Sayart.net - Gerhard Richter′s $5.5 Million Painting Headlines Strong Opening Sales at Art Basel Miami Beach 2025

  • December 05, 2025 (Fri)

Gerhard Richter's $5.5 Million Painting Headlines Strong Opening Sales at Art Basel Miami Beach 2025

Sayart / Published December 4, 2025 08:37 PM
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Art Basel Miami Beach 2025 kicked off its first preview day on Wednesday, December 3rd, with a flurry of high-value transactions that signaled strong market confidence. The marquee event of Miami Art Week and the final major art fair of the year saw several seven-figure deals on opening day, led by David Zwirner's sale of an abstract Gerhard Richter painting for $5.5 million.

The robust opening day sales appear to reflect a wave of positive market sentiment that has been building following last month's strong performance at New York auctions. Those November sales generated a total of $2.2 billion, helping to ease lingering concerns about weakness in the market's top tier that had persisted earlier this year.

Gerhard Richter has experienced a particular surge in interest this fall, coinciding with his comprehensive retrospective currently on view at the Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris. This follows a pattern established at Art Basel Paris in October, where a $23 million Richter work offered by Hauser & Wirth led the opening sales at that fair.

While Hauser & Wirth didn't secure the top sale this time around, the gallery still reported impressive results, including one $4 million transaction on opening day. Marc Payot, president of the gallery, emphasized the strength of their performance in a press statement, noting that "in the first three hours of the fair, our sales have already totaled 40% more than we made in the entire week at last year's Art Basel Miami Beach."

David Zwirner's strong performance extended well beyond the headline Richter sale. The gallery reported selling a 1967 Alice Neel painting for $3.3 million, two Josef Albers paintings for $2.5 million and $2.2 million respectively, and a 1969 Ruth Asawa wire sculpture for $1.2 million. The gallery also successfully placed a new work by Dana Schutz with an American museum for $1.2 million.

Hauser & Wirth's notable sales included George Condo's "Untitled (Taxi Painting)" from 2011, which sold for approximately $4 million. The gallery also moved two significant Louise Bourgeois works: "Persistent Antagonism" (1946-48) for $3.2 million and "Mr. Follett: Nursery-Man" (1944) for $2.5 million. Additionally, they reported seven-figure sales for works by Ed Clark, Henry Taylor, and Rashid Johnson.

White Cube's opening day was highlighted by a Willem de Kooning work that sold for $2.85 million. The gallery also reported strong sales across its roster, including a Damien Hirst work for $2.5 million, a Tracey Emin piece for £1.2 million ($1.6 million), Andreas Gursky's "Harry Styles" (2025) for €1.2 million ($1.4 million), and a Richard Hunt work for $1 million.

Several other galleries reported significant transactions during the opening hours. Almine Rech sold a Pablo Picasso painting in the range of $2.8 million to $3 million, along with a James Turrell work priced between $900,000 and $1 million. Thaddaeus Ropac moved two Alex Katz works - "Orange Hat 2" (1973) for $2.5 million and "Wildflowers 1" (2010) for $1.5 million - while also selling Georg Baselitz's "Selbstportrait 1953, 18.V.97" (1997) for €1 million ($1.2 million).

Additional notable sales included Gladstone Gallery's transaction of Robert Rauschenberg's "Tarnished Honor (Copperhead)" (1989) for $1.5 million, and Pace's sale of Sam Gilliam's "Heroines, Beyoncé, Serena and Althea" (2020) for $1.1 million. David Kordansky Gallery sold Rashid Johnson's "God Painting 'I Dream A Lot'" (2025) for $750,000, while Lisson Gallery moved an untitled 2015 Anish Kapoor work for £500,000 ($666,645). Lehmann Maupin concluded strong opening day sales with two paintings from McArthur Binion's DNA:Study series, totaling $500,000.

The strong opening day performance at Art Basel Miami Beach 2025 suggests that confidence has returned to the high-end art market, with collectors and institutions actively acquiring significant works across multiple price points and artistic movements.

Art Basel Miami Beach 2025 kicked off its first preview day on Wednesday, December 3rd, with a flurry of high-value transactions that signaled strong market confidence. The marquee event of Miami Art Week and the final major art fair of the year saw several seven-figure deals on opening day, led by David Zwirner's sale of an abstract Gerhard Richter painting for $5.5 million.

The robust opening day sales appear to reflect a wave of positive market sentiment that has been building following last month's strong performance at New York auctions. Those November sales generated a total of $2.2 billion, helping to ease lingering concerns about weakness in the market's top tier that had persisted earlier this year.

Gerhard Richter has experienced a particular surge in interest this fall, coinciding with his comprehensive retrospective currently on view at the Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris. This follows a pattern established at Art Basel Paris in October, where a $23 million Richter work offered by Hauser & Wirth led the opening sales at that fair.

While Hauser & Wirth didn't secure the top sale this time around, the gallery still reported impressive results, including one $4 million transaction on opening day. Marc Payot, president of the gallery, emphasized the strength of their performance in a press statement, noting that "in the first three hours of the fair, our sales have already totaled 40% more than we made in the entire week at last year's Art Basel Miami Beach."

David Zwirner's strong performance extended well beyond the headline Richter sale. The gallery reported selling a 1967 Alice Neel painting for $3.3 million, two Josef Albers paintings for $2.5 million and $2.2 million respectively, and a 1969 Ruth Asawa wire sculpture for $1.2 million. The gallery also successfully placed a new work by Dana Schutz with an American museum for $1.2 million.

Hauser & Wirth's notable sales included George Condo's "Untitled (Taxi Painting)" from 2011, which sold for approximately $4 million. The gallery also moved two significant Louise Bourgeois works: "Persistent Antagonism" (1946-48) for $3.2 million and "Mr. Follett: Nursery-Man" (1944) for $2.5 million. Additionally, they reported seven-figure sales for works by Ed Clark, Henry Taylor, and Rashid Johnson.

White Cube's opening day was highlighted by a Willem de Kooning work that sold for $2.85 million. The gallery also reported strong sales across its roster, including a Damien Hirst work for $2.5 million, a Tracey Emin piece for £1.2 million ($1.6 million), Andreas Gursky's "Harry Styles" (2025) for €1.2 million ($1.4 million), and a Richard Hunt work for $1 million.

Several other galleries reported significant transactions during the opening hours. Almine Rech sold a Pablo Picasso painting in the range of $2.8 million to $3 million, along with a James Turrell work priced between $900,000 and $1 million. Thaddaeus Ropac moved two Alex Katz works - "Orange Hat 2" (1973) for $2.5 million and "Wildflowers 1" (2010) for $1.5 million - while also selling Georg Baselitz's "Selbstportrait 1953, 18.V.97" (1997) for €1 million ($1.2 million).

Additional notable sales included Gladstone Gallery's transaction of Robert Rauschenberg's "Tarnished Honor (Copperhead)" (1989) for $1.5 million, and Pace's sale of Sam Gilliam's "Heroines, Beyoncé, Serena and Althea" (2020) for $1.1 million. David Kordansky Gallery sold Rashid Johnson's "God Painting 'I Dream A Lot'" (2025) for $750,000, while Lisson Gallery moved an untitled 2015 Anish Kapoor work for £500,000 ($666,645). Lehmann Maupin concluded strong opening day sales with two paintings from McArthur Binion's DNA:Study series, totaling $500,000.

The strong opening day performance at Art Basel Miami Beach 2025 suggests that confidence has returned to the high-end art market, with collectors and institutions actively acquiring significant works across multiple price points and artistic movements.

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