of the silver screen reflected in the burnished background transport the viewer to the world of 1950s Hollywood.
The immersive, even enveloping, effect of these larger-than-life Elvises creates an unforgettable impression. So powerful is the image that it was purchased for the princely sum of almost $82m when it appeared at Christie’s in 2014.
6. Barnett Newman, Black Fire I, 1961
Realized Price: USD 84,165,000
Realized Price: USD 84,165,000
Venue & Date: Christie’s, New York, 13 May 2014, Lot 34
About The Artwork
Between 1958 and 1966, Barnett Newman created a series of works in black pigment on exposed canvases. Their Zen-like simplicity and the symbolic interplay between light and darkness embodies a sense of solemnity and immensity borne out of the artist’s loss of his brother. Newman’s translated his grief and concerns about mortality into pieces of art that are raw and tense but at the same time refined and harmonious.
The reference to fire in the title invites the viewer to see movement and passion in even the linear ‘zip’ and monochrome palette. The piece certainly lit a fire in the heart of one anonymous bidder, who bought the canvas at Christie’s in 2014 for a huge $84m.
5. Mark Rothko, Orange, Red, Yellow, 1961
Realized Price: USD 86,882,500
Realized Price: USD 86,882,500
Estimate: USD 35,000,000 – USD 45,000,000
Venue & Date: Christie’s, New York, 08 May 2012, Lot 20
Known Seller: The Estate of David Pincus, humanist, philanthropist and patron of the arts
About The Artwork
Mark Rothko’s Orange, Red, Yellow appeals to the eye and the emotions for many of the same reasons No.10 does. Its warm color palette seems to emanate light from the oil, and the liminal areas at which one hue becomes another demand particular contemplation. Unlike No.10, however, this piece radiates vitality and bears no hint of the darkness that seems to signify an ending.
A myriad of light brushstrokes builds up a variety of textures, from near transparency to rich opalescence, which gives the painting a striking sense of depth. Combined with the huge scale of the canvas, which is almost 8 feet in height, this has the effect of enveloping the viewer in an intimate bubble of warmth. For this reason, it is Rothko’s most valuable work, selling at Christie’s in 2012 for $86.8m.
4. Edward Hopper, Chop Suey, 1929
Realized Price: USD 91,875,000
Realized Price: USD 91,875,000
Estimate: USD 70,000,000 – USD 100,000,000
Venue & Date: Christie’s, New York, 13 November 2018, Lot 12B
Known Seller: The collection of Barney A. Ebsworth
About The Artwork
Chop Suey is often considered Edward Hopper’s most accomplished painting because of the way it appeals to every sense and invites the viewer to create a story in their mind. Like East Wind Over Weehawken, Chop Suey focuses on the quieter moments of American life, presenting an everyday scene in broad brushstrokes and muted tones.
Instead of the photographic realism pursued by many of his peers, this style evokes the effect of a memory or dream. The enchanting and mysterious scene set a record as Hopper’s most expensive work when it was sold at Christie’s in 2018 for just under $92 million.
3. Roy Lichtenstein, Nurse, 1964
Realized Price: USD 95,365,000
Realized Price: USD 95,365,000
Venue & Date: Christie’s, New York, 09 November 2015, Lot 13A
About The Artwork
Long before it sold at Christie’s for $95m in 2015, Roy Lichtenstein‘s Nurse had become an iconic piece of American art, embodying Pop art’s challenge to the traditional understanding of fine art. Taking its cue from contemporary advertising campaigns, comic books, and commercialism, Pop art gave its audience a new lens through which to interpret the world around them and the messages they were being fed.
Although it reflects the two-dimensionality of the comic strips that inspired it, Nurse nonetheless preserves a sense of depth and energy, generated by the vast field of hand-stenciled (rather than machine-printed) dots that make up the woman’s face, sleeves, and background. Combined with the bold lines and colors that compose the rest of the image, the painting hangs somewhere in between parody and pastiche, sincerity, and irony.
2. Andy Warhol, Silver Car Crash (Double Disaster), 1963
Realized Price: USD 105,445,000
Realized Price: USD 105,445,000
Venue & Date: Sotheby’s, New York, 13 November 2013, Lot 16
About The Artwork
Like Triple Elvis, Andy Warhol’s Silver Car Crash uses a combination of silkscreen print and silver paint, but the effect is quite different. The zenith of his Death and Disaster corpus, the huge double-canvas piece was created in 1963, after a huge surge in car ownership following the Second World War. Silver Car Crash highlights that while the automobile may be a quintessential symbol of freedom, industry, and the American Dream, it also has the capacity to bring about death, destruction, and disaster.
The enticingly gruesome image of the wrecked vehicle, repeated over and over, and the hauntingly blank canvas that stands beside it attracted the interests of three hugely prominent art collectors: Gian Enzo Sperone, Charles Saatchi and Thomas Ammann. An anonymous bidder at Sotheby’s bought the piece in 2013 for over $105m, the highest price ever paid for a Warhol.
1. Jean-Michel Basquiat, Untitled, 1982
Realized Price: USD 110,487,500
Realized Price: USD 110,487,500
Venue & Date: Sotheby’s, New York, 18 May 2017, Lot 24
Known Seller: Spiegel Family
Known Buyer: Japanese art collector, Yusaku Maezawa
About The Artwork
After receiving a copy of Gray’s Anatomy while recovering from a car crash as a boy, Jean-Michel Basquiat became fascinated with the human body, as is evident in the paintings he went on to produce as an adult. The skull is one of the most recognizable images that appear again and again in Basquiat’s oeuvre, a symbol that bridges the gap between life and death.
This is exemplified by Untitled, in which vibrant colors and wild brushstrokes contrast against the sunken, subdued image of the skull. Combining a scientific basis with an urban style, the painting embodies Basquiat’s novel approach to art. This was demonstrated by a Basquiat exhibition that featured Untitled as the only piece on display, and also at Sotheby’s, where it sold in 2017 for an unbelievable $110 million.
More on American Art and Auction Results
These eleven masterpieces represent some of the most valuable American art in existence and provide an impressive reminder of the wealth of creative genius that emerged from just one country in a single century. For more outstanding recent auction results, click here: Modern Art, Old Master Paintings and Fine Art Photography.