Art

The 10 Most Expensive Artworks Sold at Auction in 2025

Discover the 10 most expensive artworks sold at auction in 2025, featuring record-breaking sales by Klimt, Van Gogh, Rothko, Kahlo, and other blue-chip masters.

Por: Angela Leon Cervera
most expensive artworks sold at auction
LEONARD A. LAUDER, COLLECTOR. Courtesy of Sotheby's

In 2025, the global art market confirmed a decisive shift toward stability and historical mastery. The most expensive artworks sold at auction in 2025 revealed a clear preference for rarity, impeccable provenance, and museum-grade significance over speculative novelty.


Across New York, London, and Paris, collectors gravitated toward historical mastery, pristine provenance, and works rarely seen on the public market.

 

The year’s highest prices were not driven by volume, but by concentration. Capital flowed toward museum-grade works with emotional gravity, institutional validation, and long-held private ownership. These ten sales did more than set records. They defined the psychology of collecting in 2025.

most expensive artworks sold at auction
LEONARD A. LAUDER, COLLECTOR Gustav KlimtBildnis Elisabeth Lederer (Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer). Courtesy of Sotheby’s

1. Gustav Klimt, Bildnis Elisabeth Lederer (1914–1916) Sold for USD 236.3 million

The undisputed apex of the year, Bildnis Elisabeth Lederer became the most expensive artwork sold at auction in 2025. Executed during Klimt’s mature period, the full-length portrait combines ornamental refinement with radical spatial flattening. Its value rests not only in its aesthetic brilliance, but in its extraordinary survivor history. Confiscated during the Nazi era, most of the Lederer collection was destroyed in 1945. This painting endured, was restituted, and remained off the market for decades in the collection of Leonard A. Lauder. Its “market freshness,” coupled with emotional and historical weight, propelled it into auction history.

most expensive artworks sold at auction
LEONARD A. LAUDER, COLLECTOR Gustav KlimtBlumenwiese (Blooming Meadow). Courtesy of Sotheby’s

2. Gustav Klimt, Blumenwiese (ca. 1908) Sold for USD 86 million

Painted during Klimt’s summers at Attersee, Blumenwiese transforms landscape into an almost abstract tapestry of color. The horizon is pushed upward, compressing depth and immersing the viewer in a dense field of botanical rhythm. The work exemplifies Klimt’s post-impressionist dialogue with nature, echoing the chromatic intensity of Van Gogh while maintaining decorative autonomy. Its strong performance confirmed that Klimt’s market power in 2025 extended beyond portraiture, reinforcing landscape as a core pillar of his valuation.

most expensive artworks sold at auction
LEONARD A. LAUDER, COLLECTOR Gustav KlimtWaldabhang bei Unterach am Attersee (Forest Slope in Unterach on the Attersee). Courtesy of Sotheby’s

3. Gustav Klimt, Waldabhang bei Unterach am Attersee (1916) Sold for USD 68.3 million

This serene forested slope reflects Klimt’s late engagement with nature as spiritual refuge. Absent of figures or modern intrusion, the composition relies on pattern, color modulation, and controlled structure. The painting’s disciplined harmony resonated strongly with collectors seeking stability and timelessness. Its acquisition by a leading art advisor underscored sustained Asian demand for Viennese Secession landscapes as long-term value assets.

most expensive artworks sold at auction
THE CINDY AND JAY PRITZKER COLLECTION Vincent Van GoghPiles de romans parisiens et roses dans une verre (Romans parisiens). Courtesy of Sotheby’s

4. Vincent van Gogh, Romans parisiens (Les Livres jaunes) (1887) Sold for USD 62.7 million

One of Van Gogh’s most intellectually charged still lifes, Romans parisiens depicts a stack of yellow-covered novels associated with modern French literature. Painted during his Paris period, the work marks a decisive break from his darker Dutch palette. Beyond its visual impact, the painting carries exceptional art-historical weight. It was one of only three works Van Gogh selected for his 1888 Salon des Indépendants debut, anchoring its importance within his public artistic emergence.

most expensive artworks sold at auction
The Collection of Robert F. and Patricia G. Ross Weis MARK ROTHKO (1903-1970) No. 31 (Yellow Stripe). Courtesy of Christie’s

5. Mark Rothko, No. 31 (Yellow Stripe) (1958) Sold for USD 62.1 million

Executed during Rothko’s luminous Seagram period, No. 31 (Yellow Stripe) exemplifies his pursuit of emotional transcendence through color. High-keyed tones radiate outward, creating a physical and psychological presence. The painting’s long-term placement in a private collection enhanced its desirability, while its sale marked one of the highest digital bids ever recorded at Christie’s, signaling the maturation of hybrid auction dynamics.

most expensive artworks sold at auction
EXQUISITE CORPUS: SURREALIST TREASURES FROM A PRIVATE COLLECTION Frida KahloEl sueño (La cama). Courtesy of Sotheby’s

6. Frida Kahlo, El sueño (La cama) (1940) Sold for USD 54.6 million

This deeply personal work depicts Kahlo asleep beneath a hovering skeleton, fusing Mexican popular symbolism with autobiographical pain. Created during a period of physical suffering and marital turmoil, the painting transforms the domestic space into a mythological stage. Its record-breaking price confirmed Kahlo’s elevation to the highest tier of global collecting and marked the strongest performance ever for a Latin American artist at auction.

most expensive artworks sold at auction
BASQUIAT CROWNED | PROPERTY FROM A DISTINGUISHED EUROPEAN COLLECTION Jean-Michel BasquiatCrowns (Peso Neto). Courtesy of Sotheby’s

7. Jean-Michel Basquiat, Crowns (Peso Neto) (1981) Sold for USD 48.3 million

Painted at the moment Basquiat transitioned from street to studio, Crowns (Peso Neto) crystallizes his symbolic language. Crowns, skulls, and text collide in a meditation on power, commodification, and Black identity. The inscription “Peso Neto” introduces a sharp critique of market valuation. Its reappearance after four decades in private hands amplified its historical resonance and market impact.

most expensive artworks sold at auction
Leonard & Louise Riggio: Collected Works PIET MONDRIAN (1872-1944) Composition with Large Red Plane, Bluish Gray, Yellow, Black and Blue. Courtesy of Christie’s

8. Piet Mondrian, Composition with Large Red Plane, Bluish Gray, Yellow, Black and Blue (1922) Sold for USD 47.5 million

A canonical expression of De Stijl philosophy, this composition embodies Mondrian’s pursuit of universal harmony. Its provenance is exceptional, having been acquired directly from the artist by Anthony Kok, cofounder of the movement. As the last of its group to remain in private hands, the painting’s sale reinforced modernist abstraction as one of the most stable segments of the market.

most expensive artworks sold at auction
The Collection of Robert F. and Patricia G. Ross Weis PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973) La Lecture (Marie-Thérèse). Courtesy of Christie’s

9. Pablo Picasso, La Lecture (Marie-Thérèse) (1932) Sold for USD 45.4 million

Painted during Picasso’s celebrated “year of wonders,” this intimate portrait of Marie-Thérèse Walter blends sensuality with repose. Though the price reflected disciplined bidding rather than exuberance, the result confirmed that portraits of Marie-Thérèse remain Picasso’s most dependable market category. The sale illustrated the market’s 2025 preference for measured valuation over speculative escalation.

most expensive artworks sold at auction
Property from the Kawamura Memorial DIC Museum of Art CLAUDE MONET (1840-1926) Nymphéas. Courtesy of Christie’s

10. Claude Monet, Nymphéas (1907) Sold for USD 45.4 million

This water lily painting exemplifies Monet’s immersive approach to surface and reflection. With no horizon line, the composition dissolves spatial boundaries, anticipating abstraction. Released from a Japanese museum collection, the work carried strong institutional validation. Its result highlighted collector preference for canonical examples over inflated estimates, reinforcing Monet’s enduring relevance within blue-chip impressionism.

The highest prices of 2025 reveal a market governed by discipline, memory, and historical gravity. Collectors rewarded rarity, provenance, and emotional depth rather than speculative novelty. From Klimt’s survivor masterpieces to Kahlo’s autobiographical intensity, these ten works reflect a decisive return to art as a tangible refuge and cultural anchor.

 

Together, these results define the most expensive artworks sold at auction in 2025, reflecting a market driven by discipline, historical relevance, and long-term confidence.

FAQ — Reading the Market Through Record Sales

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