Linear Development 2Points of Contact No.11WorkRelleu DiagonalIllaColère de Violon[Abstraction in Red and Green]Untitled La Femme aux Cheveus d'or et son Garde, 1967Cuadro (4)Jeune Homme à la CouronneDorien Leigh Modelling A Suit Amidst Unpacked Clothing, For 'Vogue', 1946She Brought Up the BanditAvatar Lord of the FireVega - GoldAndy Warhol, Screen Test of Edie Sedgewick and Kipp Stagg, 1966ConstructionDali's MustacheA complete & signed collection of Ed Ruscha first edition artists' booksMarilyn Monroe
Linear Development 2Points of Contact No.11WorkRelleu DiagonalIllaColère de Violon[Abstraction in Red and Green]Untitled La Femme aux Cheveus d'or et son Garde, 1967Cuadro (4)Jeune Homme à la CouronneDorien Leigh Modelling A Suit Amidst Unpacked Clothing, For 'Vogue', 1946She Brought Up the BanditAvatar Lord of the FireVega - GoldAndy Warhol, Screen Test of Edie Sedgewick and Kipp Stagg, 1966ConstructionDali's MustacheA complete & signed collection of Ed Ruscha first edition artists' booksMarilyn Monroe

Post-War Art

The post-war era of art history, spanning roughly 1945 to 1970, includes some of the most iconic and sought-after art movements of the 20th century, including Abstract Expressionism, Pop Art, and Minimalism. Leading the high end of the market, the most expensive post-war paintings ever sold at auction include Francis Bacon’s Three Studies of Lucian Freud (1969) at $142 million, Andy Warhol’s Silver Car Crash (Double Disaster) (1963) at $105 million, and Willem De Kooning’s Woman as Landscape (1955) at $69 million.

This is based on the artwork’s average dimension.