Guy Hepner Gallery

Roy Lichtenstein — Prints & Paintings For Sale

Roy Lichtenstein prints for sale at Guy Hepner include works from his most sought-after series: Brushstrokes, Mirrors, Nudes, Interiors, Haystacks, Entablature, and American Indian Theme. Roy Lichtenstein paintings for sale and Roy Lichtenstein original art for sale through our New York gallery are sourced with full provenance and Corlett catalogue raisonné references.

Roy Lichtenstein (1923–1997) is the defining figure of American Pop Art and one of the most collected and instantly recognisabl

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Roy Lichtenstein

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Buy Roy Lichtenstein Art — Guy Hepner Gallery, New York

Roy Lichtenstein art for sale at Guy Hepner includes prints, paintings, and sculptures from his full published catalogue. Our New York gallery specialises in Roy Lichtenstein prints for sale with Corlett catalogue raisonné references and Roy Lichtenstein paintings for sale from authenticated secondary market collections. Roy Lichtenstein artwork prices are available on enquiry across all series.

Roy Lichtenstein (1923–1997) is one of the defining figures of twentieth-century American art and a perennial favourite among collectors of post-war and contemporary works. His bold graphic paintings and prints — instantly recognisable for their Ben-Day dots, black outlines, and primary colour palettes drawn from comic books and advertising — remain among the most actively traded works in the secondary market and are represented in every major art institution in the world.

Life and Career

Born in New York City in 1923, Lichtenstein studied at Ohio State University and the Art Students League before moving through early Cubist and Expressionist phases. The pivot that defined his career came in 1961 when he began making large paintings based on comic book and advertising imagery — Look Mickey (1961) and the subsequent Whaam! (1963) and Drowning Girl (1963) established him, alongside Andy Warhol, as the central figure of American Pop Art. Exhibited by Leo Castelli Gallery from 1962, his work attracted immediate critical attention and institutional acquisition.

Lichtenstein's practice was characterised by formal rigour beneath its surface accessibility. Where his source imagery was casual and commercial, his paintings were carefully composed, with precise manipulation of scale, colour, and graphic elements. His career-long investigation of art history — through the Brushstroke series (which satirised Abstract Expressionism), the Art Deco series, Entablatures, Reflections, and Interiors — demonstrated the analytical intelligence underlying his apparently simple vocabulary. He worked until his death in New York on 29 September 1997.

Prints and Collector Market

Lichtenstein produced an extensive body of prints working with Gemini G.E.L., Petersburg Press, Castelli Graphics, and other leading publishers. His prints — in screenprint, lithograph, woodcut, and etching — are among the most widely collected blue-chip works in the secondary market. They offer access to his iconic visual language across a broad range of subjects and price points, from individual screenprints to complete portfolios.

Auction results across his print and painting markets have been consistently strong at Christie's, Sotheby's, and Phillips, with major works achieving multi-million dollar prices at flagship evening sales. The breadth of his output ensures that collectors at multiple levels can engage with his market, while rare major canvases from the early 1960s represent trophy acquisitions for institutional and top-tier private buyers.

Key Series

Comic Book Paintings. The Whaam! and Drowning Girl paintings, and their print variants, remain the most emblematic works of his career and among the most institutionally held works in post-war art.

Brushstroke Series. Begun in 1965, these works apply Lichtenstein's Pop language to the gestures of Abstract Expressionism, creating some of his most conceptually rich and visually compelling works.

Nudes and Mirrors. These series demonstrate the range of his subject matter and have strong secondary market demand, particularly for works from the 1970s and 1980s.

Interiors. His late-period Interiors series (1990s) draws on the visual language of furniture advertising and home decoration catalogues, extending his investigation of consumer culture into new territory.

Authentication and Provenance

The Roy Lichtenstein Foundation publishes the catalogue raisonné of his prints and works on paper, which is the definitive reference for authentication and edition documentation. Collectors should ensure full provenance chains and verify works against the Foundation's published records. Print quality, condition, and edition number within documented parameters are all significant factors in valuation.

Museum Collections

Lichtenstein is represented in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art and the Guggenheim Museum in New York, the Art Institute of Chicago, Tate Modern in London, the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC, and virtually every other major art institution globally.

Acquiring Lichtenstein Through Guy Hepner

Guy Hepner provides expert access to Roy Lichtenstein prints and works on paper for collectors across all levels of the market. Our New York gallery at 177 Tenth Avenue specialises in presenting carefully vetted works with full documentation. Contact us to discuss current availability and acquisition guidance.

Roy Lichtenstein Art For Sale

Roy Lichtenstein art for sale encompasses prints, paintings, and works on paper across six decades of one of the most consistently collected careers in post-war American art. His bold graphic language — Ben-Day dots, black outlines, primary colours drawn from commercial printing and comic books — remains instantly recognisable and universally desirable. Guy Hepner Gallery presents authenticated Roy Lichtenstein art for sale sourced from reputable secondary market collections with full Estate documentation.

The market benchmark for Lichtenstein was set in May 2015 when Nurse (1964) sold at Christie's New York for $95.4 million, confirming his place at the apex of post-war American art. Major canvas paintings remain predominantly in institutional and museum collections, but his extensive print output offers collectors across all levels meaningful access to his canonical imagery.

Roy Lichtenstein Paintings For Sale

Roy Lichtenstein paintings for sale on the secondary market are rare, highly documented, and typically appear through major auction houses or estate-vetted private sales. His series-based paintings — Haystacks, Nudes, Modern Heads, Brushstrokes, Reflections, Peace Through Chemistry, and Landscapes — are among the most sought works in post-war American art.

For collectors seeking to buy Roy Lichtenstein at a more accessible price point, works on paper and preparatory drawings occasionally appear on the secondary market and represent compelling acquisitions within a market dominated by large-format canvases.

Roy Lichtenstein Prints For Sale

Roy Lichtenstein prints for sale represent the most liquid and accessible segment of his market. Published across his career in collaboration with major print publishers, his editions span lithographs, screenprints, woodcuts, and etchings — many in series that mirror his canvas subjects. Cathedral, Haystack, Landscape, Peace Through Chemistry, Water Lilies, American Indian Theme, Reflections, Still Lifes, and Reverie are among the most actively traded print series at auction.

Signed impressions command a premium over unsigned editions. Edition documentation — publisher's certificate, catalogue raisonné reference — is essential for any Lichtenstein print acquisition. The Roy Lichtenstein Foundation maintains authentication records and publishes the catalogue raisonné.

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Roy Lichtenstein Art for Sale: Market Guide

Roy Lichtenstein art for sale encompasses his full printed and painted output, with the secondary market centred on the Corlett catalogue raisonné-documented prints across Mirrors, Brushstrokes, Nudes, Entablature, Haystacks, and the American Indian Theme series. Roy Lichtenstein prints for sale are among the most institutionally collected multiples in Post-War American art, with steady auction results underpinning a reliable secondary market.

Roy Lichtenstein paintings for sale represent the rarest and most valuable category of his work, with original oils on canvas from his Pop period holding world auction records. For most collectors, Roy Lichtenstein art for sale through the print market — signed lithographs, screenprints, and woodcuts — offers the most accessible route into his catalogue with documented edition structures and established pricing benchmarks.

Price guidance for Roy Lichtenstein art for sale: unsigned Lichtenstein editions begin at $5,000–$25,000; Roy Lichtenstein signed prints for sale from the major series — Mirrors, Brushstrokes, Nudes — range from $30,000 to over $500,000 for early, small-edition works. Roy Lichtenstein original art for sale including paintings and unique works requires direct gallery consultation.

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Roy Lichtenstein
Roy Lichtenstein

Collecting Roy Lichtenstein Prints

Roy Lichtenstein's prints are foundational documents of American Pop Art and among the most institutionally significant multiples of the post-war period. His engagement with printmaking produced a body of work across silkscreen, woodcut, lithography, and relief that is both art historically essential and commercially robust. For collectors, the Lichtenstein print market offers access to one of the most important visual languages of the twentieth century across a wide range of price points and series.

The major series — the Brushstroke prints, the Nudes, the Reflections, the Interiors, the Landscapes in the Chinese Style, and the Bull Profile prints — each represent distinct chapters in Lichtenstein's print career. The Roy Lichtenstein Foundation maintains comprehensive records of his print output and provides authentication resources for provenance research. Works from his lifetime, signed and numbered in pencil on the sheet, represent the most significant collecting opportunities.

Condition is a particularly important factor in the Lichtenstein print market. The bold, flat colour fields and the characteristic Ben-Day dot patterns are highly sensitive to fading and UV damage; works should be displayed behind UV-protective glazing. Guy Hepner Gallery provides full provenance for every Lichtenstein work we offer.

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