SLAMXHYPE GIVEAWAY

Related posts

Art Basel Miami Coverage

We spent the day at Art Basel, the main fair here in Miami this week(end).. I wasn’t sure how ... more

Face Addict directed by Edo Bertoglio

Face Addict is a visit back to Downtown Manhattan in the 70’s, a time run by Warhol and his fa... more

Andy Warhol Books: “Catalogue Raisonne” & “Andy Warhol Live”

Released earlier this month are two interesting hardcover books on pop art legend Andy Warhol, hi... more

Warhol, Spielberg & Jagger

The world’s most famous artist, film director and rock star wife, literally caught on camera j... more

Interview Magazine 40th Anniversary at Art Basel

Interview magazine, who are currently celebrating their 40th anniversary have set up a vending mach... more

“Meet Me Inside” Group Show At Gagosian Gallery

Opening this weekend at the Gagosian Gallery in Beverly Hills is an exciting new group show entitled... more

slamxhype.com on Facebook


Popular Tags

Andy Warhol’s Eight Elvises Sells for $100 million

Read about Andy Warhol’s Eight Elvises Sells for $100 million on SLAMXHYPE.


warhol-eight-elvises-450x265

An unknown buyer has acquired Andy Warhol’s Eight Elvises in a private sale, for a record $100 million. It sends Warhol straight into the top 10 list of the most expensive artists of all time. An auction price of $43.8m for his 200 One Dollar Bills in New York earlier this month confirms Warhol as the marquee name in the art market. The
unusual thing about this Warhol, however, is that it is unique. Unlike the artist’s other screen prints, which were run off, sometimes in hundreds of editions, he only made one of the work he called Eight Elvises.

Although the sale of Eight Elvises was completed last year, details have only just emerged after a year-long investigation by the art writer Sarah Thornton, who published her findings in this week’s Economist.

The picture, a 12ft canvas, has not been seen in public since it was exhibited in Los Angeles in 1963 as part of a much larger, 37ft canvas with 16 Elvises on it. When that massive work was dismantled, Eight Elvises went back to being one distinct piece. In the late 1960s, the work was sold to Annibale Berlingieri, an Italian collector. Since 2002, he has consistently been one of the three most bought and sold artists. At the height of the art market boom, in 2007, auction sales of his work totaled $428m, the highest turnover of any artist.

Although there is no doubt about the sale, the buyer remains a mystery. There are, however, only a few individuals who would be able to afford such a work.

Info: AM



blog comments powered by Disqus