Art

Art Basel 2025 Sales: Top Deals & Rising Stars

Art Basel 2025 sales rewrote the leaderboard—Hockney hit US $13-17 million, Rothko drew crowds, and newcomers Kameya and Joumaa dazzled collectors.

Por: Angela Leon Cervera
Art Basel
James Cohan Gallery Courtesy of Art Basel

Art Basel 2025 sales stormed the headlines before the fair’s second cappuccino cooled. Blue-chip trophies moved fast, yet the real thrill was the balanced mix of megawatt deals and breakthrough voices.

 

Despite a cautious macro mood, dealers still inked seven-figure slips and collectors queued for fresh statements upstairs. Let’s unpack the numbers, the legends, and the next-gen sparks shaping Basel’s 55th edition.

David Zwirner Courtesy of Art Basel

What Were the Record-Breaking Art Basel 2025 Sales?

Top ticket transactions (gallery-reported):

 

  • David Hockney, Mid November Tunnel (2006) – US $13-17 million, Annely Juda

  • Ruth Asawa, Untitled hanging sculpture (c. 1955) – US $9.5 million, David Zwirner

  • Gerhard Richter, abstract canvas – US $6.8 million, David Zwirner

  • Mark Bradford, Ain’t Got Time to WorryUS $3.5 million, Hauser & Wirth

  • Mark Bradford, Sin and Love and FearUS $3.5 million, Hauser & Wirth

  • Keith Haring, Untitled (1983) – US $3.5 million, Gladstone

One fact stood out: only one work cleared the US $10 million line in the first 48 hours—a sharp contrast to four such sales last year. Dealers responded by stocking more “mid-priced” masterworks, keeping velocity brisk without courting vertigo.

Marian Goodman Gallery Courtesy of Art Basel
Emalin Courtesy of Art Basel

How Did Blue-Chip Legends Perform at Art Basel 2025?

Collectors still anted up for icons. Hauser & Wirth’s surprise hanging of Mark Rothko’s No. 6 / Sienna, Orange on Wine (1962) drew steady crowds; recent auction comps peg its value between US $30 million and $50 million, though the exact ask stayed discreet.

 

Pace wooed trophy-hunters with Picasso’s Homme à la pipe assis et amour (1969), priced at US $30 million and placed “on reserve” by day two—proof that Grade-A provenance still sparks FOMO.

 

Meanwhile, blue-chip regulars Richter, Bradford and Haring all landed confident sales in the US $3–7 million range, reinforcing their status as liquidity anchors amid a recalibrating market.

Which Emerging Talents Surprised Collectors at Art Basel 2025?

Arturo Kameya (GRIMM) transformed Basel Statements into a dystopian Peruvian gym, moving multiple works to museums in Hangzhou and Amsterdam.

 

Joyce Joumaa (Eli Kerr) co-won the Baloise Art Prize, lighting recycled fuse boxes to map Lebanon’s rolling blackouts; her installation sold to Mudam Luxembourg.

 

Alexandra Metcalf (Ginny on Frederick) re-engineered antique grandfather clocks into stained-glass dream machines, a nominee for the Baloise shortlist and a clear Instagram magnet.

 

Collectors and critics also name-checked Shino Otake (Take Ninagawa) and Vikrant Bhise (Experimenter) as breakout voices, signaling a taste for concept-heavy, regionally rooted storytelling over quick-flip décor. 

Perrotin Courtesy of Art Basel

Art Basel 2025 proved that even in a cooling climate, precision beats hype. One eight-figure Hockney set the tone, Rothko radiated quiet authority, and a cadre of sharp emerging artists reminded everyone why Basel still matters. Expect follow-up buzz—and likely waiting lists—well beyond closing day.

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