This artwork is protected by copyright. We cannot display images of works by artists who passed away after 1954.
See the original at Private Collection in Unknown
by Gerhard Richter, 1986
Sotheby's / London
February 10, 2015
Eric Clapton
Private Collector
Gerhard Richter created this Abstraktes Bild in 1986, a monumental canvas standing over 300 cm tall. The painting showcases his radical squeegee technique, where industrial tools replace traditional brushes. Richter drags, scrapes, and smears layers of oil paint across the surface in rapid movements.
The process merges control with chance. Richter described it as "losing control" compared to brush painting, a central element of his artistic philosophy. The squeegee creates richly textured fields of color that both obscure and reveal underlayers, with each mark capturing the instantaneous moment of creation.
In February 2015, the painting sold at Sotheby's London for $46.3 million, establishing Richter as the most expensive living European artist. The same work had sold for just $607,500 in 1999, demonstrating the dramatic appreciation of his market over sixteen years.
Other masterpieces from the Abstract Expressionism movement

Piet Mondrian, 1930
Kunsthaus Zürich, Zurich

Wassily Kandinsky, 1923
Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York

Piet Mondrian
Noordbrabants Museum, 's-Hertogenbosch, 's-Hertogenbosch

Piet Mondrian, 1937
Tate Modern, London, London

Piet Mondrian
Private Collection, Unknown

Piet Mondrian
Private Collection, Unknown

Piet Mondrian
Private Collection, Unknown

Piet Mondrian
Gemeentemuseum den Haag, Hague, The Hague
Luxury wall art with the same mood and energy. Gallery-quality canvas, no museum crowds.
Browse Collection