The 15 Most Expensive Paintings in the World

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

The 15 Most Expensive Paintings in the World



In 2006, media mogul David Geffen sold Jackson Pollock's masterwork, No. 5 1948, for $140 million. This made Pollock's work the most expensive painting in modern history, leading a list of the world's most highly acclaimed artists. From Pollock to Picasso, Renoir to Van Gogh, famouse fine art fetches an other-wordly price on today's market. In celebration of their masterworks and the riches now behind them, here is a list of the 15 most expensive paintings in the world.


To round out this list, we've arranged these paintings by an adjusted price in 2008 dollars. The U.S. dollar has inflated quite a bit since 1987, when Van Gogh's Irises sold for $53.9 million. Today, that $53.9 million is worth roughly $102.3 million.

Number Fifteen: Yo, Picasso by Pablo Picasso

Picasso's 1901 self-portrait may not be his most instantly recognizable, but it certainly did capture a hefty price on the fine art market. Long before Picasso began experimenting with cubism and surrealism, his early oil works were equally as stunning. An interesting anecdote about Picasso– his full name is "Pablo Diego José Francisco de Paula Juan Nepomuceno María de los Remedios Cipriano de la Santísima Trinidad Martyr Patricio Clito Ruíz y Picasso". No joke. Artist: Pablo Picasso
Year: 1901
Year of Sale: 1989
Sale Price: $47.85 million
Currency Adjusted: $83.2 million.

Number Fourteen: A Wheatfield with Cypresses by Vincent Van Gogh

One of two Van Gogh landscapes in the top 15 is A Wheatfield by Cypresses, an idyllic nature scene with the artist's signature swirling skies. Wheatfield was owned by philanthropist/ diplomat Walter Annenberg until his death in 2002, and is now a part of his estate. Artist: Vincent Van Gogh
Year: 1889
Year of Sale: 1993
Sale Price: $57 million
Currency Adjusted: $85.1 million.

Number Thirteen: False Start by Jasper Johns

The lone contemporary piece in the top 15 was among a large collection of art sold by media mogul David Geffen in 2006. If you're like us, you might just be scratching your head about the pricetag on this one… Artist: Jasper Johns
Year: 1959
Year of Sale: 2006
Sale Price: $80 million
Currency Adjusted: $85.6 million.

Number Twelve: Les Noces de Pierrette by Pablo Picasso

Picasso's Les Noces de Pierrette is among the artist's blue period, including some of his most famous works. At the time, Picasso was facing poverty and the loss of a close friend who had recently committed suicide. It was works like this that would prove cathartic for the artist- and lead him to wealth later in life. Artist: Pablo Picasso
Year: 1905
Year of Sale: 1989
Sale Price: $49.3 million
Currency Adjusted: $85.7 million .

Number Eleven: Triptych by Francis Bacon

As one of the premier artists of the surrealist period, Irish painter Francis Bacon explored the tri-panel format of painting called the Triptych. His work of the same name is the most recent sale on this list, going for $86.3 million. Artist: Francis Bacon
Year: 1976
Year of Sale: 2008
Sale Price: $86.3 million
Currency Adjusted: $86.3 million.

Number Ten: Massacre of the Innocents by Peter Paul Rubens

Peter Paul Rubens' Massacre of the Innocents is both the earliest work on this list as well as its only religious-inspired painting. Painted in 1611, Massacre represents a scene from the Bible's Gospel According to Matthew. Artist: Peter Paul Rubens
Year: 1611
Year of Sale: 2002
Sale Price: $76.7 million
Currency Adjusted: $91.9 million.

Number Nine: Portrait de l'artiste sans barbe by Vincent Van Gogh

Van Gogh's beardless self-portrait shows the artist hiding something– namely a nasty, Absinthe-fueled shaving accident. In the year of this portrait, Van Gogh cut off part of his ear amidst a bout of severe depression that would later lead to his suicide. Artist: Vincent Van Gogh
Year: 1889
Year of Sale: 1998
Sale Price: $71.5 million
Currency Adjusted: $94.6 million.

Number Eight: Dora Maar au Chat by Pablo Picasso

One of Picasso's greatest works was a portrait of his then-mistress Dora Maar. Miss Maar was 29-years-old at the time, 26 years younger than Picasso. The subject was seated with a black cat perched on her shoulder. Artist: Pablo Picasso
Year: 1941
Year of Sale: 2006
Sale Price: $95.2 million
Currency Adjusted: $101.8 million.

Number Seven: Irises by Vincent Van Gogh

Van Gogh's second landscape on this list is named simply Irises, showing at first glance a rather sunny world that was much in contrast to the artist's disposition. Artist: Vincent Van Gogh
Year: 1889
Year of Sale: 1987
Sale Price: $53.9 million
Currency Adjusted: $102.3 million.

Number Six: Garçon à la pipe by Pablo Picasso

The "boy at the pipe" is Picasso's most highly priced painting on this list, having sold for $104.2 million in 2004 (currency adjusted to $118.9 million). The boy in the painting was among the community of entertainers living in the Montmartre section of Paris, many of which were the subjects of Picasso's red period. Artist: Pablo Picasso
Year: 1905
Year of Sale: 2004
Sale Price: $104.2 million
Currency Adjusted: $118.9 million.

Number Five: Bal au moulin de la Galette, Montmartre by Pierre-Auguste Renoir

Renoir's sole entry in the top 15 most expensive paintings is his work Bal au moulin de la Galette. This painting was sold in 1990 to Ryoei Saito, the chairman of a Japanese paper company and a collector of fine art. Artist: Pierre-Auguste Renoir
Year: 1876
Year of Sale: 1990
Sale Price: $78.1 million
Currency Adjusted: $128.8 million

Number Four: Portrait of Dr. Gachet by Vincent Van Gogh

This and the last painting were at one point the two most expensive paintings in the world, sold together to Ryoei Saito in 1990. This would become Van Gogh's most expensive painting to date, selling for an impressive $82.5 million ($136.1 million today). Artist: Vincent Van Gogh
Year: 1890
Year of Sale: 1990
Sale Price: $82.5 million
Currency Adjusted: $136.1 million.

Number Three: Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer I by Gustav Klimt

Once the world's most expensive painting, Gustav Klimt's portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer took three years to create in oil and gold. The painting was commissioned by a Swiss sugar magnate, a fan of Klimt and the husband of the painting's subject Artist: Gustav Klimt
Year: 1907
Year of Sale: 2006
Sale Price: $135 million
Currency Adjusted: $144.4 million.

Number Two: Woman III by Willem de Kooning

This, the second most-expensive painting in the world was among the collection sold by David Geffen in 2006. Woman III by Willem de Kooning was among six painted by the artist between 1951 and 1953, with this version ending up at the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art– where it would be later hid from the public due to its inadherence to the government's rules of morality. Artist: Willem de Kooning
Year: 1953
Year of Sale: 2006
Sale Price: $137.5 million
Currency Adjusted: $147 million.

Number One: No. 5, 1948 by Jackson Pollock

Jackson Pollock's 1948 painting entitled No. 5 1948 was arguably his greatest masterwork, the most vivid expression of the painter's unique style. When it was sold by David Geffen in 2006, it became the world's most expensive painting in history at a price-adjusted $149.70 million dollars. Artist: Jackson Pollock
Year: 1948
Year of Sale: 2006
Sale Price: $140 million

  • Currency Adjusted: $149.70 million .

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