Initial announcement and scope: Christie’s is breaking new ground with its first-ever auction dedicated exclusively to AI-generated art, featuring works spanning five decades.
- The “Augmented Intelligence” sale will run from February 20 to March 5, 2025
- The auction includes over 20 lots from both pioneering and contemporary AI artists
- Only 26% of the works are digital pieces like NFTs, with the majority being physical artworks including sculptures, paintings, and prints
- Christie’s projects the sale will generate at least $600,000
Notable artists and works: The auction showcases pieces from established AI art innovators and includes several groundbreaking interactive elements.
- A 12-foot-tall painting robot by Alexander Reben will create art in real-time at Christie’s Rockefeller Center, responding to online bids
- Van Arman’s “Emerging Faces” (2017) demonstrates the interplay between two AI systems: one creating human faces while another halts the process upon face recognition
- Holly Herndon and Mat Dryhurst’s “Embedding Study” works, featured in the 2024 Whitney Biennial, are expected to sell for $70,000-$90,000
Technical innovations: The auction highlights various AI art techniques and technologies that showcase the evolution of the field.
- Neural networks, a type of AI that learns from data patterns, are featured in several works including Van Arman’s abstract portraits
- Text-to-image AI models were used to create Herndon and Dryhurst’s spacesuit character variations
- The majority of lots (93%) will accept cryptocurrency as payment
Market context: Recent developments suggest growing acceptance of AI art in traditional art markets.
- This auction represents the first dedicated AI art sale by a major auction house
- Sotheby’s recent sale of an AI-created painting by humanoid robot Ai-Da for over $1 million indicates strong market interest
- The diverse format of works, from digital to physical pieces, shows how AI art is transcending purely digital spaces
Future implications: Christie’s pioneering sale could establish AI art as a legitimate category in the fine art market, while raising questions about creativity, authorship, and the evolving relationship between human artists and artificial intelligence.
Christie’s staging auction made up entirely of AI art